10 September 2015, 00:28
JungleboyTanzania Maasailand (& Zanzibar, Ngorogoro Crater) "Part 2/Zanzibar added"
Just got back from 16 days in Tanzania. We did the entire trip in 3 separate segments.
I have always wanted to hunt Maasailand in Northern Tanzania as they have some
species that aren't really found anywhere else. Also Jim Shockey had a very nice
show about hunting Maasailand & it being the area where humans & therefore hunting
originated. We hunted the famous Rift Valley which actually runs from Jordan
down to Mozambique/Zimbabwe. My friend, Kent, & I have done 6 safaris
together & we wanted to take our wives on one so we thought a 5 day hunt for
plains game in Maasailand, with 5 days in Zanzibar & 4 days seeing the
famous parks doing photo safari activity would be ideal. We booked this 2 years
ago at SCI. I had already had a very successful leopard hunt in Sango with
Thierry Labat 4 months ago from a hunt that had to be postponed 2 years, so
2015 ended up being a busy safari season for me! Did Cabo & Marlin Fishing in
Feb 2015 & will be going with Kiri (Fallowbuck) to shoot grouse in Scotland
in 3 weeks. I feel like Aaron Neilson? Wish every year could be this
busy with international hunting/fishing.
DATES: Aug 22 - Sept 5
OUTFITTERS:
Cy Angelloz - Global Hunting Network
Matthew Lloyd-Sim - Far & Away Safaris
PH:
Gamshed - African Buffalo Safaris
ANIMALS HARVESTED:
Grant's Gazelle (2), Thompson's Gazelle (2) & White Bearded Wildebeest (1)
AIR TRANSPORTATION: United to DC, then Ethiopian Air to Addis Ababa - Kiliminjaro
FIREARMS: (Loaner) Browning 300 Win Mag with Leopold Scope
We drove (7 hours) to Denver & caught a United flight to DC, spent the night &
left early the next morning via Ethiopian Air to Addis Ababa. We used miles to
purchase 4 Business Class seats, had a bit of apprehension about Ethiopian Air
but were pleasantly surprised. All new planes, very clean with excellent service
& food. Had 2 hour layover in Addis then flew to Kiliminjaro. Gamshed picked
us up & we drove 3 hours to Loosimingor Camp/ MGCA hunting area (borders
Ngorogoro). Camp was the classic tented style surrounded by Maasai villages.
2 immediate observations, much drier area than I had hunted before in Africa (similar to
Sonora Mexico) & grossly overgrazed by the Maasai with cattle,sheep & goats.
I have cattle on my ranches in Wyoming & was amazed how they overgrazed.
To be fair, I was told this was an extremely dry year for them?
At first I thought we would have a hard time finding animals but
luckily they were prevelant! On a 5 day license we were limited to Grant's & Thompson's
Gazelle, White Bearded Wildebeest, warthog, impala & zebra. The highly
desireable species (Gerenuk, Lesser Kudu, Fringed-Eared Oryx & leopard)
require at least a 14 day license. The cost differential, including trophy
fees, is significant. In order to have time to sight see we limited the hunting to
4 days. We ended up getting everything we wanted in 3 days.
First we went after Grant's Gazelle, truly amazing how dry & desolate the area was.
Luckily, the loaner 300 Win Mag was perfect as many shots were around
300 yards +. Both Kent & I got excellent Grant's.
My wife with the Grant's
Kent, I and a Maasai with a Grant's
The food at camp was extremely good, perhaps the best I have had in my 9 safaris.
They made a phenomenal Gazelle Pizza for lunch one day that was perfect, hard to
believe they turn out quality food on wood burning stoves out in the bush.
Our second day we both harvested Thompson's, they were on a old dry lake
bed. Once we glassed a nice male, we stalked it out in the open by walking
at 45 degree angles to it. We never really got within 300 yards so had
to take long shots, prone on a backpack. Luckily we shot well & the rifle was accurate.
Kent stalking a Thompson's
My Thompson's Gazelle (about 2/3 the size of a whitetail)
Another B&W "retro" pic of the Tommy
Day 3 we went after Wildebeest, I had shot numerous Wildebeest before
so didn't take one, however this was Kent's first.
White Bearded Wildebeest:
Hard to see the blonde beard on these pics?
We were finished hunting so on Day 4 we just drove around to see more of
the area. Some areas were mountainous with more vegetation. We saw numerous
Gerenuk, a really nice lesser kudu, numerous dik-dik's but no Oryx.
According to Gamshed, our PH, the Maasai are slowly moving into the
more mountainous areas & he's afraid they will be overgrazed in a few years.
Here's a pic of a valley, the white spots on the left are Maasai cattle
We had a great last night in camp, gin & tonic's with Romeo Y Julieta No 1's that
we picked at duty free in Addis Ababa. Then we drove to Arusha for the flight
to Zanzibar. I will post that portion of the trip next.
Jim
15 October 2015, 06:37
JungleboyPart 2:
After our 5 days of hunting in Maasailand we decided to head off for the second part
of the adventure, Zanzibar! It was a 1 hr 40 min flight from Arusha, no problem especially
since we weren't traveling with firearms. We stayed the first two nights in the old
Stone Town. It is a very old city with tight corridors between the buildings, too
small for cars so the taxi stopped about 6 blocks from the hotel & we walked
the rest of the way. Very high Muslim population & very interesting culture & history.
We stayed at the Emerson on Hurumzi hotel, very highly recommended. The rooms
were very exotic & Middle Eastern in decor. Here's our bathroom, open to the elements
except for the curtains!
We booked the rooms with roof top terraces, these gave great views of the ocean &
of Stone Town. The big patio on the right is the hotel's restaurant, we ate dinner there the
first night sitting on pillows, listening to the Islamic call to prayer followed by a group
of musicians & singers doing traditional Middle Eastern music (pretty exotic for a ranch
boy from Wyoming!)
They brought us breakfast every morning to the terrace. (Great Coffee!!)
I told my wife not to get too used to this! Here's the waiter coming down with the dishes.
We toured Stone Town & learned about all the different door types,...
Here's one we may buy if we can arrange for it to be shipped back with our trophies?
There are numerous books written about the doors of Zanzibar & there is the famous
photo of the largest elephant tusks ever taken in front of a pair of doors in Zanzibar.
It really was the hub of all trade (ivory, slaves, spices,...) coming out of Africa
for hundreds of years. The old slave market is still there with a sobering monument.
We then drove about an hour to the North part of the island to stay at a beach resort (Z Hotel).
Beautiful beaches, our room was right on the ocean & when the tide was in, the water
would splash up through the decking.
Great sunsets
We had seafood every night (lobster, fish, mussel's,...), they even put tables out on the
sandy beach at night. They dug small holes around the tables in the sand & put candles in them
The resort had tons of typical beach & ocean activities available.
Three days of this was a nice break, but we had to pack up & fly back to Arusha.
I will post Part 3 (Touring Ngorogoro, Tarangire & Manyara National Parks) later.
Overall this was a really nice side trip for the wives (& us as well). May consider
adding something like this to future safaris?
Jim