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After reading the "Rautenbach banned" thread and seeing all the discussion of SCI's sins, I'd like to know what other organization I can support with my rather meager funds to protect hunting, and particularly in Africa. I'm totally uninterested in seeing photos of wealthy blowhards shaking hands over banquet awards, and don't give a rat's ass about horn scores or record books. I'm totally interested in doing what I can to preserve the opportunity for hunters of all income levels to turn African dreams (or Canadian dreams, or Alaskan dreams) into reality, and to protect the habitat, cultures and other resources that give value to game animals so the dream remains alive for the next generation. I'm darned sure that if I attend a convention it will be in Dallas. (Must be the family roots in Texas.) But having a great convention to attend is in second place to supporting an organization that supports African hunting. Any other outfit out there that does really good work and doesn't have a bunch of self-important assholes clustered at the top of the pyramid and living absurdly well off the revenue stream? There is hope, even when your brain tells you there isn’t. – John Green, author | ||
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The best organization to support African hunting is... organize to get yourself an African hunt. As long as money is spent opportunity will exist. $.02 _______________________ | |||
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There is none. Pay your $45 and join SCI. It is the largest hunter organization in the world, so many think it does some good. I'm tired of all the SCI bashing. Please try to read the the negative posts with a critical eye. Some here simply enjoy Mike ______________ DSC DRSS (again) SCI Life NRA Life Sables Life Mzuri IPHA "To be a Marine is enough." | |||
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And there was me thinking we were all free to express our personal opinions. Whatever was I thinking............ | |||
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We are still waiting for some answers of what SCI actually does for African hunting! Suer, they get some people to go to Africa, but to think these same people would not have gone without SCI is stretching the point a bit. Of course, they do a great job of competeing with African outfitters after they have blackmailed them to "donate" those same hunts they came to sell! Steve, you are just as free to express you opinion as anyone else. | |||
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I was thinking the only way to protect or defend african hunting was to express ones wishes as a voter and taxpayer to the USFWS to try to insure importation of trophies. Other than that, I'd think african hunting is entirely at the whim of the african nations. Zimbabwe will do exactly what Zim wants to do regardless the opinion of SCI. Just my opinion, as if I know anything. | |||
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LionHunter: I am an SCI member, and an NRA member, and I hate seeing photos of Wayne LaPierre in a tux at banquets just as much as the other stuffed shirts in the Safari magazine. I also spent my hard earned cash on a trip to Namibia in 2007, and agree that is a great way to support hunting in Africa. I just have to wait another three or four years before I can afford to go again. So I guess as a paid member of SCI, I can voice my opinions, pro or con because I'm walking the walk, not just talking the talk. And in the meantime, I would love to hear about more cost-effective alternatives to SCI, that won't look the other way at shady outfitters. Saeed, Shakari, Ganyana, I am ALL EARS. There is hope, even when your brain tells you there isn’t. – John Green, author | |||
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I don't know very much about ALL the organizations in the world and I don't know all THAT much about SCI but from what I read they DO lobby and take more than a passing interest in hunting with some emphasis placed on African hunting. If I personally got more involved with the organization I would probably learn what they do and do not do that is either good or bad for hunting. I am a Life Member of SCI as I am of NRA BECAUSE I know of no other organization of ANY membership size that does ANYTHING for hunting or shooting sports on any level. I also contribute to the World Wildlife Fund as I believe they do much to maintain habitat and species and to the best of my knowledge are not anti-hunting. I am unable to hunt in Africa anymore due to financial conditions but my hunting in Africa on any level is a minor cog in the wheel of maintaining African wildlife and hunting. I too get weary of all the people with nothing but bad words for SCI without offering any alternative. The only one who really has the right on this forum is Saeed because he at least makes this forum possible for us to participate in but even he might be better put to use his influence and wealth to more directly help the plight of African hunting rather than just poor mouth SCI. SCI Life Member NRA Patron Life Member DRSS | |||
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I recon a man should look around and see what each agency spent on conservation and what was deemed conservation. I am a life member of the Boone and Crocket club and the NRA, I too am looking for another outlet for my meager donation money. | |||
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As previously stated, go there and hunt. Forums like this help weed out shady outfitters. | |||
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I think SCI is the only org that supports hunters that is a licensed NGO. This gives them a seat at the table in the UN. How many anti NGO's are there? | |||
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You could write the next great African story such as Hemingway, Ruark or Capstick did. Those guys got me (and a whole lot of other people) to Africa...simple as that. As to SCI and NRA, I belong to both of them too but Capstick in particular got me to see Africa for myself. _______________________________ | |||
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As has been said, one of the best ways to suport African hunting and the African safari industry is to go hunting in Africa. If you don't want to spend that much but want to support African hunting and conservation, one way you can do it is to support one of the pro hunting conservationists. - One guy who is pro hunting but to some extent a voice in the wilderness (because of political correctness) is Ron Thomson. By buying his books, you're not only getting yourself a great read, your also ensuring he can stay in business to write more on conservation with a pro hunting attitude..... and his books really do make total sense and are very readable indeed. (IMO) Ron's books contribute more to our conservation knowledge base than any other living writer by an absolute mile. If you want to support African wildlife, then you need to find yourself a suitable charity that isn't anti hunting and then sponsor it. I don't know about their current stance on hunting, but 'Space for Elephants' have some good intentions........ Im not sure they'll all work in the long term, but if they did, it certainly wouldn't do our big eared friends any harm........ but as I said, I'm not sure what their current position on hunting is. Hope that helps. | |||
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Bill, as mentioned; go to Africa, Alaska, Canada, UK...where ever you can hunt. Numbers (money) talk, BS walks. I'd like to see the effect of no more hunters suddenly traveling. The Airlines, travel insurance companies, medical clinics, catering (airlines), fuel, hotel, shops...on and on would go down fast. We spend Billions each year. This is strength. SCI is $55 per year. Dallas SC is $100 including tickets to their convention. Join if you wish. If not, join the NRA. We need ammo and guns. The NRA does fight daily in WA DC. It all cost money...lots of money, unfortunately. If you do not wish to join any membership, keep supporting hunting by....hunting. LDK Gray Ghost Hunting Safaris http://grayghostsafaris.com Phone: 615-860-4333 Email: hunts@grayghostsafaris.com NRA Benefactor DSC Professional Member SCI Member RMEF Life Member NWTF Guardian Life Sponsor NAHC Life Member Rowland Ward - SCI Scorer Took the wife the Eastern Cape for her first hunt: http://forums.accuratereloadin...6321043/m/6881000262 Hunting in the Stormberg, Winterberg and Hankey Mountains of the Eastern Cape 2018 http://forums.accuratereloadin...6321043/m/4801073142 Hunting the Eastern Cape, RSA May 22nd - June 15th 2007 http://forums.accuratereloadin...=810104007#810104007 16 Days in Zimbabwe: Leopard, plains game, fowl and more: http://forums.accuratereloadin...=212108409#212108409 Natal: Rhino, Croc, Nyala, Bushbuck and more http://forums.accuratereloadin...6321043/m/6341092311 Recent hunt in the Eastern Cape, August 2010: Pics added http://forums.accuratereloadin...261039941#9261039941 10 days in the Stormberg Mountains http://forums.accuratereloadin...6321043/m/7781081322 Back in the Stormberg Mountains with friends: May-June 2017 http://forums.accuratereloadin...6321043/m/6001078232 "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." | |||
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Full 100% support for shakari's advice. Ron Thomson should be compulsory reading for all school-leavers! What I urge everyone to do is to write to your congressman [or other political representative] and demand that USA [or your own country] should demand that Kortbroek van Schalkwyk immediately plan to start the removal of about 10000 elephants from the Kruger National Park. Yes, I say [in agreement with Ron Thomson and the true scientific researchers in KNP] that 'about ten thousand elephants' needs to be urgently removed from the KNP alone! Urgently. A higher figure may be required, and will be required if more time is wasted by the anti-culling idiots, but that is IMHO the correct order of magnitude for that one park alone! When you have completed your writing about the South African KNP ecosystem-destroying elephants, you start writing to your political representatives about the overpopulation of elephant in other souther African Parks and reserves. There is my mind absolutely nothing that is more threatening to hunting in the world than the idiotic idea that the "man-in-the-street" should be consulted or heard in scientific decisions about wildlife management! It is high time that we as hunters make our voices herd about such idiotic wildlife management policies as those proposed by Kortbroek van Schalkwyk and his band of so called advisors from the academics and anti-hunting league. I'd better stop now, before I get into the "Green Coal" and other debates. Please help us here in South Africa to protect our sacred National Parks' soils by protecting our National Parks' plants from further excessive damage by an overpopulation of elephant that needs to be taken away urgently. In good hunting. Andrew McLaren | |||
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I agree 100% with andrew and Steve. there is a few Gentlemen in SA that does great work Like Martin Hood,George Nell and Gerhard Verdoorn and I can only Imagine what they will be able to do if they have 1000000 USD to take on goverments and just cause shit for anti hunting organizations with their passion anything is posible only my 3 cents worth "Buy land they have stopped making it"- Mark Twain | |||
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While you're mentioning Kortbroek van Schalkwyk you might also like to try to pressure him to pull his finger out of his arse on the canned Lion issue - because if there's one single issue that's sooner or later going to destroy African hunting, it's that. Sooner or later, the antis are going to use it to hammer us into the ground and its shameful that the SA Government backed down from the issue at the last moment. | |||
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I agree. Going to Africa and supporting those operators on the ground makes all the difference. I have seen arguments against supporting “corrupt†governments etc, but feel strongly that supporting those on the ground while abiding by international law is the way to go. People like Saeed also put an immense amount into African hunting, often behind the scenes. His involvement with, and support of the African Hunter and African Fisherman magazines trickle down and influences a great deal on the ground. We are not a big organisation, but through an ethical, honest and informative magazine, we are able to do a lot, even playing “watch-dog†when required. In addition, there are a number of NGOs whose work with African wildlife is essential, though they may not be directly related to hunting. The Zambezi Society - or ZAMSOC as it is known - are one such organisation. I have been involved with them for the past 15 years or so, and their founder and past Director - Dick Pitman - writes and consults for the magazine. I am involved with the board that governs the organisation, and while they are low key, I cannot think of another NGO which has done more research, lobbying and on-the-ground work for one of Africa’s most pristine wildlife reservoirs. I would wager that more hunters have enjoyed the Zambezi Valley in all southern African countries than have not. Their continued enjoyment of this truly wild environment is largely due to ZAMSOC’s work and intervention over the last two and a half decades - stopping uncontrolled mining, damming (of the river) and poaching. Go have a look at www.zamsoc.org. While they benefit from small administration fees accrued from donor money, it is seldom enough to meet core running costs of the main offices in Zimbabwe, and these core costs, or the lack thereof, have often threatened the Society. In essence, the costs are not huge, but few donor agencies will fund “core costsâ€, and this is where people like us can become involved. Every little bit helps and international members to the Society make a difference. The Society is a lean mean conservation machine with a small dedicated staff and no bloated salaries or perks. These are devoted people! I have pasted below, some information on them, and a particularly exciting project they are about to embark on (lifted from a recent newsletter of theirs). Their web site can provide more information, and I believe has a donation system in place now. ----------------------------------- Dear Zambezi Society Members IF YOU HAVE SEEN A LEOPARD ANYWHERE IN ZIMBABWE IN THE LAST FIVE YEARS, PLEASE TELL US! Look at the Leopard Atlas Map on our website at http://www.zamsoc.org/html/leopard.html and fill in a survey form online OR: See the attached Leopard Atlas sighting sheet which you can fill in and return by e-mail to leopard@zamsoc.org OR: Fill in a Leopard Atlas sighting sheet at our offices in Harare or Bulawayo. As members and friends will already know from our Bulletins, The Zambezi Society is undertaking a National Leopard Survey for Zimbabwe, in partnership with the Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority. We want to record all leopard sightings for the past five years, with as much detail as possible. Please feel free to forward this e-mail to any of your friends or contacts who might be able to help us with leopard sightings for this survey. The Zambezi Society will be updating its Leopard Atlas Map on the website every month. You are encouraged to regularly check the website at http://www.zamsoc.org/html/leopard.html Our long term goal is to extend this programme include the whole of the Zambezi Basin area. Thank you for your help and participation in this very important exercise. SOME BACKGROUND ABOUT THE ZAMBEZI SOCIETY'S LEOPARD PROJECT Leopards are the least understood of all our big predators, and it has always been assumed that they are resilient enough to cope with the changes in habitat and human populations that Zimbabwe has experienced over the last 20-30 years. However, there has been increasing concern that this may not be the case and that the species is more vulnerable to change than previously thought. Leopards are an extremely important species, both from an ecological point of view and an economic point of view. They are top predators and their presence in an ecosystem by default implies a healthy prey base and good habitat. Being one of the “Big Five†they are also important for the photographic tourism industry, and, as a sought-after trophy species are key to the hunting industry as well. However, leopards often kill small and medium-sized livestock and can cause considerable losses to farmers. All this means that the species has to be managed to ensure that the population at the national level remains viable, but also that the income from both the consumptive and non-consumptive use of leopards is used to offset the costs borne by farmers living in areas with resident leopard. Effective management is not possible without a good understanding of the ecology and behaviour of the leopard under different conditions. The Zambezi Society will be working with the world-renowned Wildlife Conservation Research Unit of Oxford University to carry out the field work. We will be determining population densities of leopard (Phase 1 – current), demography (Phase 2 – will start as soon as there is funding available) and behaviour in relation to land use and changes in populations (Phase 3 – due to start as funding becomes available). Once data is available the Society will work with all stakeholders to use the data to develop a more effective management strategy for the species at a national level. The Society aims to keep everyone fully informed of the progress of the project. Although this project is based in Zimbabwe on a national scale, interest has already been expressed to replicate the same project to the whole Zambezi basin and other region states. SOME BACKGROUND ABOUT THE ZAMBEZI SOCIETY Formed in 1982, the Zambezi Society is a conservation group focussing is efforts solely on the Zambezi river, (Africa's fourth-longest river) and its basin. The Zambezi Society’s mission is: "To promote the conservation and environmentally sound use of the Zambezi basin for the benefit of its biological and human communities†We are committed to initiating rapid, well-informed and effective action ï¡ to maintain the Zambezi river basin’s variety and abundance of species and eco-systems ï¡ to conserve Zambezi wildernesses and promote the recognition of their values ï¡ to ensure that conservation is incorporated into planning for the whole Zambezi river basin ï¡ to encourage people to find ways of using the natural resources of the Zambezi basin without destroying them. WHAT DOES THE ZAMBEZI SOCIETY DO? ï¡ We provide financial and practical support for Protected Areas and National Parks in the Zambezi River basin. ï¡ We manage a range of wildlife and wilderness conservation and community resource management projects in the Zambezi basin region. Special focus is on protecting and monitoring black rhinoceros, elephant and carnivore populations and establishing training in wilderness awareness and management for custodians of Zambezi wild areas. ï¡ We increase public awareness about issues affecting the Zambezi river and its basin, by disseminating information through research, publications, the media and our membership. ï¡ We lobby or advocate against development initiatives that are unsuitable or damaging to the biodiversity or wilderness values of the Zambezi environment; and we promote good river basin planning based on sound scientific information. The Zambezi Society has adopted a theme-based approach to focus and streamline its activities in the Zambezi Basin. By separating out its activities into the following themes, the Society can better coordinate its conservation actions:- ï¡ wildlife (research, monitoring and protection programmes for black rhino, elephant and important Zambezi carnivore species such as cheetah and leopard) ï¡ wilderness (creating awareness of wilderness values and helping improve the management of wild areas through carefully-targeted, specialised training) ï¡ water/wetlands (promoting holistic river basin planning and underlining the importance of conserving wetland biodiversity to protect the Zambezi’s valuable water resource) ï¡ protected area support (providing logistical and material support for protection of wildlife and other natural resources in National Parks and other important protected areas). For more information about the Zambezi Society and its activities, visit our website at http://www.zamsoc.org Dr Gianetta (Netty) Purchase Project Liaison Officer Zimbabwe National Leopard Programme The Zambezi Society Tel: + 263 9 68910 or 242837 Fax: + 263 9 70367 Cell: + 263 913 016295 Email: leopard@zamsoc.org --------------------------------------- | |||
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Thanks for the ideas guys. Ant: I have the Zambezi Society site bookmarked. Shakari: I'm checking the usual suspects for Ron Thomson titles. Any favorites? There is hope, even when your brain tells you there isn’t. – John Green, author | |||
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Bill, start with "Managing our wildlife Heritage" isbn 0 62037 140 4 good hunting Harris Safaris PO Box 853 Gillitts RSA 3603 www.southernafricansafaris.co.za https://www.facebook.com/pages...=aymt_homepage_panel "There is something about safari life that makes you forget all your sorrows and feel as if you had drunk half a bottle of champagne." - Karen Blixen, | |||
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Bill, Here's a full ist of his books: Managing Our Wildlife Heritage ISBN 0-620-37140-4 A Game Warden's Report ISBN 0-620-30850-8 The Adventures of Shadrek ISBN 1-571-57133-7 Mahohboh ISBN 0-620-21779-0 The Wildlife Game ISBN 0-620-16315-1 Currently Ron is writing his big game hunting memoirs which will be released across several volumes, the first to be available in 2008. Hope that helps Ant, Thanks for the tip on the Zambezi Society. | |||
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Guys: I checked Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Powell's and Alibris for "Managing Our Wildlife Heritage" without result. Know of any bookstores that might carry it? There is hope, even when your brain tells you there isn’t. – John Green, author | |||
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Oops, sorry about that, I should have told you he sells his books direct. His e-mail address is magron@ripplesoft.co.za | |||
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The best organization to support African hunting is... organize to get yourself an African hunt. As long as money is spent opportunity will exist. AMEN! And while you are there ask around regarding who the local organizations are and how you can help - you'd be surprised at how much oraganic work is actually going on in Africa - A well funded concession lisencee can be one of the most effective tools going! JW | |||
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Hijacking this thread: Ron Thomson got a rude bashing from John Osborne,in his book "a ranging son" for having pactized with the infamous Shadrek, who attempted to kill rangers a couple of times when John Osborne were the game ranger in charge of Gonarhezou NP, before Ron took over his post. I have read only "Mahoboh". I declined membership of SCI in Paris. By booking I support PHs and outfitters,it's what counts. In France we have ACP (Association of the French PHs) and the GIE (association of PHs, outfitters, agents, taxidermists, air companies...) that tremendously support hunting abroad. We can easily do without SCI. J B de Runz Be careful when blindly following the masses ... generally the "m" is silent | |||
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Ladies and Gentlemen, I have received the following from Ron Thomson, which he has asked me to post. Response to the letter by Jean B. de Runz Dear Sir A respondent to your Hunter’s Forum requested information regarding where he could obtain some sound and factual information about wildlife management in Africa. Several people recommended that he obtain a copy of my book “Managing Our Wildlife Heritage”. We have since been in touch. Another respondent (Jean B. de Runz), however, commented thus: “Ron Thomson got a rude bashing from John Orborne in his book “a ranging son” for having practised with the infamous Shadrek who attempted to kill rangers a couple of times when John Osborne were (sic) the game ranger-in-charge of the Gonarezhou NP, before Ron took over his post.” I would like to set the record straight in this regard: Up until the time John Osborne left the employ of the old Rhodesian Department of National Parks and Wildlife Management, the Gonarezhou National Park (and all wildlife management matters in the surrounding South East Lowveld area of Rhodesia) was commanded by a senior game warden based at the Gonarezhou’s Mabalauta headquarters. This was located in the south of the Park on the Nuanetsi River. Chipinda Pools, where John Osborne lived throughout his service in the Gonarezhou, was a small satelite field station located 80 miles north of Mabalauta, on the Lundi River. Chipinda pools, throughout John Osborne’s service period, was commanded by the Warden at Mabalauta. The first Warden at Mabalauta was Tim Braybrooke. He was followed by Tinky Haslam. I replaced Tinky in October 1968. John Osborne was then the senior game ranger based at Chipinda Pools. In 1968 I inherited John from Tinky. John Osborne, therefore, came directly under my command in 1968 and he remained under my command until he resigned from the department circa. 1972. John Osborne persistently referred to himself as the Game Ranger-in-charge of the South East Lowveld. Where he developed this illusion I have no idea because there was no such post. John Osborne was a charismatic and likeable man who oozed charm and bonhomie. I know of nobody who disliked him. I considered him to be a competent field officer and I felt privileged to have him as my 2 i/c (in the north of the park). In fact I relied on him completely and gave him a great deal of free rein in the execution of his duties – because I, myself, could not be in two places at the same time. Throughout his reign at Chipinda Pools John Osborne tried in vain to catch the infamous elephant poacher Shadrek - who operated out of adjacent Mozambique. Over a hundred prime elephant bulls were allegedly killed by Shadrek over a period of about a five years. The elusive Shadrek, became something of a bete noire for John. He became obsessed by the poacher and John went to extraordinary lengths to catch him. Many of John’s exploits in this regard were illegal and I now know that a great deal of important information in this regard was withheld from me as a consequence. Instead of us all being in on the act, therefore, John’s pursuit of Shadrek became a personal vendetta. Long after both John and I had left the Gonarezhou, at the height of the Rhodesian Bush War, I managed to lure Shadrek into my confidence. He and I formed a team (and a friendship) and we operated in Mozambique together, militarily. As a direct result of our activities ten ZANLA terrorist bases were exposed – and wiped out by the collective Rhodesian military machine. I was able to put my personal disapproval of Shadrek’s elephant poaching exploits behind me, in the interests of Rhodesia’s greater military cause. John Osborne, apparently did not see it that way. John Osborne has, apparently, seen fit to give me a “rude bashing” in one of his books because I befriended and worked with Shadrek, a black man that he hated and resented in the extreme. I have no regrets. I liked Shadrek, we worked well together and we produced super results. John Osborne’s opinion of me, therefore, is of no consequence. From his writings – which I must admit I have perused only superficially – I note that he has always harboured a natural disdain for those who held dominion over him. In retrospect, therefore, I am not surprised that he developed disapproval regarding my military work with Shadrek. That fact that I did so, and the fact that he could never lay a hand on his elusive enemy, must have been a bitter pill for John to swallow. Perhaps there is a shadow of envy in his attitude towards me today, too. Who knows? Who cares? I trust that those people who read John Osborne’s books will read mine also. If they do they will very quickly determine which of life’s many pigeon holes John Osborne and I, respectively, live in. They are poles apart! Ron Thomson ====================================== Tel/Fax : (012) 253 0521 MAGRON PUBLISHERS Email : magron @ ripplesoft.co.za P.O. Box 733 HARTBEESPOORT 0216 SOUTH AFRICA RON THOMSON’S BIG GAME HUNTING MEMOIR BOOK PROGRAMME. Ron Thomson is at last writing his African big game hunting memoirs. The planned programme comprises six volumes, the first of which is nearing completion. Altogether these books record the history of the author’s remarkable life in a colonial Africa that is long gone and will never return. This is probably the best, and it may be the last, verbatim record of a white colonial game ranger’s life in Africa and what are probably the greatest ever free-range African big game hunting stories ever told. Many of the stories are as incredible and they may seem impossible. The books are set, primarily, in colonial Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) where, for 24 years (1959 - 1983), the author was employed as a game ranger in the country’s Department of National Parks and Wildlife Management. During those years he was embroiled in the most incredible big game hunting and black rhino capture work programmes imaginable. The numbers boggle the mind. Animals he has hunted, by conventional means, on foot, and with the aid of his faithful Bushman trackers, include some 5000 elephant; 800 buffalo; 50-60 lion (including six man-eaters); 30-40 leopards; and over 200 hippos. In addition, Ron led the culling team that killed 2 500 elephants, over a two year period, in the Gonarezhou National Park in the early 1970s. He led the country’s black rhino capture team during the 1960s and early 1970s. Over a seven-year period he pioneered and perfected the capture and translocation of black rhinos. In that time he and his team captured and translocated some 140 black rhinos. These captures were effected with a capture gun that fired darts (flying syringes) which delivered a dose of immobilizing drugs into the target animal. The work entailed tracking the animals down on foot, following the spoor with African trackers, finding the rhino in the Zambesi Valley’s dense jesse bush, and moving in on the target animal on foot. Ron conducted the final approaches ALONE with just a dart gun in his hands, a gun that fired a single dart that took between 15 and 20 minutes to immobilize the rhino! Absolute silence was the key to success. And he had always to maintain a position that was down wind of his quarry. Most days, although several rhinos were tracked down every day for months on end, produced no results. The rhinos detected the approaching hunter, by sound, movement or scent, and they either charged him down or they turned and ran away. Ron believes that over the seven-year period of this black rhino capture work he had, perhaps, 3 000 close encounters with these very dangerous animals. He was always alone and armed only with a dart gun. The requirement for absolute silence on the final stalk made it impossible for a back-up game ranger to accompany him. So there was never a man with a heavy caliber weapon nearby to help him should he be attacked and mauled by the rhino. Some final stalks, over the last 100 yards or so, took upwards of 4 hours to complete. Firing the dart was only possible when the hunter was able to maneouvre himself into a position where he had a completely clear shot at the target. This fact accounts for the very close darting ranges recorded. In the early days, before he himself improved the equipment, Ron’s average darting range was between 6 and 13 yards. To successfully execute these capture operations required the most incredible hunting skills. Few people had what it took to carry out this work and be successful let alone survive. Few people had enough control of their nerves. Three of Ron’s colleagues were gored by black rhinos. He himself was tossed twice, knocked aside once, and spent some harrowing moments being kicked around under the belly of an irate black rhino bull that he had just darted. The chronicle of Ron Thomson’s black rhino hunting/capture experiences will surely rank amongst the greatest of conventional hunting stories that will ever be told. Finally, Ron was involved in a part-time capacity, as a tracker-combat-unit leader, throughout the 16 years of the Rhodesian Bush War. In the 1960s this was an informal arrangement. He was, in those days, called upon, on an ad hoc basis, to use his hunting and tracking skills to track down and engage Joshua Nkomo’s insurgent forces of Ndebele (ZIPRA) terrorists who were then invading the country. In these pursuits he used his Bushman trackers to great effect. In the 1970s this arrangement was formalized by the establishment of the National Parks Volunteer Tracker Combat Unit (NP-VTCU). During this latter period he was more deeply involved in hunting down the Mashona (ZANLA) terrorists of Robert Mugabe. Over the years hunters have always speculated about ‘the most dangerous quarry’. Ron will tell you it is a group of terrorists, armed with machineguns, who are prepared to fight back and take the battle to their enemy. Ron’s war service brought into his life some of his most exhilarating, yet harrowing, ‘hunting’ experiences. One of his hunting memoir books will be devoted entirely to telling this story: Game Rangers At War! He intends that it should serve as a tribute to all those of his colleagues who were part of the NP-VTCU; and in memory of those who lost their lives serving in it. The NP-VTCU was a small but elite group of young Rhodesian men, black and white, who had very special hunting and tracking skills. In the 1970s they were trained (in military disciplines), armed and uniformed by the Rhodesian army under whose command they operated. The tiny NP-VTCU, pro-rata, is said to have suffered more casualties in the Rhodesian Bush War than any other military unit. This was because the men of the unit were constantly in hot pursuit of the enemy. They were the first to be placed on the terrorists’ tracks. They were persistent in tracking them down. They were the first to enter the killing fields when the enemy laid ambushes for those who were following them! And they were the first to engage the enemy when they came under fire. Ron still does not understand how he came through 16 years of war unscathed. He was lucky. His was saved on many occasions, he believes, by the exquisite bush-craft skills of his Bushman trackers; and, undoubtedly, also because of his own bush-craft skills which he absorbed, over many years, from his Bushmen friends. In many ways Ron’s war experiences represented high points in his life and peaks in his hunting career. The sheer numbers of animals involved in Ron’s big game hunting adventures explains the many extraordinary hunting stories that he tells. The law of averages dictate that a certain proportion of the hunts he conducted would result in exceptional stories. Most of his hunts were mundane and have been forgotten. Those that he remembers are memorable and unforgettable. Never before has there been a series of big game hunting books like these. There will never be a series like them in the future. These, therefore, are African big game hunting books that no self-respecting hunter will want to miss. Each book will be part of the series but it will also stand on its own. The first editions will be limited to ONLY 1 000 collector’s copies. Each book will be numbered and signed by the author. Those who purchase these books will have their names inscribed in calligraphy on the collector’s copy page. Those who purchase the first volume/volumes will be given preference in the purchase of all subsequent copies, so as to enable them to obtain every volume in the 6-part series. Volume 1. The saga begins with the author’s first encounters with Africa’s big game animals and his first ventures into big game hunting. It begins when the author was just 16 years old (1955). The book takes the reader through the author’s early hunting years, with leopards and crocodiles and elephants, and his attestation into the Department of National Parks and Wildlife Management (1959), aged 20. It explains the big game hunting training he was given by experienced game wardens up to the day he was entrusted with hunting elephant and buffalo on his own (early 1961). It tells the story, therefore, about how he “earned his stripes” as a big game hunter-game ranger. This book relates several fine and exciting leopard hunts, early buffalo and elephant hunts, and the author’s first lion. It includes one of Ron’s most dangerous buffalo hunts ever. It also, incidentally, introduces the reader to a range of ordinary yet remarkable national park duties that young Rhodesian game rangers were required to perform at the height of Africa’s colonial era. Although each book stands on its own, this first volume does set the scene for the other five that will follow. Volume 11. This second book of the series covers the period 1961 to 1964 when the game rangers of Rhodesia’s Hwange National Park undertook the first serious attempt to reduce the park’s excessive elephant population. The park remained a sanctuary for all wild animals but every elephant that left the park boundaries was tracked down and killed by one or another of Hwange’s (at that stage) TWO ‘available’ young game rangers. Ron Thomson was one of them. The hunting was carried out in the conventional manner, tracking the animals down with Bushman trackers, finding them in the dense teak forests of the area, and shooting as many of them that the game rangers could find. Every buffalo that was found outside the park boundaries was similarly treated. The stories tell of the killing of many crop-raiding elephant bulls, too, and the first ever elimination of entire elephant breeding herds in Rhodesia. It also relates the hunting of stock killing lions, leopards and hyenas. Some of the buffalo hunts will stand, forever, as some of the most exhilarating hunting stories ever told. This book tells the story of a young game ranger, with a huge passion for big game hunting, who falls with his ‘bum in the butter’. Every month of this three year period saw the author hunting elephants and/or buffaloes anywhere and everywhere outside the park boundaries; and/or he was killing stock-killing lions and leopards on the commercial ranches throughout the Hwange district; or in the district’s tribal reservations. He also shot two buffalo bulls every week for labour rations. Half way through this period, when his senior ranger colleague, and one-time mentor, was transferred to Victoria Falls National Park, Ron took on the duties of senior hunter-mentor at Hwange National Park’s Main Camp. It then became his responsibility to train the new young game ranger recruits who came to Hwange. His age-range during this period was 21–24 years old. All Ron’s dreams of becoming a big game hunter were realized during this period. The hunting experiences he enjoyed were beyond his wildest dreams. He grasped every opportunity with both hands until, at the ripe young age of 25, he became one of the most competent and experienced elephant hunters in Hwange National Park’s history. Life, Ron believed, could not get better than this. He was mistaken! Volume 111. This book covers the period 1964 to 1968. The winds of change blew over Africa in the early 1960s. In October 1963 the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland was dissolved. The two less-developed partners in the coalition, the British colonies of Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia) and Nyasaland (now Malawi) were given their independence. Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), the most developed and senior partner, was not given its independence despite the fact that Southern Rhodesia had been self-governing since 1923. The politics of the period was to change the author’s life forever but he did not know it then. Nor did it interest him very much either. His attention was focused entirely on his big game hunting career which, at that time, was cruising on the crest of a very high wave. Although the federation had been a partnership between three African countries only Southern Rhodesia had surrendered game reserves to the Federal Department of National Parks. When the federation broke up, therefore, Southern Rhodesia simply absorbed the Federal National Parks Department and amalgamated it with the country’s territorial Game Department. It was meaningless to have two wildlife departments in the one small country: one administering the national parks; one being responsible for all wildlife matters outside the protected areas. The Rhodesian Department of National Parks and Wildlife Management then came into being (October 1963). For years there had existed a sometimes unhealthy rivalry between the rangers of the old Game Department and those of the much more sophisticated national parks organization. To make the combined group into a cohesive whole, therefore, at the break up of the federation staff transfers were effected that saw old game department staff being posted to national parks stations, and vice versa. Ron Thomson was caught up in the turmoil thus created. At the beginning of 1964 Ron was promoted to the rank of senior game ranger and transferred out of Main Camp, out of his beloved Hwange, to a small government station on the shores of the newly formed Lake Kariba. He was reluctant to move but he had no choice. He was placed in charge of the 5000 square mile Binga district in the middle Zambesi Valley which he was required to administer all on his own. Binga district was a piece of real estate the size of Hwange National Park. It contained two 500 sq. mile game reserves, Chete and Chizarira, which had been set aside to accommodate ALL the wild animals of the district. This was a forlorn hope conjured up by government administration in the capital. The rest of the district was, at the time of Ron’s arrival, being occupied by the Ba-Tonga people who had vacated the recently inundated Zambesi valley floor. Lake Kariba, 280 miles long and 25 miles across at its widest point, filled to capacity for the first time in 1963. Prior to this event some 57 000 primitive Ba-Tonga tribes-people were forcibly evicted from their ancestral homes in the lake basin and they settled on vacant land above the high water mark all around the lake shore. This himterland had been wild and pristine African bush before the advent of Kariba. It had been populated by a whole range of wild animal species ONLY. Before Kariba, an undisturbed ecological balance between the animals and their habitats had been in force here since time began. When the Kariba dam was constructed all this changed. All the wild animals that had once lived in the lake basin walked out in front of the rising waters. They, too, occupied the hinterland country above the lake shore, being forced to join the old and resident animal populations. The whole district, therefore, became unnaturally and very heavily overstocked with wild animals. The masses of displaced Ba-Tonga were simply told to “find land” on which to build their new villages and on which to grow their crops. This had to be done in the hinterland of the district away from the lake. No organised resettlement programme existed. The people individually selected locations where there were natural springs, and/or places where there were perennial pools in the seasonally dry riverbeds. Their primary need was to live near a permanent source of water. These springs and river pools, of course, were the ancestral waterholes of the wild animals of the district, too. This brought the people and the wild animals into direct conflict. In February of 1964 Ron’s new responsibilities comprised administering all wildlife matters in the whole Binga District. Binga was, at that time, still a huge piece of pristine Africa in which there was a salmagundi of massive numbers of wild animals and huge numbers of resettling and very primitive people. Whilst the people were busy hacking out new croplands from the animal’s wild habitats, their crop lands were being plundered by the huge numbers of elephant and buffaloes which then ranged the district. There were elephants and black rhinos and buffaloes, and people, and goats, and sheep, and chickens, and scrawny village pariahs, all mixed up in one big boiling pot of disorganization. During his first year at Binga 17 Ba-Tonga people were killed by elephants when they tried drive the big bulls out of their croplands. During that year Ron killed 600 elephants in protection of Ba-Tonga crops alone. He was also kept busy shooting crop-raiding buffaloes and hippos, and stock killing lions, leopards and hyenas. Every day of the week he was out on one kind of game control mission or another, or trying to stop the Ba-Tonga from laying wire and steel-cable snares to kill wild animals for food. Throughout 1964 elephants and buffaloes trekked away from the turmoil in the valley. They moved onto the commercial highveld cattle ranches and they took with them the dreaded tsetse fly. Soon the fatal disease, nagana, which was transmitted to the domestic stock of the commercial farming areas by tsetse flies, became a new problem resultant from the formation of Lake Kariba. Hurriedly two ‘parallel’ high-tension steel-wire game-proof fences were erected around the Zambesi valley. They stretched from the upper reaches of Lake Kariba, for hundreds of miles, to the Mozambique border in the far north east of the country. The corridor varied between five and sixty miles wide. It became government policy to remove ALL animals, both domesticated and wild, between the two fences. This eventually stopped the spread of the tsetse fly. Ron was placed in charge of the Sebungwe (Binga) section of the tsetse corridor and, in November 1964, he was given two elderly, white, ex-farmers to help him eradicate all the buffaloes and all the elephants inside his part of the corridor. Ron’s new helpers were nice enough guys but they were not competent to handle the serious killing that had to be done. Most of the heavy work, therefore, fell on his shoulders. In the first three days of this operation Ron, on his own, killed 67 elephants. His middle-aged helpers simply could not keep up with his athletic running capabilities which is an absolute necessity when hunting elephants under these conditions. The anti-tsetse operations lasted four years. And crop-protection was a continuing exercise throughout this period. Early in 1964 the Ba-Tonga complained that they could not occupy a large area of heavy bush in the Sengwa River Mouth area of the Lake Kariba shore because it was heavily occupied by belligerent black rhinos. It was mooted that the rhinos be shot out. The Department of National Parks refused to consider this. Instead they launched a black rhino capture operation in the winter of 1964 (between May and September). It was headed by Warden Rupert Fothergill of Operation Noah fame. Ron was tasked to assist him. VOLUME IV. Between the two of them, Ron & Rupert captured 18 black rhinos over a six-month period in 1964. They were all translocated and released into Hwange National Park from where the species had been extirpated in the 1930s. The anti-tsetse operations began in November 1964. They were destined to last the next four years. By the time the following winter came round, and the second phase of the rhino capture operations were due to commence, Ron was deeply immersed in the elimination of elephants and buffaloes in the Sebungwe Tsetse corridor. It was deemed, therefore, that Rupert should carry on with the rhino capture operation without Ron’s assistance. It so happened, however, that shortly after the operation began Rupert was badly gored by a rhino. He had his stomach ripped open, his right shoulder joint was smashed, and his upper right arm was shattered. He was casevacked out by helicopter. He survived but he never hunted again. Ron was then the only person in the whole country who had any experience in black rhino capture. Consequently, he was (to his delight) temporarily withdrawn from his elephant and buffalo control programme in the Sebungwe Tsetse Corridor and, at age 25, he was placed in charge of the country’s black rhino capture operations. This was to last for the next seven years during every dry season, when Ron and his team captured and translocated 140 black rhinos. The rhinos were captured in tribal areas all over the country, where they were being killed by the local native peoples, and they were released into the country’s ‘safe’ game reserves. During this period Hwange National Park, the Chizarira National Park and the Gonarezhou National Park were all restocked with black rhinos. Others were released into the Chirisa tribal game reserve in the Gokwe district. Volume IV tells the story of this remarkable exercise. Volume V. Game Rangers at War. This volume tells the story of the formation and the work carried out by the National Park Volunteer Tracker Combat Unit (the NP-VTCU), and Ron’s participation in it. This is an incredible story of man-hunting and war skirmishes between the game ranger-tracker-hunters and the terrorist forces (otherwise known as ‘freedom-fighters’). The terrorists belonged to the black-nationalist leaders of the day, Joshua Nkomo and Robert Mugabe. The war period lasted sixteen years of part-time (ultimately three week duty stints every two months) and very specialized soldiering. It ended with the take-over of power in the country by Robert Mugabe in 1980. Rhodesia was then renamed Zimbabwe. Volume VI. This book covers the last fifteen years of Ron’s service in the Rhodesian/ Zimbabwe Department of National Parks and Wildlife Management, the most intense period of the liberation war. It tells of his promotion to Provincial Game Warden (of Mashonaland South) and his eventual appointment to the post of Provincial Game Warden-in-charge of Hwange National Park. Falconry substitutes, during some of this period, for Ron’s Big Game Hunting passions, until his return to Hwange. This is the period of his maturity from a wild and woolly young game ranger to a deep-thinking and serious wildlife manager. In this period he qualified as a Member of the British Institute of Biology and he became registered as a Chartered Biologist with the European Union. It covers the period of Robert Mugabe’s first three years as President of Zimbabwe and the evolution of a political machine that allowed him to hold onto power into the late first decade of the new millennium. He achieved this by instilling fear in his own people by way of intimidation, torture and murder. It affected everybody’s lives. Ron, being in a particularly high profile government position in the early 1980s, became a prime target. This book tells of the political pressures put on him to resign. Mugabe wanted a black man in his place! He refused. Several ambushes by Mugabe’s military machine were then laid for Ron inside Hwange National Park. He managed to avoid them all as a consequence of information fed to him by his black staff in the game reserve. In one of these ambushes 13 government soldiers, armed with machineguns, lay in wait for him to pass by on the main tourist road in the national park . It was their intention to kill him and to blame his death on the action of Joshua Nkomo’s Matabele ‘dissidents’. These were Robert Mugabe’s political enemies. It was a harrowing time. Finally Ron saw the writing on the wall is six-foot high neon lettering. He succumbed to the pressure knowing that if he didn’t resign he would be killed; and with him, maybe, his family also. Even then he was not out of the woods. Ron knew far too much about Mugabe’s killing sprees in early 1983 when more than 20 000 Ndebele people were killed. The government refused to sign release papers that would allow him to emigrate quietly to South Africa. The break-through that saw his papers signed was a drama that one only expects in a Hollywood film. This book tells of Ron’s ‘escape’ to South Africa, one step ahead of Robert Mugabe’s notorious Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO), the Zimbabwe Intelligence Police (ZIP) and Mugabe’s presidential guard, the infamous North-Korean-trained 5 Brigade. , The evil forces of Robert Mugabe’s ZANLA regime were responsible for over 20 000 Ndebele murders in the first three months of 1983. Many of the victims were the families of Ron’s African staff at Main Camp, Hwange National Park. He thereby gained much knowledge about what was going on. The Mashona and Ndebele peoples were arch-enemies long before the white man arrived in the country, in the 1890s. The Ndebeles then had the upper hand. After Zimbabwe’s independence in 1980, however, voting in the first ever fully democratic elections, saw the Mashona-leader, Robert Mugabe, come to power instead of the veteran Ndebele-leader, Joshua Nkomo. In 1980, 77 per cent of the electorate were Shona-speaking people; 20 percent were Sindebele-speaking people; and just three percent were ‘other races’. The latter group included the ‘whites’, the former rulers of the country for the previous 87 years. The voting, therefore, was split exactly according to tribal affiliations. Ron’s last twenty-odd years in South Africa saw him develop a major philosophy on wildlife management and, particularly, a national park wildlife management philosophy that is totally contrary to everything that is happening in Africa today. Those who read the first five books in this series will be left in no doubt that Ron has been “through the mill” and that he knows what he is talking about. Since he left Zimbabwe in 1983, of course, the commercial poaching pandemic (for elephant ivory and rhino horn) has flourished in Africa. It caused Ron to rethink everything that he ever learnt whilst he was “in” the profession. He is now a man who is quite happy looking for reality “outside the box” rather than confining his thinking to the doctrinaire and peer-pressure norms and values of our modern society. Ron now scorns the CITES international trade bans for elephant ivory and rhino horn. He is adamant that their perpetuation is counter-productive. He states that the purported sole causes of the poaching, the existence of a black market and the festering sore of Africa, corruption, are of no consequence. He is equally adamant that the real driving force behind the poaching is poverty. Today he promotes the idea that the only solution to the commercial poaching problem is to relieve poverty in those rural communities that surround Africa’s remote national parks, the communities from which the poachers come. The poacher communities! He claims that hunting the huntable animals in the annual culling quotas WITHIN the Africa’s national parks is the best way to generate enough funds to relieve the local people’s poverty and thus to stop the poaching. Ron says the commercial poaching of elephants and rhinos (particularly) is a uniquely African problem. But, he says, hunting for meat will eventually overtake elephant and rhino poaching as the most destructive force threatening Africa’s wildlife. He claims that the CITES solution to stop commercial poaching, the trade bans, will not work. He says they will not work because they offer only a First World recipe. He says solutions that will work in Africa will only work if they come out of Africa. They must address the real and African causes of the problem - principally poverty. Finally, he says, the solution must be a self-sustaining solution, a solution that is maintainable solely by Africa. No more ignominious begging bowls. No more hand-out solutions. Ron wants Africa to resolve this problem in an African manner - because none of the First World solutions so far offered have any chance of long-term success. Ron’s philosophies are compelling. They are based on his belief that hunting inside the national parks is the only way we can produce enough money to sustainably solve the poverty factor in the poacher communities. It is the only way to stop the poaching. “We must always remember,” he says, “that the poacher communities are doubling their numbers every twenty years. So the poverty problem is going to get worse over time, not better.” “By using the wild animals of the national parks as the means to solve poverty in the poacher communities,” he says, “is also the only way we will ever be able to generate an ‘emotional ownership’ of the national parks within the hearts and minds of these poacher communities. When this happens,” he says, “they will become the greatest-ever custodians of Africa’s wildlife.” “Hunting inside Africa’s national parks, within a specific framework (which he outlines)”, he says, “is the ONLY thing that can save Africa’s wildlife, Africa’s national parks, and Africa’s tourism industries, for posterity.” This is the pro-hunting conclusion of a 69 year old man who has spent his whole life in the service of Africa’s wildlife and Africa’s national parks. Society should take heed of his views. AWARDS 1. In recognition of his contribution to public awareness - about the principles and practices of wildlife management - and for projecting hunting in a positive light, Ron Thomson has received the following awards from hunting associations in Africa and across the globe: (i). The Conservation Trophy (The International Conservationist of the Year Award) 1992. - Safari Club International – - (based in Tucson, Arizona, United States of America) - (ii). The Conservation Medal (The International Conservationist of the Year Award) 1993. - International Council for Game and Wildlife Conservation (C.I.C.) – - (then based in Brussels, Belgium, Europe) – (iii). Associate Life Membership of the International Professional Hunters Association. 1992. - (then based in South Africa) – (iv). Golden Award. 2007 - The Confederation of Hunters’ Associations of South Africa. (CHASA). - (based in South Africa) (v). Namibian Conservation Medal 2003. - The Namibian Professional Hunters Association (NAPHA) - - (based in Windhoek, Namibia) (vi). Natal Conservationist of the Year Award 1992 - Natal Hunters and Game Conservation Association. South Africa. - (based in Kwa-Zulu, Natal, South Africa.) (vii). Natal Conservationist of the Year Award 1993 - Natal Hunters and Game Conservation Association, South Africa.. - (based in Kwa-Zulu Natal, South Africa.) (viii). Honorary Membership of the S.A. Hunters Association (2007) - South African Hunters and Game Conservation Association. - (based in Pretoria, South Africa.) CONCLUSION: Those who read this series of six books are in for a pro-hunting roller-coaster adventure that they never ever thought was possible. And they will be left with a new pro-hunting social perspective that they never expected. M.C. De Jager. Editor-in-Chief. Magron Publishers. REGISTER YOUR CONTACT DETAILS – name, postal address and Email address – with the publisher. This implies no obligation to purchase. What registration will do is allow the publisher to notify you when each and every volume has been printed. You will then be given a priority option to purchase as and when each of these books becomes available. Registration address: magron @ ripplesoft.co.za. | |||
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Fantastic reply - Good for Ron. I reckon him one of the very best men and writers in Africa. Saeed, Thanks for posting it! | |||
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Sounds like Ron! One of the most interesting wildlife people I've ever met. Buy his books and study them, I cannot agree more with Shakari on that one! Johan | |||
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I regret that my post could have been misinterpreted. I didn’t wish to be obnoxious and offer Mr Thomson my apologies. As Shakari has listed all the books and tremendous achievements of Ron Thomson, everybody could have realized that the criticisms from John Osborne, hardly known from a couple of forumites, were groundless. I was supposing that many posters would strongly react and defend Ron Thomson. I heart fully thanks Mr Ron Thomson for re-establishing the truth. Like everybody here I rejoice myself that his extensive experience will be related in no less than 6 books and would make a great reading. If I read 2 books of John Osborne, I just read only Mahoboh of Ron Thomson. This excellent book gives some hints of numerous hunts and captures and unconsciously I regretted that all these experiences will be lost forever. Of course I’ll buy all these books as soon as they’ll be marketed and it’s great that this thread helps to advertise for this event. J B de Runz Be careful when blindly following the masses ... generally the "m" is silent | |||
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Four copies of "Managing Africa's Wildlife Heritage" on the way from ZA to Oregon. Shakari, thanks for the suggestion. Mr. Thomson seems to be a first-class fellow. There is hope, even when your brain tells you there isn’t. – John Green, author | |||
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Bill, It was my pleasure and I KNOW you won't be disappointed. If I had my way, his books would be compulsory reading before anyone was allowed to shoot an Elephant. - That way, they'd understand the difference between an Elephant and an Elephant that's ripe for shooting.......... | |||
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In a (free society) amongst other there are hunting organisations, some good some bad some in between. They do play their part in promoting hunting to some degree. Of course there are some fat cats in all organisations, there is nothing stopping you and I from becoming one of those fat cats if we so choose, therfore before we get tooooooooo critical remember we have freedom of choice to join or not to join. Sometimes the ones whom complain most are those whom sit back in a cosy arm chair slurping their sundowners and not contributing towards a goal. My humble thoughts on the specific question posed are .. Consider, or more importantly, book a hunt, maybe even buy a ranch yourself, the only way something can be (maintained or progressed) is by participation, not by observing and complaining Cheers, Peter | |||
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I try to make sure I do not donate money to any charity, the results of which will increase the population of homo sapiens in Africa. | |||
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It's good to hear "the rest of the story." I also read "A Ranging Son" and have wondered about some of the accusations. ____________________________________________ "Build a man a fire, and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life." Terry Pratchett. | |||
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By looking up a Safari area on "GOOGLE EARTH" one can see what you have helped protect from hunting in Africa. The boundary's of say Chirisa Safari Area or Bubiana conservancy stand out like the "proverbial" against the surrounding communal farming lands. | |||
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One of Us |
Very true, well said oz Dave | |||
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