03 October 2006, 23:28
Kathi'Con game' fools the Baron who thought he shot trophy stag
'Con game' fools the Baron who thought he shot trophy stag
By Tony Paterson in Berlin
Published: 03 October 2006
For Baron Eberhard von Gemmingen-Hornberg, it was a trophy hunter's dream come true: deep in the Bulgarian countryside last year a single shot from the German aristocrat's rifle brought a giant stag of unprecedented proportions toppling stone dead to the forest floor.
The magnificent beast weighed more than 300kg and bore a huge crown of tree-like antlers on its head made up of no less than 37 branches. The trophy was enough to enable the Baron to claim that he had achieved a new world hunting record.
The Baron's exploits were feted in the German and international hunting press, who vied with each other to document the extraordinary features of the slain stag. Never, it seemed, had any hunter managed to bag such a creature.
Yesterday, however, it emerged that Baron Gemmingen-Hornberg's trophy was no roaring wild stag of the Bulgarian beech forests but rather a tame, chocolate-loving red deer raised in an Austrian game reserve. The animal had been deliberately fed calcium tablets to enhance the growth of its antlers.
"The stag's name was Burlei, he was completely tame and children liked to feed him chocolate," the animal's former owner, Rudolf Pöttinger, told Spiegel television.
The series of events that led the Baron to be duped started in the summer of last year. Mr Pöttinger, the owner of a 53-acre game reserve in southern Austria, received an offer of €20,000 (£13,500) for Burlei and promptly sold the animal to two game dealers.
Within a month the stag was roaming hunting estate forests run by a Bulgarian organisation called Elen Hunting, which has its headquarters near the town of Etropole. Anxious to find a wealthy marksman with a yen for huge stags, the company began to spread news of Burlei's whereabouts.
The Baron heard of the stag from a Serbian wildlife documentary film-maker and, after paying a total of €65,000 for the privilege, he flew to Sofia in late August last year with his gun and a team of cameramen.
Accompanied by a game keeper and two film-makers, the Baron caught up with Burlei as the animal was grazing in a clearing. Undaunted by the fact that the supposedly wild stag failed to run away as the team approached, he raised his rifle and shot it dead.
In the months that followed, the Baron was pictured in hunting magazines worldwide with his trophy of antlers. "I had never seen anything so magnificent and, of course, I never remotely dreamed that I would have the chance of bagging such a stag," he was quoted as saying.
His triumph was shattered after photographs of Burlei grazing in his former home appeared on the internet. An Austrian police investigation established that the animal was indeed the tame red deer and that it had been fed calcium to enhance the growth of its antlers.
Baron Gemmingen-Hornberg's attempts to sue the culprits for fraud proved fruitless as police were unable to identify the Bulgarian middle men who supplied the hunting estate with the stag. The Baron, who insists that he wishes to forget the affair, was not available for comment yesterday. His world hunting record has been annulled.
Spiegel television said he had instructed his domestic staff to put Burlei's antlers in the cellar of his country house.
04 October 2006, 01:10
gryphon1This crap happens all the time in every country around the world,some "hunters" dont care some are pissed off to be done for their money.Thanks for the great post.
04 October 2006, 13:44
BoghossianWhat a farce, I think the photos were posted on here not long ago...
I feel for the guy, it is one thing going on a canned hunt fully aware of what you are doing, it is another to find out you have been duped...
10 October 2006, 15:32
mboga biga bwanaThe full story in german about this canned hunt is on
www.jww.deBut in South Africa they do it ( Canned Hunting ) every day with any game and thousands of international "Hunters" coming every year and very few are complaining....
r.
Seloushunter
10 October 2006, 17:19
ErikDquote:
after paying a total of €65,000 for the privilege
€65,000 for a red stag! Which turned out to be canned!

10 October 2006, 17:47
MarkHIt follows with the theme of deep frozen leopards that escape after being shot.. If a hunt is advertised as too good to be true it probably is.

Mark
10 October 2006, 22:00
analog_peninsulaA cynic would suggest the Barron was really upset that proof of the stag's origin was discovered and made public.
Of course, I don't know the fellow and he wouldn't be the first man who believed true what he wanted to believe was the truth.
I think most of us have that penchant to a greater or lesser degree.
10 October 2006, 23:07
NitroX
Would
never have guessed this stag wasn't wild.

10 October 2006, 23:29
Claret_DabblerAnyone with such a sufficiently large ego to spend Eu65k to buy themselves the "opportunity" to shoot the largest Red Deer in the world, so they can see their name at the top of some list, deserves all they get.
If he wants sympathy, he can look for it in the dictionary between sh#t and syphallis. This sort of crap get hunting a bad name.
16 October 2006, 08:19
ForrestBBurlei, come home! All the kids miss you.
20 October 2006, 20:52
Chuck ScorseWho's to say the baron wasn't aware of the animals domestication and was just in pursuit of all the fame to claim over taking the beast.Remember his camera crew??? Think he's making up for a shortcoming??

Wouldn't be the first won't be the last.
The slugs in the U.S. do it all the time, and exactly where does "hunting" enter into this equation? The decrepid wannabwees paying game farms are truly a "bloodsport" and should be abolished.