28 April, 2014

Beneath The Acacia Trees Of Samburu

By Kathleen Peddicord

“Kait, please stand there, beneath that acacia tree,” Tilas instructed.

“Jackson, you must stand over there, beneath that acacia tree,” he continued.

“Kathleen, go there and stand beneath the shade of that little tree…and, Harry, stand here, under this tree.”

Not sure what was to come, we followed Tilas’ instructions and dispersed to our four trees. When I turned to face back toward where Tilas had been standing, he was gone.

Jackson family after the walk.

I looked around at Kaitlin, Jackson, and Harry, all positioned dutifully beneath their trees, even young Jackson standing still, staring straight ahead patiently. What is Tilas up to, I wondered…

We remained in our spots for what seemed a long time, not sure why but not wanting to move or even to speak.

Then, some minutes later, Tilas reappeared, in a flash, from the bush. He motioned with his arm that we should come over to him.

“Now, you must tell me, Jackson,” Tilas began when he’d gotten us all back together, “what did you think about standing beneath your own tree? What did you see? What did you hear?”
Tilas the naturalist and Jackson’s family


Tilas the naturalist and Jackson’s family

“I was trying to get the bitter taste from my mouth,” Jackson replied.

“Ah, the taste of the gum I made for you from the carnivoora incisa tree,” Tilas remembered. “You still have that flavor in your mouth?”

“Yes,” Jack said. “I spit and spit, but it won’t go away.”

Tilas, still chewing his gum from the same tree, laughed.

“Harry, now you must tell me. What did you think standing beneath your own tree?”

“I knelt down and looked at the ground,” Harry explained. “The rocks, the branches, the bark, the leaves, the earth. There are so many layers to the ground here.”

“Yes,” Tilas agreed. “All time is layered in this earth.”

“Now, Kait, please, you must tell me. What did you think standing beneath your own tree?”

“I looked around at the shapes, the figures, the textures, of the plants, the bushes, the trees. Everything has a design, and even the dead trees are beautiful.

“And I thought of the stories you’ve been telling us,” Kaitlin continued, “about the uses for all these plants, how your people use them to treat themselves when they are sick or wounded.”

“Yes, we find all the medicine we need here,” Tilas said. “The bark from this tree stops pain, instantly,” he said, pointing to a tree nearby.

“A tea from this bush helps women who have just given birth,” he continued. “And the twigs from this tree are good for cleaning your teeth. We call it the Toothbrush Tree. I have never used toothpaste or a plastic toothbrush,” Tilas explained, “but I have all my teeth, and they are all strong. I am a carnivore, and I can eat all the meat I like,” he assured us proudly, flashing a bright, white smile.

“Now, Kathleen, please. What did you think of standing beneath your own tree?”

“I looked around the landscape, to the far horizon in each direction, and I tried to think how I would write about the great expanse of this place…about how I could relay the feeling of being here, standing here, out in the open plain, with the savannah all around. Feeling, at once, so small and so grand. Feeling a part of all things, of all history. It will be difficult to convey that sensation without sounding corny or cliché.”

Tilas, a member of the Samburu tribe here in the north of Kenya, has been our guide during this visit, our first to this part of the world. Out on the plains where Tilas led us on foot one morning, we have seen dik-dik, gerenuk, and impala. We have watched a lone, sleeping lion. We have been among a pride of lionesses stalking a kill. We have seen families of elephants with as many as five babies among them and a dozen giraffes that passed us by single-file, as though on parade. We have seen a male ostrich raise his tail feathers to impress his partner and a pair of ostriches sitting on their nest. We have seen Nile crocodiles up close and soaring eagles. Zebras, hippos, leopards, jackals, mongooses, baboons…at times, the landscape before us has included dozens of animals at once.

“Your first visit to Africa is a special thing,” a friend in Nairobi told us our first evening in Kenya. “You get this place, or you don’t, and you know instantly one way or the other. If you do get it, once you’ve experienced it, Africa is impossible to resist. She will call you back again and again throughout your lifetime. You will return.”

“Please, you must stay in touch with me,” Tilas told us during our morning walk across the savannah. As he spoke, he reached out and peeled off a piece of the top layer of the bark of the tree before us.

“This is the Paper Tree,” he explained. “You can peel its bark in thin pieces that you can use as paper.”

Then Tilas pulled a pen from his belt, laid out the thin strip of “paper” he’d just pulled off the tree, and began to write.

“There,” he said when he’d finished, handing the small piece of paper to Jackson.



Jackson and his Father at Kiltamany primary school where they donated 40 mattresses this month

“That is my e-mail address,” Tilas said. “Write to me to tell me when you will be returning.”

Indeed, we’ll be back as soon as we’re able.

Compiled by Kathleen Peddicord, 
Pictures by Steven Tilas, Resident Naturalist, Samburu Intrepids Camp ©Heritage Hotels Ltd

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