Surrounded by rocky hillsides, herds of Black Wildebeest ran with impunity among the fields of South Africa’s Free State. It wasn’t always this way. In fact, it wasn’t long ago that seeing even a single Black Wildebeest on this land would have been unheard of. And unwelcome.
By the time of The Great War’s beginning, the dominant herbivore in South Africa was reduced to less than 600 animals. The Black Wildebeest wasn’t driven to near oblivion for its meat or its horns.
Surrounded by rocky hillsides, herds of Black Wildebeest ran with impunity among the fields of South Africa’s Free State. It wasn’t always this way. In fact, it wasn’t long ago that seeing even a single Black Wildebeest on this land would have been unheard of. And unwelcome.
By the time of The Great War’s beginning, the dominant herbivore in South Africa was reduced to less than 600 animals. The Black Wildebeest wasn’t driven to near oblivion for its meat or its horns.