Author: Darryn Murray

  • Gratitude versus gratuity

    In this blog, Bushwise Trainer Darryn Murray discusses gratitude versus gratuity. This delicate question is one that often arises with new field guide trainees. As Darryn describes, it’s essential that we as guides are just as appreciative of earnest gratitude, as we are of generous gratuity. 

    Read time: 5 mins

    How do you measure gratitude versus gratuity?

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    If you ask young guides where their dream job is, most of them will answer along the lines of Africa’s most exclusive, expensive and luxurious game viewing areas. The major difference is whether the guide is there to change guests’ lives or simply hoping for the gratuity at the end of the guests’ stay.

    Several years ago, I guided a family of eight from the USA, a couple that had just retired, their two daughters and their husbands and their two granddaughters. The grandparents had never travelled abroad before, but they had recently retired after 60 + years of working 9-5 jobs. 

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    Their children and their spouses, aged between 40 and 50 years old, had helped pay for the safari experience to bring their parents to Africa on safari as this had been a life-long dream for the family, but they’d never been able to afford it.

    A life-long dream realised

    I wasn’t made aware of how long they had been saving up for this family holiday to come on safari. It was a standard length stay for a group of guests – three nights and four days. 

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    We had amazing sightings throughout their stay, many good laughs were shared by all of us on the vehicle, and the grandfather even drove the game viewer around the parking lot on the last morning so that he could tick that off of his “bucket list”.

    As they gathered to leave on the last morning after breakfast, the elderly grandmother walked up to me, took me by the hands and began to weep as she handed me a handwritten note. It read as follows:

    “Dearest Darryn,

    We have saved up for 60 years to be able to come on a holiday like this, we watch wildlife shows on TV every night and always imagined what it would be like to do it in person, well it has been everything that we ever dreamed of and so much more.

    You have truly made this experience one we will never be able to forget, Thank you,

    Kindest regards”

    She then handed me all the South African currency that she had left, saying that she didn’t have much left, but that I deserved to have every last bit to show her appreciation. She extended her hand out and handed me R2.50 (roughly $0.15). 

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    I still have this as well as the note that she left me because this was something that stuck very firmly in my mind to prove that we’re making a difference in the world. 

    This may be a once-in-a-lifetime experience for this family, they may never have the funds to come back to go on another safari. So at the end of this tear-jerking journey with the family, I got what is still one of the best gifts someone’s ever given me.

    The real meaning of gratitude versus gratuity

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    Please don’t get me wrong, money makes the world go round, but a gratuity from guests is never a guarantee. It is a gift that guests give if they feel that the service has gone above and beyond the expected level. Regardless of what the gratuity is, the guide should be humble, be grateful and most of all, be gracious regardless of what it is. 

    When guests come and stay at the super luxurious, exclusive and very expensive lodges throughout Africa, they are paying a fortune to be there.

    It is the responsibility of the field guide allocated to the guests to give them the absolute best experience possible and to make sure that they have the time of their lives. 

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    You never know if this is the guest’s only opportunity to go on safari. Whether you’ll receive gratitude versus gratuity shouldn’t be your first thought.

    Field guides are the ambassadors of the natural world, we’re there to give guests a great experience, show them the wonders of Africa’s wildlife and natural beauty, and at the end of the guest safari experience if they decide to leave a gratuity for the guide, remember it is an honour and a privilege to receive these gifts from them and not a right. 

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    Be thankful that you as the guide get to experience the wonders of the bush and guests leave you tokens of their appreciation for a job well done.   

    Become an ambassador for the natural world and start your career with Bushwise. Between gratitude and gratuity, you’ll earn so much in a rewarding wildlife career.

    Words by Darryn Murray, photos by Louise Pavid

    #lodges #gameranger #fieldguide #safariguide #guidejobs #guests #apprenticefieldguide #safari #sightings #fieldguiding #gamedrive #guiding #fieldguides

  • Safari in Africa: sightings that last a lifetime

    This blog was written by Darryn, one of the Bushwise trainers. Here, Darryn reflects on his incredible experiences working in the bush, including two unforgettable memories on safari. 

    BY: Darryn Murray

    Since I started my guiding career 11 years ago, I have heard guests make remarks such as, “You have the greatest job in the world” and “Your office is SO much better than sitting behind a desk in New York, London, Dubai etc.” But one of my personal favourites has always been, “You are so lucky, you get paid in sunrises and sunsets, in the greatest place on Earth on a daily basis.”

    The last quote has stuck with me because I don’t believe field guides appreciate often enough how fortunate they are to be where they are. Yes, yes, I know what you’re thinking: we get up so early, we go to bed so late, we work in places where the temperature regularly reaches well over 40 degrees Celsius. However, these are small prices to pay for the things we get to see.

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    Photo by Louise Pavid

    I often refer to what I do as more than a passion, but rather a paid long-term holiday. What do I mean? My explanation goes something along the lines of this…

    Most of the people we see at the lodges and camps are only able to come and experience this once – whether due to financial constraints (because let’s face it, it’s not a cheap holiday) or it being a “keeping up with the Joneses” experience where the fear of missing out was just too great. There are some guests that return, either to the same lodge or try various different lodges. These are the ones that were bitten by “the Safari Bug.”

    Yes, that’s a real thing, and no, I don’t mean a mosquito or other insects that we get here during the hot and rainy summer months – but rather the urge to keep coming back over and over again. These are often the lucky ones that get to experience some of the greatest sightings they (and sometimes even the safari guide) have ever seen.

    I will share two brief accounts of such sightings that sit very fondly in my memory.

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    Photo by Darryn Murray

    The first happened several years ago when I was guiding in Kruger National Park. I was allocated a couple who I was told had been on safari SEVERAL times all over Africa! Upon arrival, they began regaling me with tales of their safari experiences in Botswana, Kenya, Tanzania and quite a few other places, impressively. The only item left on their bucket list was spotting the ever elusive leopard – 35 years of going on safaris and that was the one thing that had eluded them.

    We set off with the hope of finding a young female leopard that we had seen earlier in the morning – we struck out! We followed tracks for a male, to no avail! By the second afternoon I could see the guests were beginning to get rather antsy. It was at this point my tracker looked back at me and uttered the words they had been waiting so long to hear: “There is the leopard, in the river bed.”

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    Photo by Darryn Murray

    We were the only car there for the first 20 minutes and they took hundreds, if not thousands, of pictures, videos and selfies with the cat, now sitting a little more than 30 metres away from the car. They were both so excited. But then something happened that I had, up until then, only seen on TV.

    A male leopard walked out from the river bed out of our field of view and came to lie down next to her. We now had two!

    That was when it happened: the female was ready to mate. The mating happened right before our eyes and nobody said a word! I don’t think we spoke for a good ten minutes afterwards either, it was just cameras clicking wildly.

    That was their first sighting (mine too) of mating leopards. We drove away, stopped to have sundowners, and I still don’t think anybody had said a word. When we were able to speak again, everyone was talking at a thousand miles an hour about how amazing the sighting was.

    This is an image I took and sent to the guests, which they framed and put up on the wall at home in the UK for all their friends to see.

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    Photo by Darryn Murray

    The second event happened only a few weeks ago. We are very fortunate at The Southern African Wildlife Collage as we share an area with the famous Birmingham Pride of lions. 

    We had the whole pride lying next to a waterhole and the vehicle was abuzz with camera clicks, excited laughter, chatter and giggles, but one student caught my eye – she had tears rolling down her cheeks. When I asked if she was OK, she looked up, smiled, and said that this was the greatest day of her life. She had heard of the white lions of the Birmingham Pride but didn’t in her wildest dreams think she would be fortunate enough to see them in person. And here they were, not 15 metres away!

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    Photo by Louise Pavid

    It’s moments like these that make the early mornings and sweltering hot days on safari worth it – the look on a guest’s face when they see what they have travelled halfway around the world for is absolutely priceless. Don’t get me wrong – the sunsets are pretty cool too, but there is nothing quite like a tear of joy and excitement.

    Do you want to start making memories that last a lifetime, the way Darryn has? Apply today and pretty soon the bush could be your office!

    #lion #bushwise #fieldguide #apprenticefieldguide #safari #sightings #fieldguiding #gamedrive #fieldguidecourse