"When I was your age I was before the mast on a square rigged ship that ran to Africa and I have seen lions on the beaches in the evening."
[…]
He no longer dreamed of storms, nor of women, nor of great occurrences, nor of great fish, nor fights, nor contests of strength, nor of his wife. He only dreamed of places now and of the lions on the beach.
Ernest Hemingway. The Old Man and the Sea.
I’d read this long ago, and never gave a thought to it that this detail must have been rooted in reality. It’s interesting to learn what the lions were doing there.
Holy smokes! I had the book recommended to me 15-ish years ago. Today I incidentally grabbed it from our book shelf and read half of it. The lion thing stood out to me. I've never heard of lions at a beach. And now this. There is something strange about this world. Maybe time to re-read what Jung said about synchronicities.
Yes, out of the uncountable unlikely coincidences, some are bound to happen. The comment was mostly a joke. Still, the evidence keeps piling up - that you're all just agents in a humorous world that revolves around me :)
Nah dude, it's me, I'm the center and comments like yours are just trying to cast doubt in my mind by pretending all you NPCs have the same thougt so it must be delusion... Take that for a response, Matrix! :)
It is criminal that the article does not mention the fantastic "must watch" National Geographic documentary : Survivors of the Skeleton Coast - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ce09ZygnMLg
The only video that i know of where you can see a Lion feeding on a Whale carcass on the beach!
Nature documentaries and in particular rare ones like these deserve wider dissemination and recognition.
This particular scene made such an impression on me when i first saw it that it has always stayed with me. It is a reminder that our Planet still has amazing secrets for us to discover.
I visited the Skeleton Coast in 2021 for a couple days. It's just an incredible other-worldly place (well lots of Namibia is like that, really). I had no idea at the time that lions had started coming back.
There are also desert adapted elephants in Namibia. We had a local tour guide take us out to find them, which was one of the wildest, most interesting experiences I've ever had.
I never made it to the Skeleton Coast, but being out on the sand dunes in the middle of nowhere in the Namib desert was one of the most surreal things I've ever experienced. It felt like I was on Mars, except for the incredibly deep blue sky.
I'm lucky in that the family I married into is strongly connected to Namibia. My wife lived there when she was young, and her family goes back regularly, so I've been able to tag along with them. Getting introduced to that place -- somewhere I likely never would have known otherwise -- is one of the (many) things that makes me feel grateful for my life and my wife.
Well, well worth a visit. Southern Africa has its problems like anywhere, but it's a really special place in the world.
I recommend Namibia too, and especially the skeleton coast for a different experience than the most visited parts (dunes, safari parks). Driving on the skeleton coast lead to the experience to drive for 5-6 hours without meeting any other car. Having that feeling of driving in a beautiful- though extremely dry- spot on this planet with nobody around for 100s of kilometers is an amazing feeling.
The cap fur seals make funny - fart-like noises and it is quiet smelly - but funny experience.
Nominally related: Ocean Conservation Namibia [0] is one of the most oddly soothing and satisfying YouTube channels I've ever discovered. These guys sprint across beaches to catch sea lions that have fishing lines/debris around their necks and cut the debris away. Highly recommend.
They better be careful. Once the fish get a taste for lion, they may establish a beachhead, and construct a breathing apparatus, perhaps of kelp, to hunt down the remaining members of the pride.
This way of managing the balance between the needs of wildlife and the wants of humans, stands out in a world where normally the animals (and plants) have to give way to fulfil the desires and safety needs of humans.
On the remote beaches of western Latvia, in the sand are frequent paw tracks left by wolves. I wondered whether they were able to hunt any sea life, or if it is just an easy travel path alongside the pine forests that are immediately alongside the beach.
Namibia is one of the most incredibly diverse countries in the world. And as a new to Africa tourist its super easy to get a flavor of this magical continent.
And few tourists and the roads are nice. You can go rent a car, drive to a national park, hang out by a watering hole with a ton of wildlife, and have the whole thing largely to yourself. Completely different experience from Kenya and Tanzania. (at least, 20 years ago when I went).
Cats are pretty well adapted to water despite the stereotypes, and fish are typical prey for many species.
Tigers famously live along deltas, there are spotted wildcats which live in mangroves called "fishing cats", flat-headed cats stalk the waters around the Gulf of Thailand, even Pallas Cats have been known to go fishing in the steppes.
Although, according to the article these lions started eating birds that live along the coastline because their usual mammalian prey are dying off from drought. It's pretty common for birds, especially migratory ones, to hang around saltwater while they feed on things like algae and small shellfish.
There are man made salt licks on safaris so tourists have a greater chance to see a predator, and possibly even a hunt since the prey is gathered there.
Right and they only went there when their normal prey (ungulates) became scarce so facing starvation they opted to hunt for shore animals like seals and birds that frequent the seashore.
That's a bit of a simplification of what the article reports, which is that desert lions were there before being driven out by nearby farmers in 2002. They came back because of the drought and lack of non-marine prey. Seems likely that there have been lions there for a very long time, which sort of by definition means that they're adapted for living there, even if that adaptation was spurred by difficulty in getting "normal" prey.
[…]
He no longer dreamed of storms, nor of women, nor of great occurrences, nor of great fish, nor fights, nor contests of strength, nor of his wife. He only dreamed of places now and of the lions on the beach.
Ernest Hemingway. The Old Man and the Sea.
I’d read this long ago, and never gave a thought to it that this detail must have been rooted in reality. It’s interesting to learn what the lions were doing there.