This is from the hunt report.
--------------------------------
Big Elephant In Zimbabwe
Hunt Report by Dick Vander Yacht
--------------------------------
My son Dale and I just returned from a 15-day elephant, buffalo, and
leopard safari in Zimbabwe. Hunt dates are October 2 - 16, 2001.
This hunt was booked last March to replace a hunt canceled in Zimbabwe in
2000. We had contacted your office for reports on the political situation,
called Safari Club, State Department and the South African outfitter. All
seemed OK as we made final preparation. Then the Trade Center bombing and
we almost canceled again.
We flew from New York to Johannesburg, South Africa via South African Air.
No problems of any kind except tight airport security. Our PH, Claude
Kleynhans of Mafigeni Safaris, Letsitele, South Africa met us at Joburg
airport where we spent the night at City Lodge. Nice place, lots of hunters
staying over, shuttle direct to and from airport.
Next morning we flew to Victoria Falls and met by Ashley Pearson of
Brookland Hunting Safaris in Harare. Ash Pearson is a charter pilot as well
as a PH who worked with Claude during our hunt. We flew with Ash to Hwange
airport, once the pride of Zimbabwe. The airstrip is four miles long. There
was not one plane large or small on the field, only three cars in the
parking lot and the terminal was empty. Nearby Hwange Safari Lodge - 292
units - only 8 were occupied.
Apprentice PH Andre Thaler of Brookland met us and transported us via land
cruiser to a hunting camp in Ngamo Forest Conservancy about an hours drive
south. Very nice camp, cement block cabins with thatched roof and all
facilities. Open bar and food served in open dining hall. All meals were good.
Day 1 - Sighted our rifles - Drove to waterholes - Mainly orientation.
Day 2 - Early AM - Dale shot large sable. Very heavy horns - Saw an old
bull elephant with broken tusks. Watched him roll in the mud. Dry fired a
few rounds for practice.
Day 3 - Found fresh bull elephant tracks at waterhole early AM. Animals
were traveling east. Forest is cut into four or five square mile blocks by
fire guard roads. We drove around two blocks. Bulls went into third block
but we could not find tracks leading out. Immediately spotted two small
bulls - 20 - 30# near road. 9:00AM began tracking other bulls, 10:30AM -
two miles into hush Claude spoiled two bulls sleeping under a tree. Large
one was facing us and looked to be over 45#. We worked into position 40
yards away. I shot .416 Remington from sticks. Brain shot - bull dropped.
Both PH were amazed at size of ivory - Estimated in field at 55 to 60#.
Official government scale weight - 76# x 64# 73 inches and 65 inches x 19
1/4-inch girth. My first elephant hunt collected a real Jumbo after a
90-minute stalk. Not bad for a man heading for his 71st birthday.
The Ngamo camp had been booked for 10 days - 1 elephant, 1 buffalo and 2
sable. That night we were advised the buffalo and remaining sable had been
canceled by forestry officials. No reason given. We packed up early next AM
and flew to a private camp owned by Brookland Hunting Safari in the Savi
River Land Conservancy 200 miles south of Harare. This is an area of one
million acres privately owned and managed strictly for wildlife. It is an
old cattle ranch. All interior fences have been removed. A perimeter fence
exists only to keep buffo from moving into nearby cattle ranches. We could
hunt or drive all day without seeing a fence. Real wild country - No human
habitation but several wire snares were found while hunting.
Dale's objective was buffalo and leopard. I was now an observer basically
but wanted to hunt plains game if I could find something better than what I
had. On the third morning Dale shot a real nice old Cape buffalo bull. That
was the last buffalo on this years ranch quota.
We each shot several bait impala and each a large zebra stallion. Dale
spent seven nights in leopard blinds without success. Female leopards
arrived each night plus civet cats and bush pigs. One torn leopard arrived
about 10:00 PM as they were leaving the blind but did not have time for a
shot. Leopard PH Paul Welloch knows his job but Dale did not get his cat.
During the interim I shot a management kudu with 52-inch horns - he looked
kind of sick - no trophy fee. Then I shot a 55-inch kudu for trophy, a
23-inch impala ram and a baboon. Here you can shoot all the baboons you
want without trophy fee.
This ranch is overrun with kudu and impala. It has a large population of
zebra, blue wildebeest, eland and wart hog. The full conservancy has a
population of 1,800 elephants but hunting is not allowed at this time. We
saw elephant, giraffe and packs of wild dogs every day plus a few bushbuck,
steenbok and duiker. The bush abounds with game and is a great place to
hunt. Camp facilities and food are very good. Wild game on table every day.
We had a certain amount of apprehension about this hunt but found our fears
were totally unfounded. There was no fuel shortage, no squatters, no war
veterans, no trouble at the airport other than tight security and intensive
exam of carry on luggage. We were treated with courtesy by airport staff
and government officials. Ashley Pearson is a very good bush pilot and a
good PH. This is my third hunt with PH Claude Kleynhans and Dale's second.
In my estimation he is one of the best PH's in Africa. He is a licensed PH
in South Africa and Tanzania and books hunts in Zimbabwe with a Zimbabwe PH
due to Zimbabwe Government regulations. (011 2783 280 3558 or 01102715 345
1637).
Major problem on this hunt was the time of year. It was HOT! 95 degrees
most days, sometimes over 100, the last day 114. Too hot to hunt, too hot
to nap. If I book another hunt it would be in May, June or July, never
again in October. We had a great time - great camp staff and PH - food was
excellent - all movement from point to point accompanied by Zimbabwe
residents. We came home tired but pleased we went.
In advance of the hunt both PH felt confident that despite my age I could
get an elephant from 40 to 50 pounds. Both were amazed at the size of my
bull. In Harare we visited the Zimbabwe Professional Hunters office to file
a report. My 76-pounder was the largest registered so far in 2001. If a
larger bull has been taken it had not yet been registered.
A 25,000 acre controlled burn in a neighboring block got out of control and
burned 100,000 acres coming within two miles of our camp. Several members
of the camp staff spent two days fighting fire. Four workers from that
block were killed. There may be trouble someplace in Zimbabwe but where we
hunted it was the same as hunting here at home. I would not hesitate to go
again.
We arrived back in the USA at Atlanta and missed our connecting flight due
to inspection and clearance time. Please advise your subscribers that
because of tight airport security, US Immigration, Customs and Department
of Agriculture inspection, at least three hours should be allowed for
connecting flights. Thanks for your past help.
------------------
saeed@ emirates.net.ae
www.accuratereloading.com