Saturday, January 27, 2024

Subsistence Hunter of the Week, John "Pondoro" Taylor.

This entry may be controversial.  

Certainly, it's questionable.

John Howard "Pondoro" Taylor was a near contemporary to last week's entry, Jack O'Connor.  O'Connor bore an Irish last name, and Taylor did not, but Taylor was a Dublin born son of a well-to-do surgeon and fit into the Anglo-Irish Protestant class that basically ran Ireland until the Anglo-Irish War.  Indeed, it is rumored that Taylor may have gotten into trouble somehow with the IRA, resulting in his relocation to Africa.

I've read the Peter Hathaway Capstick's biography of Taylor, but I've forgotten almost all of it. I usually retain a great deal of what I read, but Capstick is not my favorite author and I've lost the details.  That means this entry is, to a large degree, uninformed.

First, does Taylor deserve a spot here at all?

Taylor was an Ivory hunter, and frankly, he was a poacher.  That puts him outside of the classification of subsistence hunter, to be sure.

More on that in a moment.

Taylor went to Africa in the golden age of African big game hunting, which roughly stretched from the 1890s until 1950, and which coincided with the height of late stage European colonialism.  A "remission man", that class of English man who was sent overseas by their family, with a sort of allowance, in order that they not cause trouble in their line of succession, he was a prolific hunter but oddly solitary.  He had no interest in guiding hunting clients at all.  As noted, he was an ivory hunter, and a poacher, at a time when that was not admirable, but which did not threaten the game populations, but he also hunted other African species very widely, to include African game bird species we otherwise very rarely think of.

Taylor is known to us today as he was well-educated and very literate.  He authored two books, one of which is an absolute classic to this day in terms of big game cartridges.  His book on African cartridges basically picks up where Jack O'Connor's leaves off.  He cannot be discounted as an expert on big game hunting, or on cartridges.

All together, Taylor write at least five books, with African Rifles and Cartridges being an absolute classic. There is a sequel to it, which I have not read, just on hunting cartridges alone.  Interestingly, his last book, Shadows of Shame, was not only his only novel, but it apparently had subtle homosexual themes, with Taylor widely believed to be homosexual himself, which may have led to his explosion from Africa.  He was also a slaveholder, in this case the two being linked as he purchased a young man in the bush from the boys desperate parents, with the African man going on to be the object of his attention later on.

Slavery and pedophile behavior cannot be excused, so the question is why list Taylor, who ended up dying in poverty in London?  Perhaps he's a reminder that some individuals of great talent also have enormous faults.  At any rate, he lived by his rifles for most of his life, existing off of what he shot for food and an income.  He's not wholly admirable by any means, but his written works remain among the best ever written on rifle cartridges.

Wednesday, January 24, 2024

Lex Anteinternet: Monday, January 24, 1944. Rendering Skunk Fat.

Lex Anteinternet: Monday, January 24, 1944. Red Advances, Luftwaffe...:  

In Cheyenne, a War Salvage lecture was given on the topic of "How to get fat from skunk without smell". Attribution:  Wyoming State History Society Calendar.

I don't think I'd try that.

Some apparently do, however.

The question is why?

Lex Anteinternet: Wyoming Catholic Cowboys - raw and real: Hat Shaping

Lex Anteinternet: Wyoming Catholic Cowboys - raw and real: Hat Shaping: Wyoming Catholic Cowboys - raw and real: Hat Shaping : I'm more of a straw hat guy, but for six months out of a year, Wyoming cowboys ar...

Sunday, January 21, 2024

Subsistence Hunter of the Week: Jack O'Connor

Arizona born writer/professor/big game hunter Jack O'Connor was, in my opinion, the best firearms author the country has ever produced, and certainly the best one on the topic of North American big game rifles.

Born in Arizona in 1902, he was partially raised by a bird hunting maternal grandfather, due to his parent's divorce when he was five years old, which influenced him heavily.  His paternal grandfather was a judge who also ranched, which also influenced him a great deal.  His mother became a university professor after that, at the University of Arizona, which he ultimately would as well.  As a very young man, he'd briefly worked as a market hunter for an uncle's saw mill.

O'Connor served in the military twice.  He joined the Army at age 15 during World War One, but was discharged due to tuberculosis.  He later joined the Navy in 1919, serving as a hospital corpsman until discharged in 1921.

He took to big game early on.  By profession, he was a writer, as noted first being a college professor.  He was the first journalism professor at the University of Arizona, a position he left to write in sporting journals full time in 1945.  In that role, he became famously associated with the .270 Winchester and Mountain Sheep hunting.  Not too surprisingly, he moved to Idaho in 1948, where sheep are indigenous, although he stated that this was in part as he felt Arizona had become overpopulated following World War Two.

While associated particularly with sheep, O'Connor was the class western North American hunter, and hunted every big game animal native to the region, frequently with his wife.  He was a noted conservationist as well.

Blog Mirror: Assumptions about gender roles in past humans ignore an icky but potentially crucial part of original 'paleo diet'

 

Assumptions about gender roles in past humans ignore an icky but potentially crucial part of original 'paleo diet'

Friday, January 12, 2024

Lex Anteinternet: Blog Mirror: 6 Must Have Winter Car Accessories t...

Lex Anteinternet: Blog Mirror: 6 Must Have Winter Car Accessories t...

Blog Mirror: 6 Must Have Winter Car Accessories to Stay Safe and Comfy

6 Must Have Winter Car Accessories to Stay Safe and Comfy

All good advice.

I'd add, here in Wyoming, a winter coat for sure.

And a blanket that will suffice for cold weather without electricity, as you might not have your car electricity all that long.

And some food for a few days is a good idea, also.

I'd also add, for at least off roady and over the road vehicles, a two-way radio.  I have GMRS radios in both of my regular 4x4s, which are also my regular daily drivers.  Personally, I much prefer GMRS over CB, which has a more limited range.

Wednesday, January 3, 2024

Wild Cats of Hawaii.

Wild Cats of Hawaii.


They are feral, of course, not really wild, and not native to Hawaii at all.
















 

Monday, January 1, 2024

Blog Mirror: Beer As Restorative.

Yes, it's hunting related: Beer As Restorative.