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How many have you fed?
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While in CAR I shot a 50" LDE. Big boy. I asked the outfitter how long would an animal this size feed his crew? He replied that he had 40 employees (all male) in camp and it would feed them for 3 days.
While in RSA, I shot a number of different (plains) animals and I saw all that meat being carried off to market.
I can't imagine how many people an elephant would feed and for how long.

So, with all your safaris and various hunts, how much meat do you think you've supplied to the people of Africa?

Note, these kinds of question/answers are the ones that absolutely destroy the greenies!!! Smiler
 
Posts: 3456 | Location: Austin, TX | Registered: 17 January 2007Reply With Quote
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with the exception of RSA i don't think i've ever been anywhere where the meat didn't go to #1 the staff, #2 the nearby people. In RSA the game ranches are replacing beef ranches, thus it is still going to the people, with the landowner getting paid for the meat, which is what he is farming for and providing a living for all the workers and their families
 
Posts: 13446 | Location: faribault mn | Registered: 16 November 2004Reply With Quote
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Bluefin,
I have no idea about your original question other than what I read in the Lewis and Clark Journals. Lewis wrote that each man on his crew could and often consummed 9 lbs of meat per man per day. The hunter for the outfit was constantly hunting as they moved up the Missouri River.

He also commented once that they shot a mule deer that was totally eaten (guts, bones and all) by some starving Indians. He did not mention how many Indians other than to say they ate of it.
 
Posts: 10169 | Location: Texas... time to secede!! | Registered: 12 February 2004Reply With Quote
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Well, we fed how ever many people it takes to eat two elephants.
 
Posts: 1138 | Location: St. Thomas, VI | Registered: 04 July 2006Reply With Quote
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I was a bit bothered by some info shared on a tv program regarding Kenyan lions the other day.

The program was promoting the economic value of live lions over dead ones taken by hunters. The program mentioned that in one case a photo safari lodge in Kenya charged as much as $250.00 per night per guest to stay and view live lions. Wow.

On my upcoming leopard buffalo hunt in two weeks I'll be paying better than $1100. per night to be there and ofcourse better than $3k to take a leopard if so lucky. All other trophy fees will apply if possible I have no doubt.

My point is I am providing quite a bit more "feed" to Mokore Safari and the 80 camp staff they employ than the photo safari in Kenya. I believe that in most of Africa the American dollars we hunters leave provide far more "feed" than the camera tote'ers.

Sure, on my first trip I ended up with quite a bit of dead red meat laying around and sure it fed more than 80 folks as I see it for a day or two.
 
Posts: 9119 | Location: Dillingham Alaska | Registered: 10 April 2006Reply With Quote
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My bull giraffe was spread out among 5 villages
 
Posts: 1678 | Registered: 16 November 2006Reply With Quote
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On one hunt, my giraffe bull was dispersed to the nearby village..

Then on my latest hunt, I took 3 elephant bulls.. Half of one bull was taken (after it was cut up) on a flatbed truck to Harare and Bulawayo to the hospitals to feed the patients.. The hospitals were full of cholera patients and they were having food shortages to feed all the patients.. The other 2 were disributed amongst the Parks staff and the nearby villages.
 
Posts: 2163 | Registered: 13 February 2006Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by dogcat:
I read in the Lewis and Clark Journals. Lewis wrote that each man on his crew could and often consummed 9 lbs of meat per man per day.


I remember reading that too... That's a LOT of meat but it's what they had and I imagine they were performing some pretty difficult tasks.

$bob$


 
Posts: 2494 | Location: NW Florida Piney Woods | Registered: 28 December 2001Reply With Quote
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I have fed several hundred people in Zimbabwe with the game I have shot.

I have been in the remote villages. The people there, the same ones that showed up to my elephant kills, were very nice, very friendly.

They began cooking right next to the dead elephant.

They shared what little they had with me.

We all ate elephant meat cooked directly on the fire.

For the next several days, when we passed a village, there was elephant meat hanging everywhere dryingout.


DOUBLE RIFLE SHOOTERS SOCIETY
 
Posts: 16134 | Location: Texas | Registered: 06 April 2002Reply With Quote
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the PH estimated the the elephant I shot in Zim. fed 200 to 250 families. When the last of the elephant was carted off, there wasn't enough left for the vultures. I saw meat drying a surprising number of miles away from the kill. I ate some of it, good but tough (think tire tread, steel belted radial).

Dave
 
Posts: 2086 | Location: Seattle Washington, USA | Registered: 19 January 2004Reply With Quote
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I don't know how many I've fed, but it's in the many thousands. I flew relief in the Sudan, Ethiopia and Angola for eight years. I've often wondered if it did any long term good.
 
Posts: 11729 | Location: Florida | Registered: 25 October 2006Reply With Quote
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quote:
So, with all your safaris and various hunts, how much meat do you think you've supplied to the people of Africa?



A heck of a lot, but not nearly enough. Guess I'll have to just keep working on it.


When you get bored with life, start hunting dangerous game with a handgun.
 
Posts: 495 | Location: Florida | Registered: 17 February 2008Reply With Quote
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On like ants they came until the carcass was covered from sight. Within an hour it was reduced to bones; thirty minutes later nothing but stomach contents littered the ground. The working mass had done their work and disappeared into the darkness of the jungle. I stood alone in silence....content.
LDK


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