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Gerald Durrell
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=== Cameroons 1947β1948: Bakebe, Mamfe and Eshobi === Durrell planned to visit the [[British Cameroons]] in West Africa. He teamed up with [[John Yealland]], an ornithologist with some collecting experience, and several British zoos expressed interest in seeing whatever they were able to bring back.<ref>Botting (1999), pp. 104β105.</ref> The planning took over a year, and during that time Durrell met and fell in love with a woman in London that he refers to in his writings only as "Juliet". Durrell considered marrying her, but she ended the affair after a couple of years.<ref>Botting (1999), pp. 106β107.</ref>{{Multiple image | image2 = Angwantibo 1963.jpg | alt2 = Black and white photograph of an animal like a small monkey | image1 = ArctocebusCalabarensisWolf.jpg | alt1 = Colour painting of an animal like a small monkey | footer = The angwantibo: an 1864 painting ''(left)'' and a 1963 photograph }} Durrell and Yealland left from Liverpool on 14 December 1947.<ref>Botting (1999), pp. 109β111, 115.</ref> The ship broke down three times, but eventually reached the coast of the Cameroons at about the turn of the year.<ref>Botting (1999), pp. 115β116.</ref> The two men stayed in [[LimbΓ©, Cameroon|Victoria]], on the coast, buying supplies, planning trips to the interior, and learning [[Cameroonian Pidgin English|Cameroonian pidgin]].<ref>Botting (1999), pp. 117β119.</ref> In early January they stopped in [[Bakebe]] for three days, acquiring a [[hairy frog]] and a baby [[Drill (animal)|drill]], among other creatures, and then went on to [[Mamfe]], where they spent a week.<ref>Botting (1999), pp. 120β123.</ref> In mid-January Yealland returned to Bakebe to establish a base, and Durrell went on to Eshobi, with people carrying his equipment as there was nothing resembling a road.<ref>Botting (1999), pp. 125β127.</ref> He spent months there, collecting hundreds of animals, and the return to Mamfe required him to hire sixty people to carry them all, with Durrell suffering from [[Pappataci fever|sandfly fever]] during the trip.<ref>Botting (1999), pp. 133β135.</ref> He rested at Bakebe for a few days to recover, and while he was there a hunter brought in an [[angwantibo]], one of the animals Durrell was keenest to obtain, as he knew [[London Zoo]] were looking to acquire them. [[Cecil Webb]], a well-established animal collector, arrived in the Cameroons intending to catch angwantibos shortly afterwards; he considered Durrell and Yealland to be inexperienced and amateurish, and Durrell was delighted to be able to tell him when they met that the angwantibo was prospering. Durrell gave Webb a chimpanzee, named Cholmondely, to take back to London Zoo.<ref>Botting (1999), pp. 136β137.</ref> In July, as they began making arrangements to return, Durrell realised they did not have enough money. He wired home for a loan; Leslie's girlfriend, Doris Hall, sent Β£250 (equivalent to Β£{{formatprice|{{inflation|UK|250|1948|r=-2}}}} in {{Inflation/year|UK}}) immediately. Durrell came down with [[malaria]] just before the return home. He was told by a doctor that he would die if he insisted on travelling to the coast and boarding the ship, rather than resting. Durrell ignored the advice, and sailed from [[Tiko]] with the animals on 25 July, recovering on the voyage. They arrived in Liverpool on 10 August, with nearly two hundred animals, which were dispersed to various English zoos.<ref>Botting (1999), pp. 138β139.</ref>
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