It was September 19 , 1977 . I was conducting my work as a supervisor for the construction workmen in one of the tea estates around the Habiganj district . We were building a small irrigation canal from a nearby stream . After the work was over , the kind owner gave me permission to shoot half a dozen red jungle fowl on his property ; which I could take home for eating .
That evening , I had a go at them with my Laurona 12 bore sidelock ejector side by side shotgun ( which I always kept under the seat of my Ford pickup truck ) and a packet of Eley Alphamax number 4 birdshot shells . I was quite successful at this , even managing to shoot two of them with one shell . At the time , my close friend and fellow war veteran , Niyazur was going through an extremely difficult time . He was going through his fifth divorce and this ex wife had successfully kicked him out of his own house . As a result , I let Niyazur stay in one of my two rooms for a few weeks until he could win a legal battle in court against his ex wife and get his house back . I decided to take back the six red jungle fowl to my home and share them with Niyazur , after gutting and cleaning all of the downed birds .
Niyazur and I spatchcocked two of the red jungle fowl and seasoned them with salt , pepper , sour cream and paprika . Then , we grilled them over an open fire and ate them with fried potatoes , canned spaghetti and two bottles of local Hunter brand beer . I had already purchased a television for my flat , by that time and we were both watching the local news . The local police DC was talking about a rogue Asiatic elephant bull which had come down from the hills , recently . This animal was wantonly destructive and had gone through two entire villages , destroying everything in his wake . To make matters worse , he had already killed ten people . The DC offered 2000 Taka to any of the local hunters / arms owners who could successfully kill the rogue elephant , before further loss of human life was incurred .
Hearing about this amount of money , I felt tempted to try my hand at elephant shooting . I owned a large calibre rifle ( a .458 Winchester Magnum ) and had a good stock of solid ammunition for it . 2000 Taka was roughly four times of what used to get offered for a man eating cheetah and I could use that kind of money . I asked Niyazur what he thought about my idea and he remarked that it would just be like Stewart Granger shooting an elephant bull at the beginning of the 1950 cinematic adaptation of “ King Solomon’s Mines “ ( a favorite childhood film of Niyazur’s and mine ) , but far more exciting .
I went to my closet and retrieved my .458 WM ( Winchester Magnum) . It was custom built by Flaig’s in Millvale , Pennsylvania on a Winchester Enfield 1917 action with a Douglas Premium barrel and a French walnut stock . I had purchased it from Colonel Mirza just a few months back and had only used it so far against an Axis deer , a pair of wild boar and a marauding Royal Bengal tiger. I then opened my safe , where I kept all of my ammunition . I had two boxes of Winchester Super Speed factory loaded ammunition ( with the boxes advertising a velocity of 2130 feet per second ) in the safe :
* One was a box of 510 grain soft nosed ammunition .
* One was a box of 500 grain round nosed steel jacketed solid ammunition .
These , I carefully kept in my safe with a little silica gel in order to prevent moisture from making contact with the ammunition . Colonel Mirza had educated me about a few traits of the .458 WM calibre . Since it employed a 500 grain bullet being propelled at 2130 fps ( feet per second) from a 2 1/2 inch shell , the gunpowder needed to be severely compressed . This compression ( while of no consequence in freshly manufactured ammunition ) would lead to severe fluctuations in velocity in ammunition which had been lying around for a year or two after being exposed to the elements . By using silica gel , the Colonel had figured out how to keep the moisture out of unopened packets and preserve the freshness of the .458 WM ammunition for more than just a few years . Ever since then , I have always kept my .458 WM loaded ammunition in a tight safe with some silica gel in order to keep out the moisture .
I carefully removed the box of 500 grain solid ammunition and laid them next to my .458 WM . I felt hopeful that it would prove adequate for the rogue elephant bull .
.458 WM belonging to the author .