Sorry for my funny english!
Stormy wind, heavy raindrops on my hat. Tonight the camels are tied to trees close to the kitchen. A bigger campfire would be good, especially today. Anyway I need more coals for cooking so John puts some more logs on the fire for me. There is a noise in the camp I've never heard bevor. The camels are moaning and groaning same time in one cry. Everybody is not happy about the weather but nobody dares to say anything, cause there is nothing to do about it. The sound of the camels is distressing. John explains "They hate it! They complain about the rain!" That's good to know. At least we are allowed now to feel a little bit sorry for us humans too because even the camels are pissed off. And for some of us this will be the first rainy night outdoors.
That doesn't matter too much to me right know - it would be far more a misadventure if I would spoil the veggiepie I am trying to cook here.
"I can't help you cooking now - I have to join Joe to have a look at the wild bull over there" John disappears.
Alright I am coping somehow... but a wild bull camel in the camp - not nice tonight. In the afternoon we came across a group of more than ten of them. In the distance I could see the white froth driveling off their mouths. But they weren't that interested in us and disappeared very soon. But are they now keen on a rampage in the camp? On the table I am flattening the dough. Ingrid gives me a hand with the veggies and the cooking fire. I hear somebody saying that there is no camel bull in the camp but a very small camel. I leave my dough because now I want to have a look myself. There, fifty meters away, a teenage camel! All alone it found it's way into our camp. What it is doing here?
After tea I have look at it. It is dark and the approximately two-years-old girl-camel has chosen a very special accomodation. She has found her way past all our male camels and hooshed down right beside Chewy, our only and very admired Lady of the camel team. The light of the torch reveals the reason why the little one came on her own: I can see the bare skin just behind her hump; it is sore. So, here is the reality side of the romantic desert, bull camels had an easy victim to practice humping. At least she can have a comfort rest this night. I feel sorry for the young camel but it is kind of wonderful seeing Chewy with a fosterling on her side. As if she became a mother all of a sudden.
The rain continued for the night but the wind dropped. In the morning it was still overcast but dry. The little camel was still there. Dave and Joe untied the camels and they started feeding. Actually each of us had a core to do be done every morning but today everybody took a minute to have a look at this little fairy camel. She didn't seemed to be scared by humans at all and alllowed us to come as near to her as three meters. Our Humps were more interested in eating bushes, except for Morgan who circumnavigated her gently, cautiously sucking in all olfactory information with his two big velvety nostrils. There was a special mood in the camp: close encounter between the wild and the tamed...
But the visitor didn't seem to be intimidated. Just very, very interested and observant. Then the time came to load the camels. As the camels were lead into loading position the little camel simply joined into the moving herd. I was under the impression that she had decided to give it a try to stay with this mob. No camel here had given her any sign of her being not wanted here. And even us humans, which must have appeared to her totally obscure did not scare her off. But there was a plan. Joe had decided to chase her off as soon as we completed loading. Because a little wild sapling like her has never seen or heard anything about a string of pack camels, which in this case were two caravans of eight to nine camels each loaded with 100 to 300 kilogramms of equipment. If she would follow us she could irritate one or some of the camels, or get in between them, who are tied to each other with a rope. Everything could tangle up. And an upset full-loaded camel string could be a source of injury for both camels and man. So despite the wild camel was the one in need for company and some protection she was a danger to us. She would have to lead on her live out here on her own for now.
So that's why we soon will chase her off. But the humpy visitor is a very clever one. She observes closely how each camel gets hooshed down in exact position, the saddles get put on, the girth strengthened and all the pieces tied on. After 20 minutes, before we finish, she simply turns around and walks off quietly without turning her head once. She is going north, where we came from yesterday. She quickly got the point: being a pack camel is hard work. That's not her kind of business. In a steady pace she moves away from us; her body vanishes in the grey-green foliage of the landscape under the overcast sky.
Soon we are off, too. To the west. My thoughts are still with the wild one - she was only a little bigger than the yearlings I worked with at the camel farm - of course I would have loved to adopt her...
"You know what!?" Ingrid says. "That was exactly like a kid from the street, showing up at your door one day. You give her a good feed and of course she can stay on your lounge for the night. You see what a beautiful and brave being she is and seriously think about letting her stay for a bit longer and help her staying out of trouble. But next morning - gone. Together with your favorite yoghurt out of the fridge." Ingrid had actually experienced something like that before.
Southern Simpson Desert, South Australia, July 2007







