The 18-month-old lion cub, already bigger than a Great Dane, leapt out of the thick under-brush, put his furry front paws up on Tony Fitzjohn’s broad shoulders and rubbed heads joyously with his friend. It was Thursday, 12 June 1975, and in lion fashion Freddie was welcoming Tony back to Kora Camp after a two-day supply trip.
Kora, an isolated huddle of tents protected by a high wire fence in northern Kenya, was where 70-yearold naturalist George Adamson rehabilitated lions in a unique conservation project. Orphaned cubs or young zoo lions—animals that would otherwise remain in captivity—grew up, reproduced and lived free in an area the Kenyan government had designated a national game reserve.
Conditions at the camp were rugged: intense heat and biting tse-tse flies, no electricity or plumbing and a six-hour drive to the nearest settlement. But English-born Fitzjohn, 31, had read the Born Free books as a teenager and been captivated by the story of Joy and George Adamson raising the orphaned lioness, Elsa. Living in Africa and working with Adamson for the last three years had been a dream come true for Tony.
One of his regular jobs was a monthly trip by Land Rover to buy supplies at the tiny outpost of Garissa. This morning, before his return, he had stopped to see the district game warden and thank him for evicting a gang of armed poachers who had been leaving poison traps for rhinos inside the reserve.
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