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VIDEO: Old School Hunt
16 April 2011, 09:07
KPeteImpressive:
The hunt.
The hunter.
The hunted.
And of course, Attenborough - a remarkable film maker.
Kim
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"Cogito ergo venor" René Descartes on African Safari
16 April 2011, 18:14
ddrhookvery artistic but I don't think it has much to do with life as it is today. looks kinda like a reality show on TV
16 April 2011, 19:30
fujotupuquote:
Originally posted by ddrhook:
very artistic but I don't think it has much to do with life as it is today. looks kinda like a reality show on TV
Sprinkled with a fair amount of BS - a bushman wearing sprinters and socks? Gimme a break!
16 April 2011, 20:19
Bobby B.According to the the manager of Edo's Camp, a spot in Botswana where we spent a couple of days, this video was shot on their property.
Bobby B.
17 April 2011, 00:08
MJinesThanks for sharing. Very interesting.
Mike
17 April 2011, 00:49
PalmerIt makes one wonder how that camera man kept up with the runner - unless he followed along in a vehicle.
These San people are impressive. After finishing a leopard hunt in Botswana a few years ago my wife and I wanted to see them track a lion just for fun. We followed along in the Land Rover while the bushmen ran the track and eventually we all caught up with a massive black maned lion.
ALLEN W. JOHNSON - DRSS
Into my heart on air that kills
From yon far country blows:
What are those blue remembered hills,
What spires, what farms are those?
That is the land of lost content,
I see it shining plain,
The happy highways where I went
And cannot come again.
A. E. Housman
17 April 2011, 01:23
John FrederickTypical Attenborough crap.
Lots of small "grabs" edited together to make a story.
Must have been a bloody fit camera man.
Emotive garbage.

17 April 2011, 03:02
Von GruffAnd from the little I know or have read of the traditional San people the way the water he had was spilled when he drank and then poured over his head seemed false. The film seems to have more flaws every time I see it. The final spear through didn't seem to penetrate even to the depth of the blade, symbolic or not.
Von Gruff.
18 April 2011, 01:02
John Frederickquote:
Originally posted by Von Gruff:
And from the little I know or have read of the traditional San people the way the water he had was spilled when he drank and then poured over his head seemed false. The film seems to have more flaws every time I see it. The final spear through didn't seem to penetrate even to the depth of the blade, symbolic or not.
Von Gruff.
Not to mention the fact that the kudu was drugged, not exhausted.
18 April 2011, 02:29
surestrikeLooks like dramatic done for the camera BS to me. That Kudu was obviously drugged. Sorry but I'm not buying this one.
18 April 2011, 02:40
ddrhookya the camera man could fly too!!

even Dave Fulson is not that good

ya ya ya I know Dave will get me for that one

18 April 2011, 07:05
BaxterBWhat? No fist pumps and woo hoo's???
18 April 2011, 20:00
eyedocPoints to ponder:
1 This was not filmed yesterday or even last week, It is a way of life that is rapidly dissapearing and will soon be just a memory.
2) If you have not had the priveledge of seeing San Bushman track game, then I can understand the sceptisism in some of the earlier posts.
3)Was the video shot as it occurred or were re-creations used to get the story told? I do not know. But was this a true hunting technique utilized by the San? Absolutely!
4)Do the San use other hunting techniques as well? Yes, they hunt with bow and arrow.Their tiny bows have no where near enough energy to kill the animal but serve to deliver one of several types of poisons that they make. Once the animal is struck , the bushman take it's trail and follow it for as long as it takes for the poison to do it's job.On an eland or a giraffe it can take days.
We seldom get to choose
But I've seen them go both ways
And I would rather go out in a blaze of glory
Than to slowly rot away!
18 April 2011, 21:36
Small BoreI think people are too quick to cry BS.
Credit where it is due, David Attenborough has done some remarkable work over the decades.
19 April 2011, 13:53
JabaliHunterThere is no way that David Attenborough would risk a reputation forged over decades of wildlife programming for the BBC to drug a kudu for the camera.
It is even more remarkable that they show an animal being killed by humans. You can imagine the reaction that the BBC would have got for this. You can be sure they would want everything to be 'squeaky clean' before wading into that controversy.