How To Navigate Running A Business As A Working Mother

(Image via Getty)

Ed. note: This is the latest installment in a series of posts on motherhood in the legal profession, in partnership with our friends at MothersEsquire. Welcome Ryan Daugherty Sharp to our pages.

Six years ago, I transitioned from my law practice to become an owner/officer in the automatic door company that my father started when I was two, and ran until his retirement. I am clearly not the only attorney to move from the legal field to the construction world, which is riddled with daily negotiations and relies heavily on collaboration, organization, and timely flexibility. The only distinguishing factor for me is that I also happen to be a mother to three adorable, magical, messy, crazy, creative, and VERY energetic children. There are still, unfortunately, just not that many mothers in leadership positions in the construction industry. Further, because I entered both the ownership track and the “mommy track” at nearly the same time, I never had the practice and example of working for someone else while navigating parenthood. I basically started with a blank slate.  I was — and am — simultaneously “allowed” to take whatever time I want off, make my own schedule, and set up my own rules about being a working mother, but I am also completely and utterly responsible for any impact any absence places upon our business, finances, and employees.

At first this was overwhelming for me, but over the last several years, I have grown to appreciate this experience.  I have the unique vantage point of being able to simultaneously experience and address the following questions from the perspective of both a new mother and an employer.

  1. What challenges do my employees and customers — both male and female — experience in fulfilling their roles while also parenting?
  2. As a small business that may not always be able to provide big-ticket items (extended paid leave, duplicated employee roles for coverage, etc.), how can I provide employees with accommodations that truly make a difference, but also fit our business needs?

Here is what I have determined can really make a difference.

One Size Doesn’t Always Fit All – Each parent (and each parenting couple) has their own dynamic, and provided that your employee is dedicated and good at their job, that information is quite useful. Each person has a different level of detail that they want to share with their employer, but years ago, we started asking employees what their personal goals were, not just their professional goals.  Employees have wanted to save for a house, plan for retirement, compartmentalize work and home better, get home earlier, get healthier, etc. Meeting these goals can actually improve performance and focus, though they can initially seem unrelated or counteractive to workplace goals.  Thus, our team has made it a point to try help find ways to help with these goals whenever possible.  In fact, we have helped employees become more efficient, take on more responsibility, or even rearrange their schedule in a way that benefits both our company and their balance. Sometimes it just takes an honest conversation and some creativity.

Culture  – Most parenting benefits focus on paid maternity leave. For a small business (40 employees), it is somewhat difficult to offer extended leave because most job duties are unique to the individual employee. However, there is a very long span of time between when someone returns to work after a new baby and when they become an empty-nester, and a company’s culture can make so much difference in how an employee is able to navigate work and parenthood. For us, this goes way beyond congratulating a new mother or father or commenting on their kid’s cuteness (though we love doing that too).  We have found that encouraging our employees to build comradery through quarterly team-building activities and our own general willingness to communicate has led to an environment in which employees are more willing to cover a new parent’s on-call rotation, or swap or share shifts in order to accommodate a family activity.  This has, in turn, benefited our business, employees, and recruiting capability immensely. We have also encouraged office-based employees to bring their kids with them to the office or vary their schedule instead of miss a day of work (and pay) when childcare falls through. We have also worked with employees to create a work-from-home schedule to reduce summer child care costs. My kids join me regularly at the office, and we have acquired quite an extensive box of shared toys and art supplies to entertain. Since my brothers and I grew up hanging out at this building with our father, it seems particularly natural for us to have this same dynamic continue.

Flexibility – This is tricky, as we are a service profession. However, I have found that allowing varying levels of schedule flexibility is highly beneficial to employee retention and general work production. For us, it has been more about creating a culture in which — when the timing doesn’t matter — there isn’t any undesirable implication to sending an email outside of regular working hours, or in saying, “Hey, can we meet 30 min earlier because I have to pick up my kid.”  We extend the same culture to our customers as well, and they appreciate it. When it does not matter, we try to work with our employees and customers.  On the other hand, when it does matter, then we fully expect everyone to understand.  Our experience is that they do.

Let’s be real, I don’t always navigate this perfectly: I lose my cool, I need a nap, I rely heavily on others.  Still, I sometimes fall short of being the parent and employer I want to be.  My hope is, however, that a continued focus on the above items and on communication about being a working parent can help be serve my business, my family, my employees, and my customers better.  I hope that some of my observations can serve you as you navigate the balance of being a working parent for yourself, spouse, employees, co-counsel, and clients.

EarlierMothers At Law: Achieving Meaningful Success In The Legal Profession


Ryan Daugherty Sharp pursued her education at the University of Georgia where she was a member of the UGA Swimming and Diving team, graduating with a BLA (Landscape Architecture) from the College of Environment and Design. Thereafter, she worked as a Federal Planner in Pittsburgh and throughout the world, for the engineering firm now known as Atkins North America. After attending law school at the University of Kentucky, she went on to practice construction, employment, and real estate litigation matters at McBrayer, McGinnis, Leslie & Kirkland, PLLC for the next five years. In 2013, she brought these diverse skills and client services to Door Equipment Company (DEC), and now serves as its CFO and a partner in the business. She particularly enjoys being able to find new and efficient solutions for Door Equipment’s customers, working alongside skilled employees, and always striving to make DEC the best door company in the business.

An M&A Approach To Recruiting Ponzi Victims

We have a true entrepreneur of fraud on our hands here.

BREAKING: Biglaw Bonuses Are Here!!!

Bonus season has officially arrived — and it’s here SUPER early!

It’s actually a bit shocking that Biglaw bonus season is here so soon. This is actually the earliest that Biglaw bonuses have been announced since 2009. But what comes as an even bigger shocker is the fact that Cravath was not the firm to make the first move on year-end bonuses. That’s right, Biglaw associates can once again thank the firm that brought about the $190K salary scale for their early bonuses. Thank you, Milbank!

So, let’s get into the details. What do the bonuses look like this year?

Class of 2019 – $15,000
Class of 2018 – $15,000
Class of 2017 – $25,000
Class of 2016 – $50,000
Class of 2015 – $65,000
Class of 2014 – $80,000
Class of 2013 – $90,000
Class of 2012 – $100,000
Class of 2011 – $100,000

If you recall, these are the exact same bonuses that were handed out last year (and 72 percent of our survey respondents thought this would be exactly what happened). But you may also recall that earlier this week, we reminded everyone that if 2019’s year-end bonuses were the same as last year’s, overall bonus compensation would be substantially lower than in 2018, since associates at many high-end firms also received special summer bonuses. Perhaps Cravath will come swooping in with some higher bonus bucks for associates? We suppose we’ll find out as bonus season unfolds.

Bonuses at the Milbank will be paid on or before December 31st, meaning associates may miss out on holiday gift spending, but will surely have a very happy new year.

Read the full bonus memo on the next page.

Remember everyone, we depend on your tips to stay on top of important bonus updates, so when your firm matches, please text us (646-820-8477) or email us (subject line: “[Firm Name] Matches”). Please include the memo if available. You can take a photo of the memo and send it via text or email if you don’t want to forward the original PDF or Word file.

And if you’d like to sign up for ATL’s Bonus Alerts (which is the alert list we also use for salary announcements), please scroll down and enter your email address in the box below this post. If you previously signed up for the bonus alerts, you don’t need to do anything. You’ll receive an email notification within minutes of each bonus announcement that we publish. Thanks for all of your help!


Staci ZaretskyStaci Zaretsky is a senior editor at Above the Law, where she’s worked since 2011. She’d love to hear from you, so please feel free to email her with any tips, questions, comments, or critiques. You can follow her on Twitter or connect with her on LinkedIn.

Law Firms Trying Not To Go Bankrupt This Next Recession

While superficially the economy continues to slowly inch forward, cracks in the foundation are becoming increasingly glaring to anyone willing to look. With the last recession still fresh in their minds, law firms are committed to not entering this next downturn with their pants around their ankles like last time.

When the last recession hit, a bunch of once-stable law firms got curb-stomped by reality when the check came due on their heavily leveraged lifestyle. Firms were borrowing big from banks and living high on generous lines of credit. It allowed firms to fool themselves into thinking they’d survive the economic catastrophe working its way through their clients and that rosy revenue projections would keep the cash flowing. Dewey know how that turned out?

American Lawyer has a new piece highlighting how firms have spent the intervening years turning away from the banks and toward keeping more capital in-house:

“The debt load carried by firms today is quite a bit different from the debt load that was carried by firms in 2008 and 2009,” [Citi Private Bank Law Firm Group Managing Director Michael] McKenney said, looking at a sample of 60 law firms in the Am Law 100, which does not include any firms that completed significant mergers or acquisitions in the past 10 years.

Among that sample, he said, bank debt per equity partner was $94,000 at the end of 2008. At the end of 2018, bank debt per equity partner was $57,000 at the same 60 firms.

But on the flip side, McKenney said, capital contributions per equity partner have jumped, from $330,000 in 2008 to $549,000 in 2018. The increase is due in part to law firms’ success in recent years, he noted, as capital contributions are often taken as a percentage of a partner’s earnings.

Upping the ante and lowering the debt is all well and good, but the comparison missing from this analysis is the slashing of the equity partner ranks over the last decade. If bumping up capital contributions per partner by 66 percent is impressive, but if that move corresponded with reducing equity partner headcount by 30-40 percent, it’s not as big a leap as it would seem.

Whether it’s these increased contributions or a general belt tightening elsewhere, it’s definitely enough to reduce firm debt loads which is all that’s important. Still, the consolidation of the firm’s capital in the hands of fewer and fewer equity partners does make the firm more reliant on those partners for its financial wherewithal. At a certain point, a firm puts itself in the unenviable position of a five-partner poaching representing a significant dent in the firm’s rainy day funds. There are advantages to spreading out the risk.

But this is all academic if the recession guts demand so badly that firms can’t keep revenue coming in the door. As we watch the barbarians gather at the gates, law firms are furiously repairing their ramparts. We’ll learn whether or not they’re successful soon enough.

Law Firm Debt Levels Shrink as Partners Put More Skin in the Game [American Lawyer]

Rudy Hires New Lawyers To Stand By Helplessly And Watch Him Admit To Crimes On Twitter

Rudy Giuliani (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Hosanna! Rudy Giuliani, the world’s worst client, has finally gotten himself competent counsel. Which he celebrated by going online to declare once again that his entire Ukraine project was for the personal benefit of his beloved client, Donald J. Trump, not in service of America’s interest in rooting out corruption in Ukraine. He’s always helping!

What “false charges” against his non-paying, all-powerful client is he talking about? What does smearing Joe Biden have to do with defending Donald Trump? Is he … is he connecting his recent shenanigans in Ukraine to the Mueller investigation?

How very odd that at least four competent attorneys already turned Rudy down, including his former partner Paul L. Shechtman at Bracewell which “rejected the idea, according to two people with knowledge of the matter,” according to the New York Times.

Good thing his new lawyer Robert Costello of Davidoff Hutcher & Citron was right in the middle of the Mueller investigation, so he’ll have no trouble getting up to speed.

There are a whole lot of white-collar attorneys in New York, and yet Rudy picked the guy whom the Mueller Report describes approaching Michael Cohen to be a “back channel” to Donald Trump’s legal team after Cohen had decided to flip? REALLY?

On or about April 17, 2018, Cohen began speaking with an attorney, Robert Costello, who had a close relationship with Rudolph Giuliani, one of the President’s personal lawyers. Costello told Cohen that he had a “back channel of communication” to Giuliani, and that Giuliani had said the “channel” was “crucial” and “must be maintained.”

Here’s Costello appearing to dangle a pardon in an email using a mangled Garth Brooks lyric.

“I have absolutely no concern about any of this because it was simply a reference to the president of the United States being the ‘friend in high places’ — nothing more,” Costello told Courthouse News Service back in April.

On second thought, it makes perfect sense that Costello would be simpatico with his old buddy Rudy. And after Michael Cohen said he’d get his own lawyers thankyouverymuch, he refused to pay Costello the $43,857 he claimed he was owed for all that backchanneling to Rudy Giuliani. So, really, it’s a match made in heaven.

Why Eric M. Creizman and Melissa Madrigal from Pierce Bainbridge would agree to represent a loose cannon who is under investigation by SDNY, tweets all day long, and still picks up the phone for every reporter in the I-95 corridor is a mystery. But a big mazel tov to Jon Sales, the lawyer Rudy just fired. Got out in the nick of time!

Facing Investigation, Giuliani Needed a Lawyer, but Firms Stayed Away [New York Times]
I Meant Trump: Lawyer Who Emailed Cohen Opens Up [Courthouse News]
Giuliani Turns to Pierce Bainbridge and Michael Cohen’s Ex-Lawyer in Ukraine Scandal [Law.com]


Elizabeth Dye lives in Baltimore where she writes about law and politics.

Who will protect citizens from their ‘supposed’ protectors? – The Zimbabwean

7.11.2019 15:00

The month of October brought not just scorching temperatures, but the searing heat may well be the signs of the hard and tough living conditions that Zimbabweans are enduring.

Hilton Tafadzwa Tamangani

The situation in the country is proving to be ever more dire as people are facing a leadership that does not seem to care for its citizens, rightly reflected by the death of Hilton Tafadzwa Tamangani while in police custody on the 18th of October 2019.

See the full report:  October 2019 MMR

Both Houses of Parliament Will Reassemble on Tuesday 12th November

Post published in: Featured

Both Houses of Parliament Will Reassemble on Tuesday 12th November – The Zimbabwean

Update on Parliamentary Sittings 22nd to 24th October

Both Houses of Parliament Will Reassemble on Tuesday 12th November

Both Houses will reconvene next week, having adjourned until Tuesday 12th November after their last sittings on 24th October.  In the meantime, MPs and Ministers have been attending the pre-Budget Seminar at Victoria Falls from 30th October to 4th November.

Previous bulletins since the opening of the Second Session of this Parliament on 1st October have already covered the Government’s legislative agenda for the session of Parliament [Bill Watch 54/2019 [link] of 22nd October] and the legislative output of the First Session [Bill Watch 55/2019 [link] of 24th October].  This bulletin outlines developments in Parliament during its first working sittings on 22nd, 23rd and 24th October.

In Parliament 22nd to 24th October

Anti-sanctions motions in both Houses

The President declared Friday 25th October a public holiday “for the national expression of opposition to the illegal sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe by certain countries” [link].  On Thursday in both Houses ZANU-PF members moved identical motions calling for the unconditional and immediate lifting of sanctions and applauding SADC states for their support in making 25th October a regional day for solidarity with Zimbabwe in this call.  Members were invited to participate in the anti-sanctions march to the anti-sanctions event at the National Sports Stadium.

Senate

The Senate had a quiet week. On Tuesday 22nd and Wednesday 23rd there was brief debate on the customary vote of thanks to the President for his speech at the opening of the current session on 1st October.  On Thursday 24th debate was both livelier and longer when Senators spoke on the anti-sanctions motion until 5.17 pm – and MDC-A Senators disputed ZANU-PF Senators’ claims that sanctions were to blame for the state of the economy.  It was an unusually late sitting for the Senate, which had risen at 3.35 pm on Tuesday and 3.05 pm on Wednesday.

National Assembly

In sharp contrast to the Senate, the National Assembly had a turbulent week.

Repercussions of MDC-A MPs walk-out on the President at 1st October Joint Sitting

During the week there were repercussions of the penalty the Speaker imposed on MDC-A MPs on 1st October: that those MDC-A MPs who had remained seated when the President entered the National Assembly chamber to deliver the State of the Nation Address, and then walked out, had been guilty of disrespecting the Head of State and would forfeit their sitting allowances for that day and five earlier sittings; the full ruling is available on the Veritas website [link].

Tuesday 22nd October:  At the start of business Hon Gonese [MDC-A] asked the Speaker to explain the principle underlying this penalty  The Speaker cut him short, saying he had already received an official letter on the subject from the MDC-A party, to which he would be replying.

Wednesday 23rd:  At the start of Question Time, when an MDC-A MP put a question to the Minister of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare, the Minister of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs suggested to the Speaker that if MDC-A MPs  do not recognise the President – the official MDC-A party explanation for the walkout at the official opening – “they cannot therefore extend a question and expect an answer from a Minister who has been appointed by the President”.  The Speaker agreed.  From then on the situation deteriorated, with MDC-A MPs insisting on their right to ask questions and resisting ejection from the chamber by the Sergeant-at-Arms and police officers.  At 4.32 pm the House adjourned after what Hon Mliswa described as “an absolutely useless day”, before he walked out in disgust over the absence of Ministers to answer questions.

Thursday 24th:  Hon Mliswa [Independent MP for Norton] pleaded with the Speaker to reconsider his Wednesday ruling banning questions from MDC-A MPs.  In response to Hon Mliswa the Speaker said he would reconsider his decision but would need time to think about it very deeply.

Anti-sanctions motion

This motion was moved on Thursday afternoon by Hon Nyathi of ZANU-PF.  It was quiet enough until ZANU-PF MPs started alleging that MDC-A MPs had begged the USA and the EU to impose sanctions and should be regarded as terrorists pursuing a regime change agenda.  MPs on both sides then started singing and interjecting, until the Temporary Speaker terminated proceedings at 5 pm and adjourned the House until 12th November, in terms of Standing  Order 113 which allows a presiding officer to act in this way “in the case of great disorder arising”.

Statutory Instruments [SIs] and General Notices [GNs]

23rd and 25th October and 1st November

23rd October [Gazette Extraordinary]

Traffic Safety Council Fees

SI 221A/2019 – regulations by the Minister of Transport and Infrastructural Development fixing ZWL$ fees for the services offered by the Council, including defensive driving courses.

25th October 2019 declared a public holiday

SI 221B/2019 [link– the President’s declaration in terms of the Public Holidays and Prohibition of Business Act that Friday 25th October would be a public holiday “for the national expression of opposition to the illegal sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe by certain countries”.

25th October

Legal practitioners – GZU law degree recognised

SI 222/2019 [link–   Legal Practitioners (Designated Legal Qualifications) (Amendment) Notice – this SI by the Council for Legal Education adds the Bachelor of Laws (Honours) degree of Great Zimbabwe University to the list of “designated legal qualifications” for admission to the legal profession.  Law degrees from the University of Zimbabwe and Midlands State University are already listed.

Collective bargaining agreements

SI 223/2019 [link– Insurance Industry – a cushioning allowance [100% of existing package of wage and allowances] for July, August and September 2019.  This increases the minimum package for the lowest grade to RTGS$ 907 [approximately US$ 135].

SI 224/2019 [link] – Commercial Sectors – increased minimum wages for May 2019 to April 2020 by 50%. The minimum wage for the lowest grade goes up from RTGS$ 261 to RTGS$ 392 [approximately US$ 45].

Public Service Vehicles – New licence and other fees

SI 225/2019 [link– this SI enacts a new Fourth Schedule [“Fees”] for the Road Motor Transportation (Public Service Vehicles) Regulations of 1998 [fees for foreign public service vehicle operators are in US$, and for Zimbabwean operators are in ZWL$].

Customs duty suspensions

SI 226/2019 [link– amendments, backdated to 1st January 2019, affecting the existing suspensions of duty for (1) specified fertilisers for the 2018-19 summer cropping season (2) buses imported by approved tour operators for use in the tourism industry.  Note

SI 229/2019 [link– an addition to the already long list of mining locations qualifying for 3-year suspensions, under section 9K of the principal regulations.  The section provides for suspension of  duty on goods imported for mine development operations on mines specified in statutory instruments such as this.

Income tax exemption & VAT refunds for Huawei Technologies Co.

SI 227/2019 [link] and SI 228/2019 [link], both made by the Minister of Finance and Economic Development and both backdated to 25th August 2014, give effect to the Framework Agreement between the Government of Zimbabwe and the Export-Import Bank of China [“the Bank”].  They confer taxation privileges for the purposes of NetOne Cellular (Private) Limited and TelOne (Private) Limited infrastructure modernisation projects conducted using funds provided by the Bank.  SI 227 exempts Huawei’s receipts and accruals under the projects from income tax, non-resident tax on fees and capital gains tax.  SI 228 provides for VAT refunds for the benefit of Huawei, NetOne and TelOne in respect of goods and services purchased for the projects using funds provided by the Bank.

1st November [Regular Friday Gazette]

Customs duty suspension

SI 230/2019 this lists provides for  a two-year suspension of duty from 1st June 2019 on “power equipment, critical spares and transformer components” imported by ZESA group companies ZENT, ZETDC and ZPC.  The list of goods covered fills several pages of small print.

Gazetting of Veterans of the Liberation Struggle Bill [link]

GN 2016/2019 announced the publication of this Bill with the Gazette.

1st November [Late Afternoon Gazette Extraordinary]

New ZWL$5 and $2 banknotes

SI 231/2019 [link] – Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (Issue of Two Dollar and Five Dollar Banknotes ) Notice, 2019 was issued by the Minister of Finance and Economic Development and specifies the denominations, designs, form or material of new banknotes as determined by the President in terms of section 40(2) of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Act.

This SI permits the Reserve Bank to issue new banknotes as foreshadowed in the Press Statement 4th November on Deliberations of the Monetary Policy Committee [MPC] [link].  The MPC recommended a gradual increase in cash supply over the next six months in response to the need for more cash for transactional purposes, saying that the current proportion of cash at 4% of broad money supply was well below regional and international levels and had led to the present undesirable cash premiums.

Note on issue of coins:  Reserve Bank Governor Mangudya said in a Reserve Bank Public Notice dated 4th November [link] that in addition to the new banknotes, $2 bond coins will be issued.  These new bond coins and the existing bond coins and bond notes will circulate alongside, and be interchangeable with, the two and five dollar banknotes issued in terms of SI 231.

Veritas makes every effort to ensure reliable information, but cannot take legal responsibility for information supplied.

Who will protect citizens from their ‘supposed’ protectors?
Open challenge to Zimbabwe govt for nationwide LIVE public debates on so-called sanctions

Post published in: Featured

Morning Docket: 11.07.19

(Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

* Rudy Giuliani has finally selected the counsel that will represent him in the impeachment probe. Looks like his version of “The Apprentice: Lawyer Edition” is now over. [Politico]

* Sources say former Attorney General Jeff Sessions will announce today that he is running for his old Senate seat. [CNN}

* A judge has signaled that he will allow a lawsuit filed by House Democrats seeking President Trump’s tax records to proceed. [The Hill]

* A white male former lawyer for the Hershey Company can Hershey’s Kiss his race and gender discrimination lawsuit against the company goodbye. [Patriot News]

* Law student groups are refusing to accept funding from firms with mandatory arbitration clauses. [Bloomberg]

* President Trump reportedly asked Attorney General Barr to clear him of wrongdoing over Ukraine, which Attorney General Barr refused to do. [Wall Street Journal]


Jordan Rothman is a partner of The Rothman Law Firm, a full-service New York and New Jersey law firm. He is also the founder of Student Debt Diaries, a website discussing how he paid off his student loans. You can reach Jordan through email at jordan@rothmanlawyer.com.

Our Nightmare Will Only End When We Seek The Protection of Everyone’s Interests. – The Zimbabwean

Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa attends a rally against Western sanctions in Harare, Zimbabwe October 25, 2019. REUTERS/Philimon Bulawayo

The idea that in 2019 there are thugs still defying court orders and evicting farmers like Gary and Jo Hensman on purely racial grounds while the police look on tells us why it is important to disabuse ourselves of the delusion that Eddie Cross’ presence on some RBZ committee, or Kirsty Coventry’s inclusion in cabinet is all the proof minorities need that E.D. and Zanu (PF) have changed.

Shortly after the coup, E.D organized a meeting with the White community. Many came back from it completely besotted and donning the scarf. They had found the best protector of their interests, his 37-year record notwithstanding.

It did not seem to matter that this was the same man who oversaw Mugabe’s instruments of repression as Chairman of the Joint Operations Command for decades. It was lost on them that the same instruments of repression that had brutalized many innocent Zimbabweans, including farmers some of whom had lost not just their property but their lives, had finally brought Zimbabwe’s most feared men to the throne.

In the euphoria of the toppling of Robert Mugabe, I heard many who had been sympathetic to our cause say it was over. ED was the best guarantor of stability and safety. After all, Catriona Laing said so.

All of a sudden, the simple and obvious truth that the best protection for the interests of those in the minority was not going to be found in E.D’s private promises to them, but the wholesale reforms that would ensure everyone was treated the same under the law, became a relationship breaker.

We can only bring our nightmare to an end when we seek the protection of everyone’s interests. Make no mistake about it, the same government that will shoot innocent citizens exercising their constitutional right to protest will turn a blind eye on the eviction of a white farmer from his land.

The same government that will raid an escrow account jeopardizing billion-dollar projects funded by the Chinese will not hesitate to raid individual and corporate FCAs.

The same government that will let people die in hospitals rather than address the legitimate demands of the striking doctors will allow vendors to be beaten and stripped of their wares.

Their incompetence and corruption will affect us all. Today the Security Services might celebrate getting the biggest chunk from the National Budget, but at our rate of decline, history shall soon repeat itself and we shall once again see Zimbabwean trillionaires living in abject poverty.

In the English language, a palindrome is a word that reads the same backwards and forwards. Allow me to leave you with somewhat of a palindromic truth that can only lead to our total emancipation if we apply it both ways: The oppressor of the minority can never be the best guarantor for majority interests. The oppressor of the majority can never be the best guarantor for minority interests. We must be all in this together.

Is there not a cause?

Open challenge to Zimbabwe govt for nationwide LIVE public debates on so-called sanctions
Walking Safari in Zimbabwe: Adventure Among the Beasts

Post published in: Featured

Walking Safari in Zimbabwe: Adventure Among the Beasts – The Zimbabwean

Our guide, Julian Brookstein, stood before us dead-serious, the butt of his bolt-action A lilac-breasted roller. (Courtesy of Kevin Revolinkski)

There were no fences, and in a few minutes, we’d lose the sanctuary of a nearby safari jeep as we ventured out into the bush on our first walking safari.

Such an activity sounded insane to me, and when Charles Slater, the safari planner who organized our trip, insisted I try it, I have to confess I had misgivings. I’d seen Slater’s own photos of a wild bull elephant’s face filling his lens, and heard his description of it towering over him. That sounded like the moment before the climax of a “what-was-he-thinking?” story. I double-checked the fine print of my travel insurance, and sure enough, walking safaris are covered, even under just the basic policy.

Twenty minutes later, we realized just how much bigger an elephant is when your feet are on the same dirt hers are. In the scrappy trees, 100 feet away, she was heading directly toward us, leading a small herd with a few babies among them. The females aren’t to be trifled with, but her poor eyesight meant she hadn’t yet discovered us. Brookstein, noting the presence of young, reversed direction—quickly, but without drama—and led us off a distance, where we stood to watch them emerge from the trees into a sandy plain.

KPT_2016A lioness blends in with the surrounding grasses. (Courtesy of Kevin Revolinkski)

“Just wait. She will smell us,” he said.

She was two steps out of the brush when she stopped dead in her tracks. An unheard signal was made and in unison, the whole herd turned and moved back into cover.

Traveling as a group of six friends, we had landed at the international airport in Victoria Falls in western Zimbabwe. The first day, we stood drenched in rising spray, looking down into the impossible depths and breadth of the thundering falls along Zimbabwe’s border with Zambia. The next morning, we took a shuttle to Robins Camp, a collection of simple but nice chalets at the heart of the largest of the nation’s national parks, Hwange, a 5,657-square-mile beauty. This is where we met the professor of the jungle.

Brookstein, a licensed walking-safari guide with an impressive depth of knowledge about anything we encountered, had only recently gone independent, quitting from a larger safari company. But fortunately, Slater had known him from previous trips and booked him directly for ours. Whether it was a lion or a termite’s nest, Brookstein would wait for us to get our photos and then the lecture would begin.

KPS_0059African water buffalo. (Courtesy of Kevin Revolinkski)

In the jeep, we came upon two hyenas howling up at the gory remains of an impala lodged in a tree by a leopard. He turned and sat on the driver-side door to tell us a story of hyenas—of their habits and behavior, of the matriarchal society, of the queen and her privileged daughter, of the fall of that queen and the brutal retribution upon her descendant by those who had previously given deference. It was a telling at once of scientific study and a tale of political intrigue.

Elephant tracks.Elephant tracks. (Courtesy of Kevin Revolinkski)

Our first day of safari, we saw what must have been two or three herds of elephants—at least 80 of the noble beasts—trekking together through dust and Zimbabwe’s equivalent of fall colors, rattling orange and rust leaves of June that appear with the cooler nights of winter.

sunsetA memorable sunset caps off the day. (Courtesy of Kevin Revolinkski)

One has to look a bit here to find the animals; but then, it felt more like reality than the almost exhibitionist game parks of South Africa or Botswana. Up before the sun, we donned insulated parkas in the 50-degree chill and rode along in an open Land Cruiser on two-track. Brookstein stopped at concrete crossroads markers where the cheetahs like to climb up and scat-mark territory. Many of the droppings were fresh but it took a couple of days before we finally saw one of the graceful cats. Estimations claim there are fewer than 200 cheetahs in Zimbabwe, most of them within three primary wildlife preserves, of which Hwange is one. On our third morning, we spotted not one, but two males. They moved off right away, but one paused to look back over a shoulder at a jeep full of gaping human mouths.

Unlike the instant gratification of more popular and more crowded parks, there was heightened joy in the exclusive event as if we’d earned it. All along the way, we came across zebras, antelope, giraffes, baboons, and even a pride of lions with playful cubs. We sneaked out of the vehicle and up the steps of a blind overlooking them where they lounged by a watering hole. But Brookstein has brought groups right up to them on hiking occasions, and has retraced his steps in the bush to find fresh lion prints over his own.

hyena What tales of political intrigue could this hyena tell us? (Courtesy of Kevin Revolinkski)

Brookstein reassured me, “Zimbabwe is actually one of the safest destinations to do walking safaris in Africa. Obviously, we are walking in areas that contain big, dangerous animals. However, Zimbabwean professional guides are the most qualified on the continent to do it.”

Twice a year, would-be guides sit for two-hour exams in habits and habitat, firearms, hunting and guiding laws, and a general test. When all four are passed, the applicant gets a learner’s license and must pass a first-aid course and exam before being allowed just to guide from a vehicle. An apprenticeship with a professional guide follows, lasting three to four years. Then follows a marksmanship exam at a shooting range, an advanced emergency aid exam, documented hunting skills experience, and finally a letter of recommendation from a mentor.

elephant teethExamining worn down elephant teeth. (Courtesy of Kevin Revolinkski)

Finally, you stand before an examination board of experienced guides for up to an hour of questioning. Julian said, “The words you want to hear are, ‘We would like to invite you to proficiency.’” This is a weeklong exam, wherein the applicant sets up and runs a bush camp for two examiners, who test them around the clock on everything from camp cooking to confronting a dangerous animal.

Standing in a seasonal river bed, Brookstein held up a piece of elephant dung to our bemusement and pulled it apart to reveal a mass of leaves no different from the ones on the trees. He explained the six sets of teeth adults wear out over a lifetime and told us this was the result of the ineffective chewing of a 60-plus-year-old pachyderm. We learned this and not 10 minutes later down the road, we could then spot similar droppings.

Elephant encounter.Elephant encounter. (Courtesy of Kevin Revolinkski)

Brookstein praises this as evidence of a working park system: Old elephants. On one of our hikes, we came across an entire skeleton strewn among the dust and straw-like grasses. He pointed out the half-worn sixth set of teeth in the skull and we hefted the massive tusks. Poaching still happens but parks where the “ellies” can live a long life like this are doing something right. And it’s not the humans who have scattered the bones. He guided a zoologist once who arranged them across the earth in order as parts of a model awaiting assembly. The next time Julian visited, the bones had been scattered by elephants, as if they were appalled by the scent of the humans or their unnatural rearrangement of the dead.

A close up of the elephant.A close up of the elephant. (Courtesy of Kevin Revolinkski)

“Some elephants pass through here and nothing: They have no reaction. Others, they come here and they touch the bones. They knew him,” he said.

The safari gave us a good mix of hiking and driving. The jeep sometimes is a better blind, especially for the birdlife. We saw a profound range of species, including five of the six resident species of hornbills, and the entire group became obsessed with getting the perfect photo of the vivid lilac-breasted roller. At day’s end, we watched hippos, elephants, antelope, and crocodiles from a blind overlooking a watering hole, and soon the sun sank into magnificent vermillion. We climbed back into the jeep and headed back to camp for dinner.

All in a line.All in a line. (Courtesy of Kevin Revolinkski)

A hyena crossed the road, and for one moment, it paused to look back at us warily. One ear was shredded and I wondered if this was one of the royal characters fallen from grace.

Kevin Revolinski is an avid traveler and the author of 15 books, including “The Yogurt Man Cometh: Tales of an American Teacher in Turkey” and several outdoor and brewery guidebooks. He is based in Madison, Wis., and his website is TheMadTraveler.com