Go see Baker's old accounts. Cheapo reprints online + Amazon. My notes when I read it.
Baker, Sir Samuel o
1889? [1854] The Rifle and the Hound in Ceylon. The Burroughs Brothers Company, Cleveland.
Shooting adventures 1845-53. Ah, what could be more English than sport! I.e. shooting things that don’t need to be shot. In this case, mostly elephants, although he goes to great pains to show how dangerous they are to villagers etc. Amazing adventures, you have to admire these guys’ courage. But awful attitudes toward game: shot birds until my ears rang from the reports on one page, next page he complains about too many guns have now ruined the sport at places he used to like. Elephants shot several at a time, young, old. Buffalo massacred, left to lie, except sometimes cut out the tongue. Long shots with almost no chance of hitting, although at least some effort is made to put downed animals out of their misery. ‘Elk’ (sambar) chased with pack of hounds and killed with only a hunting knife! But it’s expected that the hounds won’t last very long. Etc. Attitudes toward natives just as bad. Shooting with a huge elephant rifle rested on shoulder of bearer for long shot, ‘recoil cut his ear open’ [I expect he blew out the man’s eardrum as well, with 16 drachms of powder too].
Info on his guns P 28 [these are all percussion muzzle-loaders]: recommends double barreled, No 10 bore, weighing 15 lbs, shooting conical ball 2.5 oz, 12-groove rifling loads as fast as smoothbore. “Two-groove rifle” loads too slowly for dangerous game. Smoothbores lack range, although just as good as rifle at 20-30 paces, but you never know what you’ll be shooting at [because if it moves, it’s game], or the range. “My battery” [by which he means what his bearers carry for him] = one 4-oz rifle, single barrel, 24 lbs; one long single barrel 2-oz rifle, 16 lbs, and four double barrel No 10 rifles, each 15 lbs. [see conversions to understand what huge guns these are - a 4-oz ought to be 4 gauge, meaning the ball is over an inch diameter, 27mm! Even a No. 10 is .775 caliber.]