

That night, Dallas apologizes to Sean, and coerces him into a kiss.Īfter another orphaned elephant calf shows up at the compound, the local waArusha tribe, impressed by how the elephants follow Dallas, adopt her into the tribe. Chaos ensues when the crew helps Dallas obtain goats to get milk for the calf. They find her orphaned calf, and Dallas adopts it over Sean's protests. On a multi-day trip, the crew passes through a village where a rogue female elephant has been killed by a game warden. Still shaken, he makes Sean agree to not pursue any more rhinos until the end of the season. The Indian is released from the hospital. Meanwhile, Brandy is courted by Kurt, Chips, and Pockets. Dallas and Sean gradually are attracted to one another, though Sean, jilted by his first fiancée, resists. Despite many rookie mishaps, Dallas enjoys herself, and everyone except Sean votes to let her stay.Ĭhips arrives at the compound after displaying his skills in a sharpshooting contest, he and Kurt become friends. Because she was sent by the Basel zoo, Momella's biggest client, Sean reluctantly allows her to accompany the crew on a giraffe capture. Returning to the compound, the crew finds Italian photographer Anna-Maria "Dallas" D'Alessandro has arrived, though everyone was expecting a man. Chips, the only one present with the Indian's blood type, agrees to undergo a transfusion to save him Sean then offers him a job. While there, a French marksman Charles "Chips" Maurey approaches them, wanting the Indian's job. An aggressive rhino gores the Indian's leg during pursuit the crew transport him to Arusha hospital. Kurt and the Indian drive a herding jeep to force animals toward a larger capture truck driven by Pockets. The company consists of Frenchwoman Brandy de la Court, the unofficial "boss" tough Irish-American Sean Mercer, who heads the capture expeditions retired German race car driver Kurt Müller Mexican Bullfighter Luis Francisco Garcia Lopez Native American sharpshooter Little Wolf (aka "The Indian") zoophobic former NYC cabbie "Pockets" and several native staff. In Tanganyika in the 1960s, the Momella Game Company captures animals for zoos and circuses using off-road vehicles, lassos, and cages.
