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Boy killed while saving his mother
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Boy killed while saving his mother
December 10 2009 at 01:00PM



Nairobi - A ten-year-old Kenyan boy was severely mauled by a hyena he was fighting off to save his mother who had been attacked by the animal, a nurse said on Thursday.

The hyena crushed Samatwa Kishabili's jaw and bit off one of his fingers, while his mother suffered a fractured arm and deep cuts to her head, back and arm following the attack late Tuesday on the shores of Lake Naivasha in the Rift Valley.

"Both had bled a lot due to the attack and we had to rush them to theatre but they have responded well to treatment," Jared Onchari said.

The boy's mother had gone to chase away the hyena after it attacked her sheep.

A Kenya Wildlife Service official said the family will not be compensated because they were living illegally on a protected area.

"This is a protected area meant for wildlife and the pastoralists who have camped in the area should not be there in the first place," Nyibule Ojwang said. - AFP


Kathi

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Posts: 9519 | Location: Chicago | Registered: 23 July 2003Reply With Quote
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What a tragedy.


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The headline doesn't seem to comport with the story. Is he dead or alive? Either way, a tough price for trespassing.


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My thoughts exactly: dead or alive?
 
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poor brave kid Frowner someone have to cull hyenas. it seems there are plenty of them and they make a lot of problem over there! it is a second incident in very short time! a pack of hungry hyena surely is a bigger problem for antilopes than a few poor humans!
yes


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I gained an impression on my one trip into the bush (Chirisa, Zim) that there were two critters in Africa that anyone would happily shoot without any hesitation whatever - The one was a croc and the other was a hyena.
 
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Before:

After:
Smiler


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RReese:

You really pleased my day with a photo of a dead hyena! In fact, you made an old man happy to see a dead hyena! Fact. Beautiful photos,by the way.
 
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I too enjoy hunting Hyena. But this incident was a result of humanity moving into Kenya's Wildlife Reserves.


 
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When I was flying out of Lokighoggio, Kenya during the early 90's, the ICRC had a field hospital set up there, taking wounded and injured refugees from the Sudan there by medevac Otters. There were several kids there who had been bitten by hyenas in their huts while they slept. Anyone who kills hyenas is good to go...
 
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You really pleased my day with a photo of a dead hyena! In fact, you made an old man happy to see a dead hyena! Fact. Beautiful photos,by the way.
Thanks Gerry. The hyena had long thick fur compared to any other hyena I've seen. Here's the story of that hunt published in African Expedition Magazine.

The Poor Man’s Leopard

My hunting buddy Mike Jines and I had just finished another whitetail season in South Texas. Neither of us took anything outstanding although I had a lot of fun, as usual, shooting feral hogs. The freezer was full of pork sausage and we were sitting in lawn chairs enjoying a few cold beers and cheap cigars at our camp near Freer. “Mike”, I said, “for all the money we spend on this lease plus stands, feeders and camp gear, we could carve out a couple weeks in our work schedule and take exotic hunting trips each year for not much more. Let’s face it; we’re not making it down here to hunt but about three times a season. We’ll get more real hunting time in on guided hunts.” Mike sat silent for a few seconds, turned to look at me and said, “I want to go to Africa.”

The following months were filled with emails and phone calls back and forth – what country, what game and what outfitter. We found that planning the trip and preparing for our adventure (the anticipation) was great fun. It gave us something we could really look forward to as we slugged away at our respective jobs. At the end of the day, South Africa was our choice and plains game the quarry. Then the emails started up again as we developed our list of specific animals we would hunt.

At the top of my list was hyena. I had done a little research and learned the spotted hyena is the second largest carnivore in Africa- second only to the lion. It is a fearsome hunter taking down game as large as zebra and known to drive lions from their kill. “Since I can’t afford to hunt leopard,” I thought “I’ll hunt the other spotted predator, the hyena”. Mike, of course, accused me of hunting “trash game” but I stuck to my guns. For me, the hyena would be my “poor man’s leopard”.

September found us in the northern province of South Africa, just south of Zimbabwe and west of Mozambique. Each day we found and harvested incredible game. On our second day, Mike and I both took beautiful kudus in the same afternoon even though hunting separately. Mine measured 57 inches and Mike’s 55. At that point we began our friendly competition. The following days found us successfully hunting impala, blesbok, gemsbok, eland, warthog, reedbuck, waterbuck, zebra and blue wildebeest. Sometimes mike bested me and sometimes it was the other way around. All the while, I would ask my PH, Hennie, “When are we going to concentrate on my hyena?” Hennie would always reply, “Soon Russell, soon. We are setting out bait and waiting until we have some hits.”

What I was to learn later, after our hunt was over, is that my paperwork had been lost and the first that my outfitter and PH had heard of my wanting to bag a hyena was upon my arrival in camp. Hyenas are generally hard to find outside the protected parks. In fact, our booking agent tried to talk me out of putting the hyena on my list because of the low percentage of success in hyena hunts. As our outfitter later related, “I nearly fell out of my chair when I heard Russell say he wanted a hyena more than any other thing on his list! I immediately started calling all of the landowners and outfitters in the area to find someone with hyenas on their concessions. It really became a bit of a joke among the outfitters”, he chuckled,” since those types of calls are usually made to locate traditional, hard to find trophies. Nobody goes all out to find a hyena. But, we did.”

In the evenings around the campfire, Mike, with a smirk on his face, would give me grief. Jokingly he would comment “That hyena is going to be awfully ugly and nasty. And, he’ll stink to the high heavens. Who’s going to skin him?” Hennie, God bless him, immediately came to my defense and answered in his husky voice “I will skin the hyena”.

Later in the week, Hennie approached me after our morning hunt. “Russell, are you ready to hunt the hyena?” My answer, of course, was “You bet!” “Well” Hennie continued, we’ll first need some bait. Let’s go get us a warthog.” After driving for a short while, we spotted a medium-sized warthog in a field at about 75 yards. I placed the crosshairs of my .375 H&H behind the pig’s ear and sent a 300 grain nosler partition his way. He collapsed at the shot. “Russell!” Hennie shouted, “That’s how I want you to shoot the hyena.”

We collected the animal, placed it in the back of the Land Cruiser and began our four hour journey to an area adjacent to Kruger National Park. Our outfitter had found a landowner with a hyena causing mayhem on his property. “He is as big as an elephant!” the landowner exclaimed, with an Afrikann accent, as he held his hand level with the hood of his pickup. “He is this tall”. “Good” Hennie answered, “That’s what we are looking for”. The landowner then showed us where the hyena had been seen entering the property. He also showed us some of the damage the hyena had caused including a heavy, metal fuel container completely crushed by the most powerful jaws of any land creature.

We explored the area and selected a site to hang our bait and build a blind – a bare knoll surrounded by thick bush with a dead tree projecting from its summit. I eviscerated the hog and attached the entrails to the rear bumper of the Land cruiser. We then drug them from our bait site to the edge of the property and back laying a scent trail. A large roll of burlap was used to form our blind as we wrapped it around the acacias and the warthog carcass was hung in the dead tree about three feet above the ground. We covered our chairs with blankets to muffle sound and we waited.

As darkness enveloped us, a harvest moon began to rise behind the bait. Our hope was that I would be able to make the shot without the use of a spotlight. I had a Leupold LPS scope mounted on my model 70 just for this moment. The optics maker boasted 98% light transmission. For back up, we had a spotlight with a red lens. “Russell,” Hennie whispered, “If we have to use the light, you will only have three seconds to make the shot. You’ll need to get in position and signal me to flip the switch.”

Three hours after nightfall, Hennie held his finger to his lips signaling to be absolutely silent. He then gestured behind us indicating something was approaching and raised his binoculars. A few minutes passed when Hennie pointed toward the bait. I raised my rifle but couldn’t see anything. Again and again I tried to see whatever it was Hennie was pointing at, to no avail. Finally he pointed to the spot light and I got into position.

I signaled my readiness to Hennie and the red glow illuminated the area in front of our blind. All I could see were two small “lights” quickly moving behind a bush and shining through the branches. I quickly and instinctively centered my crosshairs on one of the lights and the .375 thundered. I immediately turned to Hennie and said, “Hennie, I’m sorry. All I could see were his eyes and so I shot at them. I no doubt missed him.” “Russell” Hennie answered, “Stay here”. Hennie then gathered his rifle and light and carefully walked toward the spot where we last saw the hyena. “Woohoo!” he shouted. “woohoo!” “You mean I got him?” I hollered. “Yes” Hennie bellowed, “You shot him right through the eye!” I hurried over to find an enormous hyena stone dead without a mark on him other than one missing eyeball. It had been a lucky shot and I was on cloud nine. We snapped a few photos, and then loaded my prize on the back of the Land Cruiser. It was pretty chilly out but I chose to ride in the open back of the truck with my trophy as we made our way back to camp.

We pulled in around 3:00 am and I hurried to Mike’s cot and woke him” Mike, you’ve got to see this thing. He’s enormous, with thick hair and beautiful spots!” (We later weighed my hyena on the scale at camp. He weighed 198.6 pounds- truly a huge hyena!)
Mike, semi-comatose, struggled to his feet and followed me to the truck. In all the years we have hunted together, he had never seen me so excited.

The next evening, as Mike and I sat around the campfire half way around the world drinking Castle Lagers and smoking cheap cigars, Mike stared into the fire and said, “You know, I might just have to shoot one of those poor man’s leopards myself.” On our return trip to Africa, he did just that.



The End


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Posts: 269 | Location: Houston, Texas | Registered: 23 January 2008Reply With Quote
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RREESE:

Great story! I mean it. Enjoyed reading it. (Of course, my opinion was also somewhat influenced by the fact that you had the good judgment to use a 375 H&H)Smiler My own hyena story was less fortunate. We had retrieved a wounded zebra after dark (and brought out a truck after hours wait) and were bouncing along slowly in the Land Cruiser (Yeah, my outfitter,too, swore by them)when a hyena appeared suddenly in the lights right ahead and not 15 feet ahead. I had a Colt Python in my actual lap,fact, -but I tried to reach for the rifle stacked ahead of me. Of course, the hyena had disappeared before I even got the rifle out of the snap. The PH hollered at me later. (we were good friends by then and regularly insulted each other) That's my hyena story - and to this day I don't know why I didn't just raise the 357 and shoot. I think he startled me by his sheer size (you think, rifle?) but anyway I really regretted not reducing Africa's hyena population by one. (By the way, you are a really singleminded hunter - Can I interest you in reducing the croc population?)Smiler
 
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Originally posted by RREESE:
quote:
You really pleased my day with a photo of a dead hyena! In fact, you made an old man happy to see a dead hyena! Fact. Beautiful photos,by the way.
Thanks Gerry. The hyena had long thick fur compared to any other hyena I've seen. Here's the story of that hunt published in African Expedition Magazine.

The Poor Man’s Leopard

My hunting buddy Mike Jines and I had just finished another whitetail season in South Texas. Neither of us took anything outstanding although I had a lot of fun, as usual, shooting feral hogs. The freezer was full of pork sausage and we were sitting in lawn chairs enjoying a few cold beers and cheap cigars at our camp near Freer. “Mike”, I said, “for all the money we spend on this lease plus stands, feeders and camp gear, we could carve out a couple weeks in our work schedule and take exotic hunting trips each year for not much more. Let’s face it; we’re not making it down here to hunt but about three times a season. We’ll get more real hunting time in on guided hunts.” Mike sat silent for a few seconds, turned to look at me and said, “I want to go to Africa.”

The following months were filled with emails and phone calls back and forth – what country, what game and what outfitter. We found that planning the trip and preparing for our adventure (the anticipation) was great fun. It gave us something we could really look forward to as we slugged away at our respective jobs. At the end of the day, South Africa was our choice and plains game the quarry. Then the emails started up again as we developed our list of specific animals we would hunt.

At the top of my list was hyena. I had done a little research and learned the spotted hyena is the second largest carnivore in Africa- second only to the lion. It is a fearsome hunter taking down game as large as zebra and known to drive lions from their kill. “Since I can’t afford to hunt leopard,” I thought “I’ll hunt the other spotted predator, the hyena”. Mike, of course, accused me of hunting “trash game” but I stuck to my guns. For me, the hyena would be my “poor man’s leopard”.

September found us in the northern province of South Africa, just south of Zimbabwe and west of Mozambique. Each day we found and harvested incredible game. On our second day, Mike and I both took beautiful kudus in the same afternoon even though hunting separately. Mine measured 57 inches and Mike’s 55. At that point we began our friendly competition. The following days found us successfully hunting impala, blesbok, gemsbok, eland, warthog, reedbuck, waterbuck, zebra and blue wildebeest. Sometimes mike bested me and sometimes it was the other way around. All the while, I would ask my PH, Hennie, “When are we going to concentrate on my hyena?” Hennie would always reply, “Soon Russell, soon. We are setting out bait and waiting until we have some hits.”

What I was to learn later, after our hunt was over, is that my paperwork had been lost and the first that my outfitter and PH had heard of my wanting to bag a hyena was upon my arrival in camp. Hyenas are generally hard to find outside the protected parks. In fact, our booking agent tried to talk me out of putting the hyena on my list because of the low percentage of success in hyena hunts. As our outfitter later related, “I nearly fell out of my chair when I heard Russell say he wanted a hyena more than any other thing on his list! I immediately started calling all of the landowners and outfitters in the area to find someone with hyenas on their concessions. It really became a bit of a joke among the outfitters”, he chuckled,” since those types of calls are usually made to locate traditional, hard to find trophies. Nobody goes all out to find a hyena. But, we did.”

In the evenings around the campfire, Mike, with a smirk on his face, would give me grief. Jokingly he would comment “That hyena is going to be awfully ugly and nasty. And, he’ll stink to the high heavens. Who’s going to skin him?” Hennie, God bless him, immediately came to my defense and answered in his husky voice “I will skin the hyena”.

Later in the week, Hennie approached me after our morning hunt. “Russell, are you ready to hunt the hyena?” My answer, of course, was “You bet!” “Well” Hennie continued, we’ll first need some bait. Let’s go get us a warthog.” After driving for a short while, we spotted a medium-sized warthog in a field at about 75 yards. I placed the crosshairs of my .375 H&H behind the pig’s ear and sent a 300 grain nosler partition his way. He collapsed at the shot. “Russell!” Hennie shouted, “That’s how I want you to shoot the hyena.”

We collected the animal, placed it in the back of the Land Cruiser and began our four hour journey to an area adjacent to Kruger National Park. Our outfitter had found a landowner with a hyena causing mayhem on his property. “He is as big as an elephant!” the landowner exclaimed, with an Afrikann accent, as he held his hand level with the hood of his pickup. “He is this tall”. “Good” Hennie answered, “That’s what we are looking for”. The landowner then showed us where the hyena had been seen entering the property. He also showed us some of the damage the hyena had caused including a heavy, metal fuel container completely crushed by the most powerful jaws of any land creature.

We explored the area and selected a site to hang our bait and build a blind – a bare knoll surrounded by thick bush with a dead tree projecting from its summit. I eviscerated the hog and attached the entrails to the rear bumper of the Land cruiser. We then drug them from our bait site to the edge of the property and back laying a scent trail. A large roll of burlap was used to form our blind as we wrapped it around the acacias and the warthog carcass was hung in the dead tree about three feet above the ground. We covered our chairs with blankets to muffle sound and we waited.

As darkness enveloped us, a harvest moon began to rise behind the bait. Our hope was that I would be able to make the shot without the use of a spotlight. I had a Leupold LPS scope mounted on my model 70 just for this moment. The optics maker boasted 98% light transmission. For back up, we had a spotlight with a red lens. “Russell,” Hennie whispered, “If we have to use the light, you will only have three seconds to make the shot. You’ll need to get in position and signal me to flip the switch.”

Three hours after nightfall, Hennie held his finger to his lips signaling to be absolutely silent. He then gestured behind us indicating something was approaching and raised his binoculars. A few minutes passed when Hennie pointed toward the bait. I raised my rifle but couldn’t see anything. Again and again I tried to see whatever it was Hennie was pointing at, to no avail. Finally he pointed to the spot light and I got into position.

I signaled my readiness to Hennie and the red glow illuminated the area in front of our blind. All I could see were two small “lights” quickly moving behind a bush and shining through the branches. I quickly and instinctively centered my crosshairs on one of the lights and the .375 thundered. I immediately turned to Hennie and said, “Hennie, I’m sorry. All I could see were his eyes and so I shot at them. I no doubt missed him.” “Russell” Hennie answered, “Stay here”. Hennie then gathered his rifle and light and carefully walked toward the spot where we last saw the hyena. “Woohoo!” he shouted. “woohoo!” “You mean I got him?” I hollered. “Yes” Hennie bellowed, “You shot him right through the eye!” I hurried over to find an enormous hyena stone dead without a mark on him other than one missing eyeball. It had been a lucky shot and I was on cloud nine. We snapped a few photos, and then loaded my prize on the back of the Land Cruiser. It was pretty chilly out but I chose to ride in the open back of the truck with my trophy as we made our way back to camp.

We pulled in around 3:00 am and I hurried to Mike’s cot and woke him” Mike, you’ve got to see this thing. He’s enormous, with thick hair and beautiful spots!” (We later weighed my hyena on the scale at camp. He weighed 198.6 pounds- truly a huge hyena!)
Mike, semi-comatose, struggled to his feet and followed me to the truck. In all the years we have hunted together, he had never seen me so excited.

The next evening, as Mike and I sat around the campfire half way around the world drinking Castle Lagers and smoking cheap cigars, Mike stared into the fire and said, “You know, I might just have to shoot one of those poor man’s leopards myself.” On our return trip to Africa, he did just that.


Russell:

Your's is the one of the most entertaining and well written hunting stories I've read on AR. And I, too, have a fascination with the spotted hyena, with his having been near the top of my list on my last two safaris. Unfortunately, my first effort - also from a blind - resulted in a single heard 'chomp' on the buffalo remnant and then 'poof' she was gone. The next year saw me and my PH Mark Dewet setting up on our camp's boneyard every morning an hour before dawn. For whatever reason, the hyena were on hiatus and my frustration has grown in proportion to my desire to bag one.

Next September I'll be in Dande and I have once again expressed a strong interest in hyena - second only to a tuskless elephant. I can only hope that I have an opportunity for a monster specimen like yours. Well done and thanks for the great story.


Kim

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Whitworth Express .375 H&H
Griffin & Howe .275 Rigby
Winchester M70 (pre-64) .30-06 & .270


"Cogito ergo venor" René Descartes on African Safari
 
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Thanks Kim. Yes, the hyena is woefully underrated. Maybe that's good for us. Smiler My hyena rug is one of my favorites.

Good luck in Dande and keep us posted.

Russell


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