The Accurate Reloading Forums
Does a Trophy Elephant Need Both Tusks?
06 March 2011, 04:10
Michael RobinsonDoes a Trophy Elephant Need Both Tusks?
I like symmetry and a good, representative bull as well as the next guy, no matter the species.<BR><BR>For example, I'd kill an old scrum capped bull buffalo in a minute these days.<BR><BR>But I think that I feel that way only because I've been lucky enough to kill my share of good, representative bull buffalo, with moderately wide spreads and good curls.<BR><BR>And I have turned down several one-tusked bull elephants, even one as heavy as 60 pounds plus.<BR><BR>But if it ever came down to brass tacks between me and this old boy, he would go down!<BR><BR><IMG class="inline_image" SRC="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y1/mrlexma/BigOne-TuskedSelousElephant.jpg?t=1299369705"> <BR><BR>He was photographed by a PH hunting in the southern Selous a few years ago. He used his cell phone camera to take the photograph, moments after his hunter told him that he would not shoot the elephant. He insisted on a two-tusked bull.<BR><BR>I spoke to the PH and he thought that the one tusk on this elephant would go over 100 lbs.<BR><BR>As far as is known, this bull is still out there.<BR><BR>Would you shoot him?Would you shoot this elephant?NoYes
Mike
Wilderness is my cathedral, and hunting is my prayer.
06 March 2011, 04:56
crbutlerAlthough I said I would shoot, it really depends on the situation.
If I saw him from the car, and it would be a gift, probably not.
If I had only seen the broken tusk, I probably would not proceed further, and let him be.
If I saw the good tusk, and shot before I saw the bad one, I would be perfectly happy, as he's an old bull with character.
If I saw both, I would think about it a bit and shoot.
That being said, if he was a 45-50# on the good side, and his bad tusk was 25-30, I would not be happy. I guess I am not consistent-
06 March 2011, 05:20
bwanamrmI seldom look a gift horse in the mouth... he is an old bull with lots of character who has spread his genes and he deserves better than to starve to death. I'd love to help him find elephant Valhalla!
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.
06 March 2011, 05:36
safari-lawyerShoot, yes.
Need two tusks, not in my opinion.
Will J. Parks, III
06 March 2011, 05:48
SGraves155In a heart beat.
06 March 2011, 05:52
LionHunterThat is a trophy bull, period. How about the hole in his ear? Just a beautiful old guy IMO.
Mike
______________
DSC
DRSS (again)
SCI Life
NRA Life
Sables Life
Mzuri
IPHA
"To be a Marine is enough."
06 March 2011, 06:04
bwananelsonone hundred pounder is better than two fifty's
DRSS,SCI.
ZOLI 9.3X74R (2)
Zoli 450 400 NE
Merkel 470 NE
V-C 600 NE
VICTOR SARASQUETA 375
06 March 2011, 06:08
MJinesI will take one Maserati over two Chevs any day. That bull would be going down if I came across him in the bush.
Mike
06 March 2011, 06:14
505EDThe PH would have a loud ringing in his ears from my gun going off! Would I shoot. YES!!!
DRSS Member
06 March 2011, 06:16
Dr. Mike H.If someone is that worried about appearences he can always have his taxidermist make a duplicate tusk. Personally I like the difference as it shows the trials and troubles thes old guys have to survive in the real world, and it makes an even more unique trophy.
06 March 2011, 06:20
465H&HNo, I wouldn't shoot him. But only because I couldn't afford him.
465H&H
06 March 2011, 06:32
AzGuyquote:
Originally posted by 465H&H:
No, I wouldn't shoot him. But only because I couldn't afford him.
465H&H
Hell yes I'd shoot him.....and send the bill/trophy fee to 465H&H.
DRSS &
Bolt Action Trash
06 March 2011, 07:01
Jorge400Mike,
This question reminds me of an article I read by Kai-Uwe Denker a several years ago. He and a hunter tracked down an exceptional bull in Bushmanland and despite the bull only having one tusk the hunter shot it. When it was all said and done, the hunter shot a "true hundred pounder", plain and simple. When I first read it my initial thoughts were why would he shoot a broken tusked bull, but it was hunted proper and it had a tusk of over a hundred pounds.
I've shot broken antlered whitetails and let walk broken antlered whitetails and other game. I guess one never knows until one is in the situation, but I would say that bull would hit the ground (provided I could afford such a situation).
quote:
Originally posted by bwananelson:
one hundred pounder is better than two fifty's
True, but two 22's are better than a 44.

"...Africa. I love it, and there is no reason for me to explore why. She affects some people that way, and those who feel as I do need no explanation." from The Last Safari
06 March 2011, 07:06
Cross Lquote:
Originally posted by Dr. Mike H.:
If someone is that worried about appearences he can always have his taxidermist make a duplicate tusk. Personally I like the difference as it shows the trials and troubles thes old guys have to survive in the real world, and it makes an even more unique trophy.
+1

SSR
06 March 2011, 23:13
Dave FulsonReady...Aim...Fire !
Dave Fulson
07 March 2011, 00:19
MJinesHey Dave, how do those Le Chameau global trackers hold up to continued use? Size wise, do they run big or small?
Mike
07 March 2011, 00:37
ledvmI would shoot that bull OVER a bilateral 60 pounder!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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.
07 March 2011, 03:57
jeff hQUICKLY!!!!
NRA LIFE MEMBER
DU DIAMOND SPONSOR IN PERPETUITY
DALLAS SAFARI CLUB LIFE MEMBER
SCI FOUNDATION MEMBER
07 March 2011, 04:15
MARK H. YOUNGIn a heart beat! What a beautiful old bull. He must be ancient the way his head dips in on the sides.
Mark
MARK H. YOUNG
MARK'S EXCLUSIVE ADVENTURES
7094 Oakleigh Dr. Las Vegas, NV 89110
Office 702-848-1693
Cell, Whats App, Signal 307-250-1156 PREFERRED
E-mail markttc@msn.com
Website: myexclusiveadventures.com
Skype: markhyhunter
Check us out on
https://www.facebook.com/pages...ures/627027353990716 07 March 2011, 04:15
mohanWould NOT hesitate , He is OLD & has Charecter , would Shoot him in a Heart Beat
07 March 2011, 04:19
Aaron NeilsonYep, shoot him!!!
Aaron Neilson
Global Hunting Resources
303-619-2872: Cell
globalhunts@aol.com
www.huntghr.com 07 March 2011, 04:28
Nemo .450I'd take him without hesitation.
I don't prticularly like true 1-tusked trophys. But he has a very respectable stump. If he had a lesser right tusk I don't think would shoot, but being old, with the right tusk of that quality, and a decent stump to boot, I'd take him without thinking twice about it.
I hope I run across him, or another like him one day...
------------------------------------------------------------------------
He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him. -- John 3:36
http://www.accurateinnovations.com -
http://aigunstocks.com/home-2/NRA Life Member
DSC
SCI
DRSS -
STILL waiting on MY "Taksdale" .450NE or a refund...
"Young knight, learn to love God and revere women, so that your honour grows. Practice knighthood and learn the Art that dignifies you, and brings you honour in wars." (Johannes Liechtenauer, 14th century) 07 March 2011, 07:13
samir

DRSS
Searcy 470 NE
07 March 2011, 07:30
CrazyhorseconsultingI will never make it to africa, and if I did, an elephant would not be on my bucket list, but if it was, as someone else stated, I would shoot that old gentleman in a heart beat. He deserves the respect and dignity of a quick death at the hands of someone that respected his life.
Even the rocks don't last forever.
Like nearly everyone else has already said, I'd shoot that bull without the slightest hesitation if I were so fortunate as to encounter him on an elephant hunt. He is a grand old bull, tons of character about him.
07 March 2011, 13:25
tendramsBetter to own one Ferrari than two Fiats. Great bull!
07 March 2011, 17:32
retreeverYes in a heartbeat. He is an ancient warrior, and showing signs of weight loss.
Wonder how many bullets he is carrying from over the years.
Mike
Michael Podwika... DRSS bigbores and hunting
www.pvt.co.za " MAKE THE SHOT " 450#2 Famars
07 March 2011, 19:21
Michael RobinsonYes, he is ancient. One of the oldest looking elephants I have ever seen!
It makes me wonder if he's still alive.
I also wonder whether the hunter who turned him down has had any regrets in the intervening years.
His PH told me that he did manage to take a decent bull several days later - one carrying around 45 lbs. per side, if I remember correctly.
Still, both of that bull's tusks together were probably lighter in weight than this old boy's single tusk!
Mike
Wilderness is my cathedral, and hunting is my prayer.
07 March 2011, 19:47
Bob NisbetThat one tusk would look fantastic over my fireplace mantle.
Bob Nisbet
DRSS & 348 Lever Winchester Lover
Temporarily Displaced Texan
If there's no food on your plate when dinner is done, you didn't get enough to eat.
07 March 2011, 21:17
nopride2In a heartbeat.
Dave
07 March 2011, 21:25
D. NelsonShoot!!!!
07 March 2011, 23:23
cable68From a keyboard I say no; If I was there I really don't know.
Caleb
08 March 2011, 00:01
matt uGrand old bull..yes ..Shoot!
08 March 2011, 02:32
Use Enough GunI agree with the 92%.

08 March 2011, 03:53
xausaDoes this answer your question?
We had just about given up on finding a really big elephant (I already had a pair of 68-70 pound tusks) and were driving back to camp on the last day of a five week hunt when we were stopped by one of the locals. The tracker and the gunbearers left with him to see what he had found, and they returned grinning from ear to ear.
It was a tricky stalk, because of two askaris and because of the broken tusk, which had a nerve which was still festering, leaving the owner angry and restive, but I finally got a shot, and here he is. The one tusk weighed 94 pounds, and would have gone a hundred, had the nerve not been so big. Anyway, it now adorns my library wall.
The old guy was down to his last set of teeth, and would have likely starved to death, had our paths not crossed.
08 March 2011, 06:31
CrazyhorseconsultingCongratulations, excellent looking bull.
Even the rocks don't last forever.
09 March 2011, 01:33
ArnietOH Yassss,
and I would thank the good Lord above every night for such a chance. Just wish I had the money to go back and try right now.
09 March 2011, 02:27
Use Enough GunWhat a tusk!

09 March 2011, 04:24
ddrhookI have the scrum cap buffalo now I need a broken tusked elephant to go with it. I would rather have something with character any day. inches and pounds me nothing to me
09 March 2011, 05:08
Cross Lquote:
Originally posted by ddrhook:
I have the scrum cap buffalo now I need a broken tusked elephant to go with it. I would rather have something with character any day. inches and pounds me nothing to me
Hook, thats cause you dont hve many of either

SSR