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Zimbabwe: Choosing the Right Time of Year for Safari

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26 April 2011, 20:16
KPete
Zimbabwe: Choosing the Right Time of Year for Safari
All three of my dangerous game hunts in Zimbabwe have taken place late in the year, usually in September and October. This has proven very hot and dry but with several offsetting benefits, including:

• Less vegetation, so movement over the ground is easier, as is improved visibility of game what with the reduction of leaves on trees, etc.;
• Fewer waterholes, thereby concentrating and moving game to more easily predictable locations; and,
• Fewer insects given the reduction of standing water - though this doesn't seem to lesson the profusion of tsetse flies and mopane bees.

On the other hand, in addition to the sometimes oppressive heat, the drier conditions make movement noisier for hunters, and there are those that say that hunting at season's end means that some of the better trophies have already been taken.

As I contemplate my next safari – with leopard on the menu for the first time (along with plains game) – I was wondering what some of our more experienced members may think regarding the best time of year for such a hunt. What month would you choose to hunt leopard in Zim and why?


Kim

Merkel Double .470 NE
Whitworth Express .375 H&H
Griffin & Howe .275 Rigby
Winchester M70 (pre-64) .30-06 & .270


"Cogito ergo venor" René Descartes on African Safari
26 April 2011, 20:32
R.Jolly
Go in May.
The temperatures are more pleasant, your leopard baits will last longer and the extra cover will encourage your cat to be more confident approaching the tree.
Good luck ( I'm off in five days time !)
26 April 2011, 20:46
MARK H. YOUNG
Kim,

With leopard as your focus even as early as late March would be fine. Terry Anders shot a monster leoaprd near Bulawayo a full month ago. The cover can be heavy depending on where you hunt making buffalo and plains game a litte more difficult.

Mark


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26 April 2011, 20:47
Cazador humilde
Many more experienced leopard hunters will comment, I'm sure, but I've tried for leopard twice. Once in October, once in March. The baits were rotten too quick in October. May sounds like a good suggestion to me.
26 April 2011, 20:49
bwanamrm
I'll second the vote for May if ol' spots is the main focus of the safari... of course late April or early June will work as well. I shot my cat in mid-May with Chifuti and I know Martin Pieters has a leopard hunter in camp now. The things that make late season so good for buffalo work against you in cat hunting. Green grass and ample water spreads game and makes harder hunting so cats are attracted to bait more easily. At least thats the theory...


On the plains of hesitation lie the bleached bones of ten thousand, who on the dawn of victory lay down their weary heads resting, and there resting, died.

If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,
Or walk with Kings - nor lose the common touch...
Yours is the Earth and everything that's in it,
And - which is more - you'll be a Man, my son!
- Rudyard Kipling

Life grows grim without senseless indulgence.
26 April 2011, 21:05
safari-lawyer
May, June, or July.

Two leopards in two tries in the Save, one in June and one in July.

I love July as an all-around hunting month. Weather is great and enough leaves have fallen off to make hunting for buff and PG more enjoyable and doable.

Will try this year in July, next year in June.

June

July



Will J. Parks, III
26 April 2011, 21:33
nube
Is not August still a good month? I figured any time before the baby warthog start showing is a good time still and August is not all that hot yet. What do you guys think of August for a buff and leopard hunt?




Zim hunt 2012 http://forums.accuratereloadin...6321043/m/3411011181
26 April 2011, 21:53
safari-lawyer
quote:
Originally posted by nube:
Is not August still a good month? I figured any time before the baby warthog start showing is a good time still and August is not all that hot yet. What do you guys think of August for a buff and leopard hunt?


August is still plenty good and a good all-around month.

For Hammmond and ARDA, specifically, Thierry got my leopard at end of July, and took one more cat on Hammond - ARDA in the second part of August. He also had several males photographed on baits in August. In fact, this past year, the May hunt was a bust and the first leopards were not killed til July and August.


Will J. Parks, III
26 April 2011, 22:45
fairgame
quote:
Originally posted by safari-lawyer:
May, June, or July.

Two leopards in two tries in the Save, one in June and one in July.

I love July as an all-around hunting month. Weather is great and enough leaves have fallen off to make hunting for buff and PG more enjoyable and doable.

Will try this year in July, next year in June.

June

July


Good advice and cracking Leopards. They have been well composed by the PH for the photographs.

Best months in Zambia (next door) is June - August as a general rule of thumb.


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26 April 2011, 22:48
Cross L
Do those months change any if you are further south on the Limpopo or in RSA?

SSR
26 April 2011, 23:08
D. Nelson
I took this one in August in Makuti. The month was ideal in 2007.



Best regards, D. Nelson
26 April 2011, 23:19
MJines
Good luck Rob. I understand they had a nice male lion feeding on the last hunt. Pete, I have not been in May, but June is a wonderful time. We leave June 2.


Mike
26 April 2011, 23:58
Bwana Bunduki
quote:
Originally posted by fairgame:
quote:
Originally posted by safari-lawyer:
May, June, or July.

Two leopards in two tries in the Save, one in June and one in July.

I love July as an all-around hunting month. Weather is great and enough leaves have fallen off to make hunting for buff and PG more enjoyable and doable.

Will try this year in July, next year in June.

June

July


Good advice and cracking Leopards. They have been well composed by the PH for the photographs.

Best months in Zambia (next door) is June - August as a general rule of thumb.


Awesome!!!

Andrew, I aasume the Luangwa kitties will measure up? No pressure though mate!!!

Jeff
27 April 2011, 00:32
Dave Fulson
In the lower Zambezi I prefer April-May-june. Bush is thick and lots of standing water around which spreads the plains game out. A hungry time for both cats. The result is that when they get on bait they are less likely to be picky, or go off and make their own kill. With that said, we have taken good cats every month of the season, but early is the best time.


Dave Fulson
27 April 2011, 04:20
Emory
I'm not one of the "more" experienced Leopard hunters you queried, but based on my "limited" experience, I certainly recommend the cooler months of May-July in Zimbabwe.

My first Leopard attempt was in February in Namibia. Had a great experience - saw some fabulous country, got several large plains species and probably a dozen or more Warthogs for bait replinishment in the summer heat. No Leopard though.

My second Leopard attempt (fourth African hunt) was on a fabulous hunt with Ade Langley last June in Zimbabwe. The focus was on Leopard, but travel placing and checking baits also allowed opportunities and ultimate success on both Sable and Buffalo. Finally connected on the kind of Leopard I was looking for on the 14th night. Believe me I know I beat the odds on that cat. An "experienced" African hunter was over a couple of weeks ago and measured the skull at 17 inches even...



That Zimbabwe experience was so enjoyable that I have detoured off my long term plan of hunting a different country each trip - less than three weeks from now, I'll be in Zimbabwe hunting with Ade again. No Leopard intensity this trip, but we'll look for another Buffalo, possibly a Bushbuck, and more large plains game...

Emory
27 April 2011, 17:27
Scriptus
quote:
Originally posted by fairgame:
They have been well composed by the PH for the photographs.



Excuse me while I blow my own trumpet just a while! Roll Eyes
27 April 2011, 17:34
Will
quote:
Originally posted by Scriptus:
quote:
Originally posted by fairgame:
They have been well composed by the PH for the photographs.



Excuse me while I blow my own trumpet just a while! Roll Eyes


What's the rule-of-thumb, the clients the length of a football field behind the leopard? Smiler


-------------------------------
Will / Once you've been amongst them, there is no such thing as too much gun.
---------------------------------------
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_________________________

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27 April 2011, 21:48
safari-lawyer
quote:
Originally posted by Will:
quote:
Originally posted by Scriptus:
quote:
Originally posted by fairgame:
They have been well composed by the PH for the photographs.



Excuse me while I blow my own trumpet just a while! Roll Eyes


What's the rule-of-thumb, the clients the length of a football field behind the leopard? Smiler


I tried to get 100 yards away, but I hit the Mozambique border and had to stop. Alas, I was only 93.7 yards into the background.

Shame. Wink


Will J. Parks, III
27 April 2011, 22:07
Use Enough Gun
Will: That's why, to dispel any doubt from the naysayers, you put them up on your shoulders like this: Big Grin Or you hold them up yourself: Big Grin
27 April 2011, 22:14
Cross L
That always looked like a good way to get ticks to me.

SSR
27 April 2011, 22:39
Will
quote:
Originally posted by Use Enough Gun:
Will: That's why, to dispel any doubt from the naysayers, you put them up on your shoulders like this:[IMG] Big Grin Or you hold them up yourself:[IMG] Big Grin


that is one big friggin leopard.


-------------------------------
Will / Once you've been amongst them, there is no such thing as too much gun.
---------------------------------------
and, God Bless John Wayne. NRA Benefactor, GOA, NAGR
_________________________

"Elephant and Elephant Guns" $99 shipped.
“Hunting Africa's Dangerous Game" $20 shipped.

red.dirt.elephant@gmail.com
_________________________

If anything be of note, let it be he was once an elephant hunter, hoping to wind up where elephant hunters go.

27 April 2011, 22:40
fairgame
quote:
Originally posted by safari-lawyer:
quote:
Originally posted by Will:
quote:
Originally posted by Scriptus:
quote:
Originally posted by fairgame:
They have been well composed by the PH for the photographs.




Excuse me while I blow my own trumpet just a while! Roll Eyes


What's the rule-of-thumb, the clients the length of a football field behind the leopard? Smiler


I tried to get 100 yards away, but I hit the Mozambique border and had to stop. Alas, I was only 93.7 yards into the background.

Shame. Wink


Excellent big mature toms, big head and thick neck and heavy jowls, and the photos look great set up in the sand. Often the prone shot is obscured with grass and other debris.

UEG,

That is an absolute beauty and you should have taken many more pictures of that beast. What did the skull measure?

Scriptus,

You are excused.


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27 April 2011, 23:08
Use Enough Gun
fairgame: we took a butt load of pics, but those are just a couple for illustration. Big Grin The skull measured 17 2/16". Will: tu2
27 April 2011, 23:23
safari-lawyer
[QUOTE]Originally posted by Use Enough Gun:
Will: That's why . . . you hold them up yourself:[IMG]

Indeed!




Will J. Parks, III
27 April 2011, 23:27
fairgame
quote:
Originally posted by Use Enough Gun:
fairgame: we took a butt load of pics, but those are just a couple for illustration. Big Grin The skull measured 17 2/16". Will: tu2


Exceptional trophy. Must say Zim is one Africa's hot spots for truly big Leopard.


ROYAL KAFUE LTD
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Tel/Whatsapp (00260) 975315144
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27 April 2011, 23:29
fairgame
Will,

Awesome brute and great photo. You do not see many of those. Well done.


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28 April 2011, 03:57
ddrhook
the best time for me to hunt ZIM is when Aubs458 say's Hook come on over and we'll go out and kill some shit with me!!!!! Big Grin Big Grin Big Grin OR when daddy say's come on son let's go hunting again jumping
28 April 2011, 04:07
A.Dahlgren
Failed once in June (21Days) failed another time in October (21days) and finally success x2cats in October(21days) took the cats on day 14 and 16. My advice, never give up !








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29 April 2011, 17:04
Marty
Kim-
The conventional wisdom, as explained to me, is that it's easier to get a leopard to feed on bait earlier, as when water holes dry up, prey is more concentrated at remaining water, making it much easier for predators to kill. That is, hunting is harder for them when there is more water, so they are hungrier. I have been told early June ar before.
I will be going to Dande for leopard/tuskless in April, 2013.
29 April 2011, 17:14
bwanamrm
Boys, those are some very nice leopards but Vaughan and Will yours are absolute pigs!


On the plains of hesitation lie the bleached bones of ten thousand, who on the dawn of victory lay down their weary heads resting, and there resting, died.

If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,
Or walk with Kings - nor lose the common touch...
Yours is the Earth and everything that's in it,
And - which is more - you'll be a Man, my son!
- Rudyard Kipling

Life grows grim without senseless indulgence.
29 April 2011, 19:07
FishN4Eyes
quote:
Originally posted by safari-lawyer:
May, June, or July.

Two leopards in two tries in the Save, one in June and one in July.

I love July as an all-around hunting month. Weather is great and enough leaves have fallen off to make hunting for buff and PG more enjoyable and doable.

Will try this year in July, next year in June.

June

July


I never get tired of looking at those big cats of yours, Will!

Hopefully after my hunt I'll have my own pictures so I don't have to photoshop my face over yours!