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Posted: 10/13/2011
Professor Inigo Tinkle back from a successful African search for the rare Oozulum bird describes the terrors of the trek, in a lecture to the members of The Royal Birdwatching Society. The year is 1900. In a flashback to the fated expedition, its participants, Lady Evelyn Bagley, her maid June, Claude Chumley, white hunter Bill Boosey, and his faithful tracker Upsidasi are pitched up in a jungle clearing. There is a quick cameo of things to come when Lady Evelyn, a middle aged, sex minded widow, runs shrieking from a wattle and leaf built Ladies' hut, with a gorilla hot on her heels. Boosey, whose passions pulse for Lady Evelyn, fumbles a cartridge in his gun and fires. Chumley's sun helmet is sent into orbit by the bullet while the gorilla shrugs its shoulders and ambles off into the jungle. In the distance Jungle Boy is disturbed by the shot. A hunting knife in his teeth, he swings off ...and hits a tree. Meanwhile, at dinner in the jungle, Lady Evelyn details the dramatic disappearance of her husband Walter and baby son Cecil on an earlier Safari. Jungle Boy spots June stripping off for a dip, swings down and lands head first in the water. Watched by the gaping gorilla they end up rolling playfully in the pool. That night, in a series of mistaken identities and tent-swapping Lady Evelyn discovers that Jungle Boy is in fact her dearest baby boy, now grown up, but still wearing the nappy pin in his loincloth that she affectionately pinned on him before losing him. The Carry On crew fall into deeper trouble when the carnivorous Nosha tribe beat their drums and prepare a large stew-pot to cook the white explorers. Just when it all looks bleak, they are suddenly rescued by the statuesque women warriors of the Lubidubi tribe. Lady Evelyn is a bearer while the coveted white men are carried to Afrodisia - land of the Lubidubis, in order to save their strength for the work that lies ahead - mating. They find they are the only males in the tribe of four hundred