Read Straight on Till Morning Online
Authors: Mary S. Lovell
Charles travelled up country to look at several sites, two of which were serious possibilities. One was at Thika, which he rejected.
25
The other was a large tract near Njoro in the White Highlands, which marched with, and was originally part of, Delamere's own property which was known as Equator Ranch because the equator ran through one corner of it.
26
Charles eventually purchased 1000 acres of this land at three rupees an acre,
27
but first he got to know the land by working it for Delamere.
The land at Njoro consisted of raw and untamed bush on the slopes of the mighty Mau Escarpment, which forms the western edge of the great Rift Valley. Much of it was covered in dense forests of juniper (known as cedars), acacia and mahogo, but there were also areas of open pasture. The climate was pleasant: the site was situated at some 7000 feet, so the heat never became oppressive even in the strong sunlight of the equator, and mild frost at night was not unusual. During the day the air had an alpine sparkle to it, dry and clean.
The views were breathtaking. No man or woman alive could fail to be stirred by the sweeping vistas of the rift down to the distant Aberdare Mountains on one hand, and the multi-hued blues and greens of the Mau Forest stretching across the Rongai Valley to the slopes of the extinct volcano Menengai on the other. Game abounded in the forests, as did lions and leopards.
In one of his letters home Lord Delamere described the area around Njoro:
I measured a cedar yesterday on the road through the forest close here â 24 ft and 22 ft, three feet above the ground and round the butt, and there are many larger in the heart of the forest I believe. The more I see of the place the more I like it. This is the hottest time of the year and the thermometer has never been above 70° since I have been up here and is down to 50° in the mornings in my hut. After the rains I expect it to be very much cooler. At the next station on the place, Elburgon, it freezes even at this time of the year, but that is up in the forest.
28
Charles Miller outlines the difficulties of the new settler who
made the initial stage of his African journey by rail from Mombasa to Nairobi, and thence to the station nearest his holding on the Kikuyu escarpment, the floor of the rift or the slopes of the Mau. The final lap was covered on ox-or mule-drawn wagons, whose axles screamed out under the weight of disc ploughs, harrows, grindstones, bags of seed, rolls of barbed wire, steamer trunks, chop boxes, bedsteads, tin bath tubs, toilet seats and veritable flea markets of household goods. Practically no roads existed outside a radius of a few hundred yards from any station. The grass rose above a man's head. The ground was strewn with rocks that smashed wagon wheels, pitted with ant-bear holes capable of snapping an ox's foreleg like a dried twig. During the rains, wagons would swamp easily while being wrestled through the mill races of bloated streams. A farm no further than fifteen miles from the nearest railway station might not be reached in a fortnight.
29
With his few personal belongings, Charles settled on the land and, helped by African labour, started the task of making the farm which he optimistically called Green Hills.
In
West with the Night
Beryl wrote a poetic summary of the years which in reality must have involved a backbreaking, often heartbreaking struggle for her father. Much has been written about the difficulties besetting the pioneer settlers.
30
There was often too much sun and not enough rain. Then, when the rain did come there was often too much of it. The dirt roads became impassable in hip-deep mud; the only movement possible for weeks at a time, was on horseback or on foot and the great ox-drawn wagons, scotch carts used for supplies, and water carts, stood idle.
Clearing the land could take months. A coarse outer beard of tall grass and dense knotted scrub had to be shaved clean with bush knives, or pangas as they were known. There were forests of gum, thorn trees and giant cedar to be felled, and their great stumps extracted like decayed teeth. As Charles Miller wrote:
Boulders and man-high anthills harder than concrete must be swept away. These chores, in turn, meant on-the-job training for the African farmhands, who were patiently taught how to wield axes, picks and hoes without amputating their legs or fracturing their shoulders. The workers also had to learn the rudiments of handling the ox teams that would drag the tree stumps from the earth with chains attached to their yokes. Even the oxen required education, being local beasts that had never known any sort of halter and that were deaf to the command of the human voice. More than one farmer harnessed his oxen by dropping the yokes on them from a tree, provided that one of the African workers could drive the animal under the branches.
When ploughing finally began, the settler was likely to discover to his exasperation, that it was a rare African indeed who could comprehend the meaning of a straight line. Furrows in the infant years of pioneering on the highlands, often resembled the paths left by gigantic pythons.
31
At first the Clutterbuck homestead was, like that of all newly-arrived settlers, a hut called a rondavel, made of mud and daub with a grass-thatch roof and sited on a high sunny clearing. Whatever your social standing, these native-type huts were your introduction to living in Kenya. Their dark interiors remained cool in the sun, and at night the thick mud walls were snug against the cold air of the highlands. Lord Delamere continued to live for years in his collection of huts on the Mau Escarpment â although in his case this was from personal choice. Lord Francis Scott recalled some years later: âFor the first nine months I lived in a tent on my estate â then my wife and two young daughters came out and we put upâ¦mud and wattle huts, until about nine months later when the house [Deloraine] was ready.'
32
In
The Flame Trees of Thika
Elspeth Huxley wrote of her first African home that it âwas most companionable, for a great many creatures soon joined us in the roof and the walls. The nicest were the lizards, who would stay for hours spread-eagled on a wall quite motionless, clinging to the surface with small scaly handsâ¦the thatch was always full of sounds, little rustling, secretive noises from unseen fellow-residents.'
These huts had no proper doors, but usually some sacking provided a little privacy. The windows were merely openings cut into the walls, but they looked out on to some of the best views in the world. Langley Morris, who was taken out to East Africa as a child to live near Njoro, recalled, âI can remember kneeling on my bed and looking out of the window at the Molo Hills to the north of us, it is my earliest real memory. The hills were deep blue â as blue as your dress [cobalt]. I asked one of the African boys if they were really that blue â he told me it was the mist hanging over the hills that made them appear so.'
33
The cold night air often made fires at night a necessity, and the main hut on the Clutterbuck homestead nearly always had a big cedarwood fire burning after dark.
Furnishings were a strange mixture. Treasured antique pieces shipped from âhome' stood shoulder to shoulder with upturned packing cases which served as makeshift chairs and tables. Beds were often animal skins on wooden stretchers. The legs of tables, chairs and beds stood in tins of water â or, if available, in paraffin â to discourage the ever-present ants.
The main diet was âtommies', the plentiful Thomson's gazelle, though most of the settlers tried a wide variety of plains game when the need arose. Langley Morris, describing their food, said, âOnce my father killed a python but my mother wouldn't let me have any in case it was poisonous. My father said it was very stringy! I did eat ostrich once and
that
was stringy. Also it looked very unattractive â covered in pits like craters of the moon, where the quills had been pulled out.'
34
Cooking was done by Africans who coped admirably in preparing European food on primitive cooking ranges. These usually consisted of three flat stones over a fire, but the Morris household had managed to acquire a Somali cook who had his own ideas: ââ¦our cooking range consisted of a sheet of corrugated galvanized iron on which several small fires of charcoal were kept burning.'
35
The pioneer settlers had little in the way of entertainment and social life, but what there was revolved around horses. Within months Charles had established his interest, and began advertising âFor Sale at Njoro, several high class ponies 14hhâ15hh. Prices Reasonable apply C.B. Clutterbuck, Njoro.'
36
His remarkable talent with horses was immediately apparent when the newly organized Turf Club held a race meeting in Nairobi in February and Charles rode in many of the races on behalf of clients. He won on Lord Delamere's Dawn and also managed several places, riding horses owned by the Delameres, R. B. Cole and others.
37
From this date onwards he rode regularly in the owner-ridden Somali or country-bred horse races and was among the first to import horses to improve the blood lines.
According to Charles, or âClutt' as he became known in the protectorate, âDelamere was never really keen on racing, only he saw it as a way of improving horse blood.'
38
Clutt imported two Australian mares; Gladys, which he owned in partnership with Berkeley Cole, and Kathleen, which was owned by Lady Delamere. Both were trained by Clutterbuck and became famous in the early days of Kenyan racing. By 1906 Clutt was well established in racing circles. In a poem which starts âTo the races I went and I had a good time, There was racing and laughter and Scotch Whisky wine', his name features heavily.
39
Race meetings were only held twice a year in those early days. Handicapping was an invidious task, for the horses ranged from English thoroughbreds to Somali ârats'. On one occasion the handicapping steward was bitterly upbraided for putting 16 stone on the horse of a prominent settler and making it give 8 stone to a Somali pony. One might suppose that the settler's complaint was justified until one learns that his horse started hot favourite and that he won the race âpulling up, in a hunting saddle'. Whenever possible Clutt personally rode the horses he trained, and despite the vagaries of the handicapper, won with what must have seemed, to rival stables, maddening consistency.
40
Clara went out to join her husband in late 1905, taking Richard and Beryl with her. As was the custom, after a few months living at the unaccustomed altitude of Njoro she went down to the coast for a few days in April 1906 to spend a short time at sea level.
41
She was staying there with friends at Mombasa in April 1906 when she met Richard Meinertzhagen who recorded the meeting in his diary:
Bowring gave a dinner party this evening at which were present Mr & Mrs Coombe, Mrs Clutterbuck, Stanley of the railways, my old Fort Hall friend Ronald Humphrey and myself. Mrs Clutterbuck told me a good story which she declared to be true. Her husband wounded an old bull elephant near Molo on the Mau Plateau but failed to recover him that day. On the following day they found that he had wandered off to a small stream, and in his efforts to get water had sunk down and died, actually in the bed of the watercourse. The stream was thus dammed but instead of the water rising and flowing over the carcass it found for itself a new course underground and now flows for over a mile in this fashion.
42
By 1906 the Protectorate of East Africa was beginning to flourish and lose some of its wildness. Nairobi had changed considerably from the tin shanty town which Charles had found two years earlier, and Meinertzhagen recorded his surprise when visiting Nairobi in 1906:
â¦the town has trebled in size. Trees have sprung up everywhere, hotels exist where zebra once roamed. Private bungalows in all their ugliness now mar the landscape where I used to hunt the waterbuck, impala and duiker. The place is full of strange faces andâ¦where two years ago I knew every soul of the twenty or thirty Europeansâ¦there are now over 1200 Europeans in the town.
43
The Clutterbuck farm was already well established by the standards of the day. A friend who visited Green Hill Farm in that year to recuperate from an illness recalled a âpretty little house, with a garden full of English cottage-garden flowers', and later recalled with amusement that she was fed on âroast mutton, boiled onions and tea for every meal'.
44
Clutterbuck was still working for Lord Delamere and ran regular weekly advertisements in the
East African Standard:
âFOR SALE at Lord Delamere's Njoro Farm: Broken bullocks at 50 Rupees, Unbroken Bullocks 40 Rupees, also young large White Yorkshire, Middle white and Berkshire Pigs, Boars and Gilts at 30 Rupees eachâ¦a quantity of the above always for sale. Apply C.B. Clutterbuck Njoro.'
In August 1906 the Ladies' Column in the same newspaper proved that it was not âall work and no play' even in the pioneering days, when it carried a report of the Turf Club Ball at Nairobi.
The Ball Room was most tastefully decorated with flags and long trailing garlands of flowers and when everyone was dancing it was a very pretty sight. There were lots of pretty women in lovely frocks. Mrs Clutterbuck wore a perfectly lovely frock of pink chiffon which suited her to perfection, Lady Delamere was in wine-coloured velvet, Mrs Bowker in a dress of fine black laceâ¦
45
The rival newspaper,
The Times of East Africa
, noted at the end of that week that âThe Delameres and the Clutterbucks have left for Njoro.'
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