THE ACCURATERELOADING.COM AMERICAN BIG GAME HUNTING FORUMS


Moderators: Canuck
Go
New
Find
Notify
Tools
Reply
  
European Bison
 Login/Join
 
One of Us
posted
Has anyone around here hunted European Bison or have any contacts for outfitters?

Thanks,

JohnTheGreek

 
Posts: 4697 | Location: North Africa and North America | Registered: 05 July 2001Reply With Quote
one of us
posted Hide Post
John

I've seen these guys on the internet, they advertise Wiecent (european Bison) hunting

I don't know if they are reliable, maybe some other members might know.

http://www.worldhunt.com/hunting_germany_austria_n.html


Let us know how the Hunt goes ( might be too drafty in the alps for that kilt though....

later

RH

 
Posts: 562 | Location: Northern Wisconsin, USA | Registered: 22 May 2002Reply With Quote
one of us
Picture of Heritage Arms
posted Hide Post
I see the Scotland trip has sparked you to finish your bison slam
 
Posts: 1573 | Location: USA, most of the time  | Registered: 11 March 2002Reply With Quote
one of us
posted Hide Post
Bison Slam????

where else have you bagged them? what is the entire list of a buff slam? Any picts of the collection?

RH

 
Posts: 562 | Location: Northern Wisconsin, USA | Registered: 22 May 2002Reply With Quote
One of Us
posted Hide Post
Rockhead,

I will try to post photos for you. I honestly don't know how many bison subspecies exist. I have a plains bison (Bison Bison) from down here in the lower 48 and a Wood Bison (Bison Athabascae)from the Yukon Territory. A Eurpean Bison (Bison Bonasus) might be the only one remaining for me but I am not sure.
Anybody have some info on any other Bison subspecies that might be running around out there?

Thanks,

JohnTheGreek

 
Posts: 4697 | Location: North Africa and North America | Registered: 05 July 2001Reply With Quote
one of us
posted Hide Post

Muskox isn't considered a bison is it? I suppose more of a sheep.

Of course there is also the Pleistocene bison once we get around to cloning them.

RH

 
Posts: 562 | Location: Northern Wisconsin, USA | Registered: 22 May 2002Reply With Quote
One of Us
posted Hide Post
Musk Ox aren't Bison although I would love to hunt one. They are classified as Ovibos Moschatus and are of the Bovidae family but the Caprinae subfamily whereas bison are from the Bovinae subfamily. So, by what is admittedly a somewhat arbitrary classification system used by science, Musk Ox are apparently more closely related to sheep and goats than bison.
Have you ever seen artistic renditions of those goofy prehistoric bison? Talk about your horn spreads! Definitely on my list if the genetic geniuses ever get it together!

JohnTheGreek

 
Posts: 4697 | Location: North Africa and North America | Registered: 05 July 2001Reply With Quote
<bearguide>
posted
There's always "Beefalo", a cross between Bison and domestic cattle!!

Seriously though, here's a couple of e-mail addresses you can try. I believe I've seen Wisent hunting on their list. Both are very large agencies.

mistral@mistral-jagd.at (Austria)
jagdreisen@kettner.de (Germany)

I'm sure someone can reply in English. Hope this helps.

[This message has been edited by bearguide (edited 03-26-2002).]

 
Reply With Quote
<Mads>
posted
Might consider contacting www.wildadventure.dk they offer good wisent hunt in Poland.

Some europeans consider the the wisent to have two subspicies. The forest wisent (Bison bos bonasus) living in forest region between Belarus and Poland in the bioavica forest, and the mountain wisent (Bison bos caucasius) living in kaukasus. The later is smaller bodied!

Regards

Mads

[This message has been edited by Mads (edited 03-26-2002).]

 
Reply With Quote
one of us
posted Hide Post
I thought those things were extinct. Was reading about them recently in Schama's Landscape and Memory, history of the wisent and hunting them. Had the impression that meat hunting during WWI and WWII had done them in. Will look that up tonight and post some of it.

quote:
Originally posted by rockhead:
John

I've seen these guys on the internet, they advertise Wiecent (european Bison) hunting

I don't know if they are reliable, maybe some other members might know.

http://www.worldhunt.com/hunting_germany_austria_n.html


Let us know how the Hunt goes ( might be too drafty in the alps for that kilt though....

later

RH


 
Posts: 207 | Location: Nicolet National Forest, WI, USA | Registered: 21 January 2002Reply With Quote
<JOHAN>
posted
Hey

The best place to go for hunting "Zubr" or wisent is in eastern Poland from Radom towards Lublin. I have seen Zubr a few times when I have been in Poland hunting.
There is also a very nice bison vodka called Zubrowka.

I would have bet my money on Poland instead of "Jerry land" or Austria. I know people who have contacted the Polish embassy to get a list of guides or outfitter companies. Good luck

Johan

 
Reply With Quote
One of Us
posted Hide Post
Great replies everyone! Thanks a lot!

Fred,

The European Bison was, at one point very close to extinction. I have heard that all wild specimins are decended from a dozen or so individuals from Eurpoean zoos. The existing species, obviously, has some serious genetic problems.

JohnTheGreek

 
Posts: 4697 | Location: North Africa and North America | Registered: 05 July 2001Reply With Quote
one of us
posted Hide Post
"A bristling beard hanging in shaggy lengths,
Its eyes, shining with a fearful red rage
And a terrible mane spreading from its neck
And covering shoulders and knees and breast."

from Carmen de Statura, Feritate ac Venatione Bisontis, by the Lithuanian hunter poet Mikolaj Hussowski, 1523. This is a fragment of the 1,070 line poem written in Latin. I have been unable to find an English translation.

quote:
Originally posted by JohnTheGreek:
Great replies everyone! Thanks a lot!

Fred,

The European Bison was, at one point very close to extinction. I have heard that all wild specimins are decended from a dozen or so individuals from Eurpoean zoos. The existing species, obviously, has some serious genetic problems.

JohnTheGreek


 
Posts: 207 | Location: Nicolet National Forest, WI, USA | Registered: 21 January 2002Reply With Quote
One of Us
posted Hide Post
Fred,

Wow, 16th Century Lithuanian wildlife poetry that's written in Latin . . .and I thought I posted obscure stuff!
I LOVE IT! Thanks!

Regards,

JohnTheGreek

 
Posts: 4697 | Location: North Africa and North America | Registered: 05 July 2001Reply With Quote
one of us
posted Hide Post
Hello JohnTheGreek. Hunting is a wonderful thing, an intellectual pursuit as well as physical and instinctive. And as Fred Bear said, "and if you're lucky, you get something to eat." My source for the poetry is Simon Schama's Landscape and Memory, a marvelous book on man's relationship to the physical world around us, how it made us and we changed it. From the Teutonic fascination with forests that lives to this day, to the origins of what is today natural resource law, Schama is a wonderful historian and interpreter. -Fred


quote:
Originally posted by JohnTheGreek:
Fred,

Wow, 16th Century Lithuanian wildlife poetry that's written in Latin . . .and I thought I posted obscure stuff!
I LOVE IT! Thanks!

Regards,

JohnTheGreek


 
Posts: 207 | Location: Nicolet National Forest, WI, USA | Registered: 21 January 2002Reply With Quote
one of us
posted Hide Post
I have a older friend who was from Ukraine and he has told me that are forest bison in his former homeland as well as Belorus if the the spelling is correct.
 
Posts: 1935 | Registered: 30 June 2000Reply With Quote
  Powered by Social Strata  
 


Copyright December 1997-2023 Accuratereloading.com


Visit our on-line store for AR Memorabilia