Friday, 2 May 2025

Savage Land ... Jacqui's latest book in her magnificent series ...

 

What's more important to life … water, shelter, or food … or …. looking after all of Nature …

Jacqui - very happy with life
The lands our early ancestors explored … needed to escape from … stretched far into the distance … further than their eyes could see … what lay ahead – and how could they take care of their wandering communities.


An area known as "Moonscape" in
the Namib Desert
I can see little reason to not believe that the indigenous peoples of Southern Africa live much as the ancestors Jacqui writes about would not have similarly existed ... so this post will be in this direction ... 



Swakop River - flooding through,
opening up into the Atlantic Ocean,
having been in ephemeral state
Depending on the season our ancestors would reach out across the physical features of earth … following ephemeral river systems … being there when the rains would let lose their life giving waters …


Female Welwitschia plant - showing the cones,
which are ripe and can be eaten raw or cooked

… they knew they had to be near a water source, while they could manage without food for one to two months at a time – the moon cycles – they'd know they needed to find some meat, fish, plants and fruits … and which suited the human system – to keep the clan alive ... 



Mopane Tree
Shelter was essential too – if the area was wind-driven, they'd need to hide away at times, keeping out of the sun … and making sure they were protected in winter …



Mopane Worm on a twig
Those early indigenous peoples would know which parts of plants were edible, where to find them, which season they would appear … and if there were insects living around the plant … they could possibly be harvested … as mopane worms are to this day.



Tamarix, Acacia, Camelthorn, Mopane trees … also provide shelter and firewood – once the indigenous peoples had learnt about fire – these particular trees are known for their hardwood.


Birds would snuggle into the 
lichen hiding their young and eggs
Over millennia our ancestors would have noticed nesting birds, which birds would nest in scrapes, and how useful finding and building shelters would be ... also to access these birds for extra food - eggs and meat ... 





A Welwitschia plant - which can live
over 1,000 years - fibrous trails
Papyrus sedge has been used for millennia, as fossil records have noted, for fastenings … many stringy or fibrous plants … Welwitschia, Papyrus, reed strands would be put to a good many uses …


Dune Spinach - edible


Over time man has grown wily – now our brains are relatively large, with an enormous amount of power … to control the various areas of our life as we progress …      ?? ever forward.



We've managed to use and subdue most things … have we thought about life itself … we in the 21st century may never know what the future holds for the sophisticated animal that is today's man … but by encountering and mastering Savage Land … we've learnt … or have we …



as Jacqui says in her strap line to Savage Land

Nature Almost Wins …


Man v Nature - Jacqui's series - on how man survived critical events on our evolution ... 


My earlier post in January 2025 ... 


Jacqui's introduction to my delayed posting - apologies to one and all - tis here now ... 


Thanks for visiting ... and do buy/read Jacqui's books - they're very readable and enjoyable ... 


Hilary Melton-Butcher

Positive Letters Inspirational Stories