Many thanks,
Peter
I hunted leopard for 14 days last summer. Our baits were all impala and they were chained to a tree at eye level. I was told that the baits could be near the ground because there were no lions on the ranch and leopard's normally don't carry prey up a tree unless they are threatened.
All animals harvested were gutted and the stomachs were kept in a a large garbage can in the back of the bakkie. Yes, it stunk to the high heaven within a few days. This "chum" was used to freshen the bait every few days. The trackers would spread it out in a wide circle around the bait.
The PH was very careful about having too many people walking around the bait. He was concerned about human scent.
Hope this helps,
Skibumplus3
A bait tree should be set up with a large extended branch that forks where the fork is silhouetted on the skyline as long as there is any light at all..Blind should be 40 or 50 yards away.
Bait should be tied but I don't think you should use chicken wire as a Leopard eats a lot of meat and baits should be replaced as he devours them. Impala don't last long but they are plentifull..Leopards like rotten meat and sometimes in some areas it must get really ripe to bring them in...Varius methods are used on the ground to temp Leopards to the tree such as carcass dragging and spilled blood on the tree etc.
Thats about all I know on the subject and it was taken from conversations that I have sat in on between some very good PH Leopard hunters.
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Ray Atkinson
I'd post a picture but I can't remember the name of the website where I uploaded all the pics!
Ski+3
Do not move around checking baits, use binos when checking. If somebody has to go in to check for spoors, it is enough with one person, not the entire party. No touching of anything around the bait, do not mill around and for heavens sake do not pee in the surroundings.
Bjorn
JohnTheGreek
We went out one afternoon to hang leopard bait in Zimbabwe.
One of the trackers was up a tree, and we were in the process of pulling our impala bait up. About 400 yards away, I saw this leopard come out of the tree line, go straight to the water and start to drink.
Me: "Hey Roy, there is a leopard drinking at the waterhole!"
Roy was busy giving instructions to the trackers.
Walter: "Roy, you do not need to put a bait up! The leopard is right there at the waterhole!"
Roy never paid any attention to us.
Me: "Roy, why don't you take a look at that leopard over there?"
Roy: "Will you two stop this silly game! I want to have this bait up before sun down"
Me: "You better hurry up. If that leopard decides to cross the valley and come here, we need to be ready!"
Roy: "What leopard across the valley?"
He looks at the waterhole, then gets his glasses and looks again.
Roy: "You two are not joking! There IS a leopard there. Get your rifle, he might come closer!"
The leopard finished drinking, then went back into the tree line, and started walking parallel to the valley.
We took our impala off the tree, drove like mad to get ahead of the leopard, got about a mile ahead of him, and hung our bait, built a quick blind and left.
Next morning we came back, sat in the blind, and just about when you can barely see, the leopard arrived.
I centered the cross hairs on his shoulders, and pulled the trigger.
Roy, in his usual sceptical fashion, asked "Do you think you hit him?"
Me: "I am not sure! But I did not hear anything running after the shot."
Roy:"We better wait for it to get lighter, and then we will take a look."
Me:"Roy, that leopardd is stone dead!"
Roy:" Alright then. Let us go have a look"
We found our leopard lying exactly where he dropped off the tree. That 130 grain Barnes X out of the 270 Ackley did the trick.
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saeed@ emirates.net.ae
www.accuratereloading.com
I'm jealous (as usual)
JohnTheGreek
This is going to be a mixed bag plains game hunt.
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saeed@ emirates.net.ae
www.accuratereloading.com