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RIP Harry Selby
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Hey all, one of the finest has moved on to the hunting grounds in the sky. RIP Harry
 
Posts: 565 | Location: Durango, CO | Registered: 18 July 2005Reply With Quote
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That is sad news! My best wishes go out to his family.

RIP


Jason

"You're not hard-core, unless you live hard-core."
_______________________

Hunting in Africa is an adventure. The number of variables involved preclude the possibility of a perfect hunt. Some problems will arise. How you decide to handle them will determine how much you enjoy your hunt.

Just tell yourself, "it's all part of the adventure." Remember, if Robert Ruark had gotten upset every time problems with Harry
Selby's flat bed truck delayed the safari, Horn of the Hunter would have read like an indictment of Selby. But Ruark rolled with the punches, poured some gin, and enjoyed the adventure.

-Jason Brown
 
Posts: 6842 | Location: Nome, Alaska(formerly SW Wyoming) | Registered: 22 December 2003Reply With Quote
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Condolences to his family and friends. Even renegades like me have heard of Mr. Selby.


Even the rocks don't last forever.



 
Posts: 31014 | Location: Olney, Texas | Registered: 27 March 2006Reply With Quote
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A great loss. I had always hoped that he would write a book.
 
Posts: 362 | Location: Oklahoma | Registered: 25 July 2009Reply With Quote
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A true gentleman and legend, although he wouldn't think the latter. I've been lucky to know him and his family since 2004. Very sad.

Kwaheri Haraka...
 
Posts: 7828 | Registered: 31 January 2005Reply With Quote
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Only knew him by reputation. He was like Elvis to me. God comfort his family.
 
Posts: 12566 | Location: Somewhere above Tennessee and below Kentucky  | Registered: 31 July 2016Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by 7kongoni:
A great loss. I had always hoped that he would write a book.


Ditto. A great man by all accounts and a fascinating life he led. A sad loss to family and the hunting community but a life lived long and well. RIP Harry.
 
Posts: 3927 | Location: Rolleston, Christchurch, New Zealand | Registered: 03 August 2009Reply With Quote
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RIP to another great
 
Posts: 5886 | Location: Sydney,Australia  | Registered: 03 July 2005Reply With Quote
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Heavens gain is our loss........

May God bless and hold those that feel his loss closest.

One heckuva man that led a life I can only envy.
 
Posts: 42460 | Location: Crosby and Barksdale, Texas | Registered: 18 September 2006Reply With Quote
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I had heard so much about him that I didn’t believe the legend was still alive until he joined here. I thought he was there with Capstick, Selous, etc. I do recall that when he joined here, he had “rookie” or whatever under his handle.


I meant to be DSC Member...bad typing skills.

Marcus Cady

DRSS
 
Posts: 3459 | Location: Dallas | Registered: 19 March 2008Reply With Quote
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Sad news. I first met Harry Selby as a 10 years old. He was a larger than life character. An amazing and storied career.

RIP Harry


___________________

Just Remember, We ALL Told You So.
 
Posts: 22445 | Location: Occupying Little Minds Rent Free | Registered: 04 October 2012Reply With Quote
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The loss of one of the last living legends that tie this era of African Hunting to the days of old that the world will never see again.....
Sad in many ways....RIP
 
Posts: 931 | Location: Music City USA | Registered: 09 April 2013Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by BaxterB:
A true gentleman and legend, although he wouldn't think the latter. I've been lucky to know him and his family since 2004. Very sad.

Kwaheri Haraka...




August 27, 1990....
 
Posts: 1168 | Registered: 08 February 2010Reply With Quote
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RIP.

Did he ever commit much of his life to writing?


DRSS
 
Posts: 1991 | Location: Australia | Registered: 25 December 2006Reply With Quote
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We are diminished. RIP and condolence to the family. He was the last of the great PH’s from the golden age of safari....


Vote Trump- Putin’s best friend…
To quote a former AND CURRENT Trumpiteer - DUMP TRUMP
 
Posts: 13590 | Location: Georgia | Registered: 28 October 2006Reply With Quote
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A true legend is gone. But he sure left us all better for his efforts.
 
Posts: 1440 | Location: Houston, Texas USA | Registered: 16 January 2005Reply With Quote
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May Gob bless.

The end of an era. Frowner


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
J. Lane Easter, DVM

A born Texan has instilled in his system a mind-set of no retreat or no surrender. I wish everyone the world over had the dominating spirit that motivates Texans.– Billy Clayton, Speaker of the Texas House

No state commands such fierce pride and loyalty. Lesser mortals are pitied for their misfortune in not being born in Texas.— Queen Elizabeth II on her visit to Texas in May, 1991.
 
Posts: 38353 | Location: Gainesville, TX | Registered: 24 December 2006Reply With Quote
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A life well lived.
He now shares a fire with other greats.
 
Posts: 1981 | Location: South Dakota | Registered: 22 August 2004Reply With Quote
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Condolences to his family and friends.


www.accuratereloading.com
Instagram : ganyana2000
 
Posts: 69201 | Location: Dubai, UAE | Registered: 08 January 1998Reply With Quote
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Indeed, a life well lived.

RIP


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Hunt Reports

2015 His & Her Leopards with Derek Littleton of Luwire Safaris - http://forums.accuratereloadin...6321043/m/2971090112
2015 Trophy Bull Elephant with CMS http://forums.accuratereloadin...6321043/m/1651069012
DIY Brooks Range Sheep Hunt 2013 - http://forums.accuratereloadin...901038191#9901038191
Zambia June/July 2012 with Andrew Baldry - Royal Kafue http://forums.accuratereloadin...6321043/m/7971064771
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Namibia Sept 2010 - ARUB Safaris http://forums.accuratereloadin...6321043/m/6781076141
 
Posts: 7625 | Location: Alaska | Registered: 05 February 2008Reply With Quote
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We all end up there sooner or later. Condolences to his friends and family.

It would have been delightful to sit and listen to him remember safaris gone by.
 
Posts: 11175 | Location: Minnesota USA | Registered: 15 June 2007Reply With Quote
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So sad to hear.

Quite the gentleman.

Years ago, when he was posted here, he happily agreed to sign my copy of Horn of the Hunter. Off to Botswana it went, with $20 tucked in for return postage, and a month or so later, it came back with a very nice, personalized inscription.

One of my most cherished books.


Hunting: Exercising dominion over creation at 2800 fps.
 
Posts: 3113 | Location: Southern US | Registered: 21 July 2002Reply With Quote
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I'm very sorry to hear this. My condolences to his family.
 
Posts: 8773 | Location: Republic of Texas | Registered: 24 April 2004Reply With Quote
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RIP

Home from the hill.


Antlers
Double Rifle Shooters Society
Heym 450/400 3"
 
Posts: 1990 | Location: AL | Registered: 13 February 2002Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by 7kongoni:
A great loss. I had always hoped that he would write a book.


I have reason to believe he was working the last few years on his memoirs with an outdoor writer who knew Selby and his family and East Africa as well as anyone. I haven't talked with the writer in a while, but I would guess the project was close to completion when Selby died.

Bill Quimby
 
Posts: 2633 | Location: tucson and greer arizona | Registered: 02 February 2006Reply With Quote
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I got wind this was in the works, so it is good to see it made it out today.

From the New York Times:

Harry Selby, Renowned Hunter and Safari Guide, Is Dead at 92



Harry Selby, Renowned Hunter and Safari Guide, Is Dead at 92


Robert D. McFadden

Harry Selby, one of the last of Africa’s renowned white hunters, who took rich and famous safari clients into the interiors of Kenya, Tanganyika and Botswana for a half-century to shoot game, photograph exotic wildlife and search for elusive adventure in the bush, died on Saturday at his home in Maun, Botswana. He was 92.

His death was confirmed by his friend Joe Coogan, an American writer and hunter who had worked on safaris with Mr. Selby. Mr. Coogan said he was notified in a message from Botswana by Mr. Selby’s daughter, Gail. No cause was given.

Mr. Selby grew up on a ranch astride the Equator in Kenya, watching enormous herds of zebra and impala, whiffing lion and Cape buffalo, listening to an elephant scream and hyenas giggling at sundown. In the burning heat, he learned to track an animal over rocky ground, and to avoid the rhino laid up in the dusty shade of an acacia tree. He shot his first antelope at 8, his first elephant at 14.

Mr. Selby was a postwar protégé of the East Africa hunter Philip Hope Percival, who took Theodore Roosevelt and Ernest Hemingway on safaris, and he became a professional hunter himself in the late 1940s. He took the American author Robert Ruark on safari in Tanganyika (now Tanzania), and with the 1953 publication of Ruark’s best-selling book “Horn of the Hunter,” Mr. Selby became one of Africa’s most famous hunting guides.

Drawn to the romance of treks to kill lions, elephants and rhinos and to photograph native tribes and storybook landscapes, clients flocked from around the world to Selby safaris, which were booked for years with clients like Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands, the Maharajah of Jaipur, Prince Stanislaus Radziwill of Poland and Western tycoons, industrialists and chief executives seeking thrills and self-fulfillment.

[Mr. Selby, left, and his friend Joe Coogan, an American writer and hunter, in 2007. “Africa itself has changed out of all recognition, both physically and politically, and the old-time self-contained safari would have no place to go in today’s Africa,” Mr. Selby wrote in 2010. via Joe Coogan]

Those were anticipated wonders not always to be found in the real Africa. In the Hollywood-inspired popular images of the 1950s, the great white hunter was a fearless Clark Gable or Stewart Granger, tall and deeply tanned, who brought down a charging rhino with a single shot while his arrogant client cowered behind him, and who later romanced the client’s neglected wife after saving her from a snarling lion.

The reality was Mr. Selby: short and stocky, mild and self-effacing, a man who seemed to listen with his eyes. He had curly hair, a boyishly shy smile and a wife and two children. He catered to men used to giving orders, not taking them, but did it with tact, avoiding upbraiding a client needlessly and almost never finding it necessary to save anyone. Neither he nor any client was ever seriously injured on a safari, though there were some close calls.

It was not all shooting and campfire tales. A Selby safari required an army of bearers, cooks, skinners, porters, drivers and others; game licenses and financial transactions; transportation arrangements, from trucks and horses to planes and boats; and a complex coordination of supplies and equipment: guns and ammunition, food, water, tents, cots, radios, medicines, maps, clothing and a thousand other necessities.

Without cellphones or evacuation helicopters, Mr. Selby had to be the doctor, mechanic, chauffeur, gin-rummy-and-drinking partner and universal guide, knowledgeable about mountain ranges, grassy plains, rivers, jungles, hunting laws, migratory patterns, and the Bushmen, Masai, Samburu, Dinka and Zulu tribes. He spoke three dialects of Swahili. And he improvised; if there was no firewood, he burned wildebeest dung.

He was no Gregory Peck, but had an easygoing personality that made for good company in the bush. He coped with emergencies, pulling a client clear of a stampede or a vehicle from a bog, treating snakebites or tracking a wounded lion in a thicket — his most dangerous game. He was left-handed, but his favorite gun was a right-handed .416 Rigby, which can knock down an onrushing bull elephant or Cape buffalo in a thundering instant.

Safaris changed dramatically in his time. In Kenya and Tanganyika in the late 1940s and ’50s, he took parties hundreds of miles into trackless bush country by truck, pitched camps with comfortable though primitive amenities, drank gin by kerosene lamp, and pursued game by his own instincts. Safaris lasted two or three months. The showers were often cold, but the food was good and the game plentiful.

In his later years in Botswana, safaris went out for just a few weeks and focused as much, if not more, on photography as on hunting, although Mr. Selby preferred hunters. Photography buffs stayed in hotel-like lodges and went on day trips to scenic sites. More adventurous hunters and photographers were flown to rendezvous points and driven in Land Rovers to fixed camps elaborately equipped with electric power, refrigerators, flush toilets, hot showers, kitchens and dining facilities with silverware and table linen.

“Africa itself has changed out of all recognition, both physically and politically, and the old-time self-contained safari would have no place to go in today’s Africa,” Mr. Selby wrote for Sports Afield in 2010, when satellite phones, computers and helicopters made life easy for the busy executive on safari.

“There are hunters today,” he added, “who would prefer to have experienced the sense of freedom of an old-time safari, as I am sure there were those who went on safari many years ago who would have preferred something along the lines of what is offered today. The two experiences are as different as night is from day; the only feature common to both is the name … that magical word, ‘safari.’”

John Henry Selby — Harry was his universal nickname — was born in Frankfort, South Africa, on July 22, 1925, the youngest of six children of Arthur and Myrtle Evelyn Randall Selby. When he was 3, his family moved to a 40,000-acre cattle ranch near Mount Kenya.

Surrounded by a game-rich countryside, the boy learned to hunt from an old Kikuyu tribesman. “He taught me to use my eyes and ears as well as my nose, and to be patient in order to remain motionless for long periods of time waiting for an animal to come within range,” Mr. Selby told The American Rifleman.

Mr. Selby attended local schools, traveling by ox cart, and later the Prince of Wales, a boarding school in Nairobi. After World War II, he worked for Mr. Percival, who recognized his potential as a hunter-guide, and in 1949 he joined East Africa’s foremost safari outfitter, Ker & Downey, based in Nairobi. In 1956, after Mr. Ruark’s book had made him famous, he formed his own safari company, Selby & Holmberg.

In 1953, he married Maria Elizabeth Clulow, known as Miki. They had two children, Mark and Gail. Mark died in 2017. Mr. Selby is survived by his wife, daughter and a number of grandchildren.

In 1962, after Kenyan independence and political upheavals dimmed prospects for safaris in East Africa, he accepted a partnership in his old company, which became Ker, Downey and Selby, and in 1963 moved as its trailblazer to Bechuanaland, a British protectorate that became independent Botswana in 1966. It was a hunter’s — and a photographer’s — paradise.

“What we found exceeded our wildest expectations — a land which the passage of time had passed by, where nature had remained unchanged in the 20th century,” Mr. Selby said in an interview for this obituary. “The vast savannas were teeming with huge herds of elephant, buffalo, kudu, zebra, wildebeest and sable. Lions were everywhere, showing little fear of man.”

For 30 years, Mr. Selby ran company operations in Botswana, and guided hunters and photographers into leased concessions covering thousands of square miles in the Okavango Delta in the north and the vast Kalahari Desert in the south, home of the click-talking Bushmen. He cut tracks and built airfields in the wilderness.

In 1970, he established Botswana’s first lodge and camps for photographic safaris. He hired guides and a large support staff for what became a dominant safari business in Southern Africa. After Ker, Downey and Selby was bought by Safari South in 1978, he remained a director, and even after resigning in 1993 he continued to lead safaris privately until retiring in 2000.

In 2007, President Festus Mogae of Botswana awarded Mr. Selby the Presidential Certificate of Honor in recognition of his contributions to hunting and photographic tourism.
 
Posts: 7828 | Registered: 31 January 2005Reply With Quote
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RIP, to one of the names that will live forever.


Frank



"I don't know what there is about buffalo that frightens me so.....He looks like he hates you personally. He looks like you owe him money."
- Robert Ruark, Horn of the Hunter, 1953

NRA Life, SAF Life, CRPA Life, DRSS lite

 
Posts: 12758 | Location: Kentucky, USA | Registered: 30 December 2002Reply With Quote
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RIP- A great loss to a "giant" in our field!
 
Posts: 1128 | Location: Zimbabwe | Registered: 22 June 2009Reply With Quote
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Sorry to hear the sad news & condolences to the family. Frowner






 
Posts: 12415 | Registered: 01 July 2002Reply With Quote
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Gail Selby video of her father


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"Peace is that brief glorious moment in history when everybody stands around reloading" - Thomas Jefferson

Every morning the Zebra wakes up knowing it must outrun the fastest Lion if it wants to stay alive. Every morning the Lion wakes up knowing it must outrun the slowest Zebra or it will starve. It makes no difference if you are a Zebra or a Lion; when the Sun comes up in Africa, you must wake up running......

"If you're being chased by a Lion, you don't have to be faster than the Lion, you just have to be faster than the person next to you."
 
Posts: 6825 | Location: Tennessee | Registered: 18 December 2006Reply With Quote
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A Man among men, condolences to the family .... RIP Harry.
 
Posts: 2073 | Registered: 06 September 2008Reply With Quote
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Another legend passes. RIP


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Posts: 10001 | Location: Zambia | Registered: 10 April 2009Reply With Quote
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Now cracks a noble heart.

Good night, sweet prince; and flights of angels sing thee to thy rest.


Mike

Wilderness is my cathedral, and hunting is my prayer.
 
Posts: 13749 | Location: New England | Registered: 06 June 2003Reply With Quote
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A legend indeed...RIP



 
Posts: 3974 | Location: Vell, I yust dont know.. | Registered: 27 March 2005Reply With Quote
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I hunted with Harry on my first trip to Africa in 1992. Twenty one days in the Okavango, it had a profound influence on the rest of my life. In person he was everything you read and more.
 
Posts: 48 | Location: Texas | Registered: 16 August 2016Reply With Quote
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Wow. He made it to 92. I honestly thought he had left us sometime before. Hope his last days were good, clear ones and he was completely at peace.


There is hope, even when your brain tells you there isn’t.
– John Green, author
 
Posts: 16669 | Location: Las Cruces, NM | Registered: 03 June 2000Reply With Quote
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I remember a few years ago he came on AR and even responded to one of my posts.He was a gentleman.
 
Posts: 11651 | Location: Montreal | Registered: 07 November 2002Reply With Quote
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My favorite AR quote by Mr. Selby

“In my opinion you have not only an exceptionally beautiful rifle there but an entirely practical one as well. In my fifty five years of professional hunting my respect for the .375 H&H cartridge has increased each time I saw it used. In my opinion the greatest cartridge ever developed. I would prefer to see a visiting hunter arrive for his safari with such a rifle than with a double of any caliber. Good luck on your hunt.”.

Harry Selby.


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Hunt Reports

2015 His & Her Leopards with Derek Littleton of Luwire Safaris - http://forums.accuratereloadin...6321043/m/2971090112
2015 Trophy Bull Elephant with CMS http://forums.accuratereloadin...6321043/m/1651069012
DIY Brooks Range Sheep Hunt 2013 - http://forums.accuratereloadin...901038191#9901038191
Zambia June/July 2012 with Andrew Baldry - Royal Kafue http://forums.accuratereloadin...6321043/m/7971064771
Zambia Sept 2010- Muchinga Safaris http://forums.accuratereloadin...6321043/m/4211096141
Namibia Sept 2010 - ARUB Safaris http://forums.accuratereloadin...6321043/m/6781076141
 
Posts: 7625 | Location: Alaska | Registered: 05 February 2008Reply With Quote
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Truly, he will be missed!

Thank you Harry, for such a great life. Rest in Peace.


Regards,

Robert

******************************
H4350! It stays crunchy in milk longer!
 
Posts: 2321 | Location: Greater Nashville, TN | Registered: 23 June 2006Reply With Quote
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Good stuff from a Great Man!

quote:
Safaris changed dramatically in his time. In Kenya and Tanganyika in the late 1940s and ’50s, he took parties hundreds of miles into trackless bush country by truck, pitched camps with comfortable though primitive amenities, drank gin by kerosene lamp, and pursued game by his own instincts. Safaris lasted two or three months. The showers were often cold, but the food was good and the game plentiful.
 
Posts: 1835 | Location: Sinton, Texas | Registered: 08 November 2006Reply With Quote
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