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Namibia: Leopard and Plains Game Safari Hunting Dates: 5/27/06-6/8/06 Location: Ehi-Rovipuka and Omantendeka Communal Conservancies Outfitter: Vaughan Fulton Classic Safaris www.fultonclassicsafaris.com Booking Agent: Wendell Reich www.huntersquest.com Professional Hunter: Fred Bezuidenhout Rifles: Mod. 70 Classic Briley Custom .375 H&H and Mod. 70 Classic .338 Win. Mag. Ammunition: .375 270gr Barnes TSX handloads; .338 225gr Barnes TSX handloads Animals Taken: Hartmann’s Mountain Zebra (2), Oryx, Klipspringer, Kudu, Eland, and Springbuck Animals Hunted but Not Taken: Leopard Animals Seen but Not Hunted: Elephant, Steenbok, Jackal, Giraffe, Bat Eared Fox, Warthog, Black Faced Impala, Puff Adder, Horned Adder, Hyrax, and too many different types of lizards and birds to list I returned from a leopard/plains game hunt with Vaughan Fulton Classic Safaris on 6/10/06. This was my first hunting trip to Africa, so I had high expectations and was not disappointed. I flew from Phoenix, AZ to Houston, TX on 5/24 where I met up with Bill (THAT TEXAN here on AR). We then flew to Frankfurt then on to Windhoek. I would highly recommend this route; I had less hassle getting my rifles into Namibia than I do when I fly back to Texas to go deer hunting. The only trouble I had was in Houston when I was checking my bags onto Lufthansa. The ticket agent asked me how much ammo I had and I told her it was a little less than eleven pounds. She said, “You’re only allowed to have 5 kilograms!†I responded, “Five kilograms is eleven pounds.†She stared at me for a few seconds then said, “We’ll check into that.†The porters put my bags on the conveyor belt while the ticket agent walked away and went into an office, leaving me with mental images of her digging frantically through metric conversion tables while my bags continued their inexorable journey to the cargo hold. We arrived in Windhoek and were met by Vaughan’s PH, Gert van der Walt. Gert took us to Vaughan’s house where we met Vaughan and Fred Bezuidenhout. We reviewed the particulars of the hunt and our expectations, then I got in a truck with Fred, Bill rode with Gert, and we drove about six hours to the tented camp on the Ehi-Rovipuka Communal Conservancy. The terrain just to the North of Windhoek is a lot like that of South Texas: flat with thick, thorny brush; as we got farther North the terrain became more varied with abundant mopane trees and some gorgeous rock outcroppings. I noticed there was a lot of grass and the trees were still green. Fred explained that this year Namibia had its best rainy season in over twenty years. As I discovered later this was a mixed blessing: it made for beautiful views and pictures, but the game was harder to find and the grass hid the rocks which made both walking and driving rather interesting. [IMG:left] [/IMG] We arrived at camp after dark at about 7:00pm. We got settled into our respective tents and then had a few post-sundowners and some dinner. To paraphrase Crosby, Stills, and Nash: I saw the Southern Cross for the first time. I have wanted to see this since I was a kid. I was born and raised overseas and have lived, traveled, or worked over most of Europe and the Middle East, but had never been South of the Equator until now. Day 1 Checked the sighting on my rifles; both were still perfect. We then went looking for mountain zebra, so we would have some leopard bait. Fred told me that the most important thing to remember about hunting mountain zebra is just because that is their name does not mean I have to shoot one on a damned mountain. We tried two stalks on different herds of zebra that were in the plains, but the wind was swirling and got us both times. A little while later we spotted two stallions half way up a mountain. We stalked about 500 meters, and then ran out of good brush. I had brought my binoculars on the stalk, but left my range finder in the truck. I estimated the distance at 200 meters, and asked Fred if he thought that was right. He said they were at about 300 meters, but I misunderstood him and thought he confirmed my 200 meter estimate. My .375 was set for a 200 meter zero, so I put the crosshairs on the zebra’s shoulder and squeezed the trigger. All Hell broke loose on the mountain. My shot was about 10 inches low and hit the front leg at about the knee. The zebra couldn’t climb, but was running horizontally along the mountain while I threw shot after shot at him. Fred told me to calm down, I was shooting low, the zebra was a little over 300 meters, take a deep breath and shoot. I followed his instructions and dropped the zebra. Hunting will keep you humble! After this I never took my binoculars on a stalk, and kept my rangefinder clipped to my ammo belt at all times. Even after the embarrassing display of marksmanship, I was very excited to have my first African animal. Fred and I shook hands and then realized we had not followed his initial advice, “You don’t have to shoot mountain zebra on a damned mountain.†After much climbing, cursing, bridge building, dragging, and lifting, we had my zebra in the truck and headed back to camp. Zebra [IMG:left] [/IMG] Day 2 We scouted for places to hang leopard baits. We found a lot of sign along a particular river. There were three different leopards working about an 8km stretch. Leopard Tracks [IMG:left] [/IMG] We hung three baits at promising looking spots, and all agreed that the first bait was our most promising site. There had been a big leopard coming past this tree the last two nights. Our tracker, Elliot, said this would be the place where the leopard would eat. Hanging Bait [IMG:left] [/IMG] Day 3 Checked our leopard baits; we had no hits, but there had been a large male within about 150 meters of one bait and a female with two cubs near another. We spotted a large bull oryx about 600 meters away and decided to stalk him. We had gone about 200 yards when a couple of smaller oryx walked past us at about 40 meters heading in the direction of the bull. We continued our stalk, and spotted a big cow about 100 meters to the left of the bull. We got within 175 meters of the bull, set up the shooting sticks, and I started to line up the shot when the oryx that had walked past us in the brush spotted us and started running. The bull didn’t see us, but he took off as did the big cow to his right. Fred and I wrote it off as a busted stalk and walked back to the truck. We continued on our drive to check our final leopard bait. We were entering a dry riverbed close to where the oryx had ran when Elliot and Ben (tracker and assistant respectively) started yelling, “Gemsbuck! Gemsbuck!†and pointing across an old fence that had been washed out by the rain. Fred told them we could not hunt on that property so not to worry about it. When Fred started to drive on Elliot and Ben started yelling again. Fred said it must be on hell of a big Gemsbuck they wanted us to see, so we both got our binoculars and started looking up the river across the fence. They continued to yell and point across the washed out water gap; while Fred kept asking them where it was standing. Finally Ben got out of the back of the truck and threw a stick at the far bank of the river on our side of the water gap. There lay the big cow oryx tangled up in the wire that had been washed out by the rain. She was not moving, so we didn’t know if she was alive. We walked over to look at her, as we got close she started struggling to free herself. We decided we could not safely free her, so the best thing to do would be to shoot her. I had my .375 and fired a bullet through her heart. After this, we were able to piece together what had happened: the oryx had all ran up the river and followed a trail up the bank, this cow had missed the trail and hit the strung out wire with such force that is stunned her and whipped her head to the right so hard, she had speared her right hip with her right horn. It’s a damn shame she had to go down this way; she was a beautiful animal with 41.5†horns and 7.5†bases. Oryx [IMG:left] [/IMG] Day 4 Bill and Gert had car trouble yesterday, so Bill rode with Fred and I this morning to check leopard baits. We saw tracks, but no hits on bait. We were on our way back to camp to check on the other truck when we spotted a huge springbuck. I don’t want to go into a lot of detail on this and spoil Bill’s hunting report, but suffice it to say that Bill got an absolute monster springbuck. Day 5 On our way to check leopard baits, we spotted a couple of klipspringer on some rocks in the valley below us. I shot the male from 150 meters with my.375. He is a great looking animal! I am going to have Jerry Huffaker do a full body mount. Klipspringer [IMG:left] [/IMG] Day 6 Fred and I checked the baits; no hits and no tracks. We spent the rest of the day scouting other areas to bait. We didn’t really hunt this day, but we did see a lot of wildlife. Horned Adder [IMG:left] [/IMG] Giraffes [IMG:left] [/IMG] [IMG:left] [/IMG] Elephant [IMG:left] [/IMG] On a side note, the elephant in the picture is crossing the same water gap where the oryx cow got tangled in the wire. The high fence in the picture is the “veterinary fence†it spans Northern Namibia from East to West and was built to control hoof and mouth disease. I don’t think it can be doing much good, because probably 10 to 20% of the span I saw had been torn down by elephants and the rest was in such poor repair that the animals, both wild and domestic, moved freely through it. Day 7 We needed some bait for a new site we found the previous day, so we decided to go check our baits early and then head into the mountains to try to find a kudu or eland. As we were on our way to check the final bait we saw the tracks of three eland bulls that had crossed the dry river earlier in the morning; we checked the final bait (no hits) and decided to track the eland. We started tracking at about 8:30am. The first couple of hundred yards was easy, but then we reached a rocky area at the base of a mountain and lost their trail. There were two mountains with a draw running between them; Fred decided we should go up and over the one in front of us and see if the eland were in the valley on the other side. Just as we were reaching the top of the mountain, Fred spotted the eland standing on the other mountain at the same level as us. They were about 600 meters away and directly downwind. The three were still together and we got a good look at them through binoculars: one was young: the other was mature and had some very nice horns; the final one was very old, with beat up horns and a massive body. This was the one for me! They couldn’t see us, but, because of the wind, they could smell us. They milled around nervously for a few minutes then started walking back down the mountain toward the river where we had picked up their tracks. We tried to cut them off and get a shot, but by the time we made it down our mountain they were nowhere to be seen. We glassed for about 15 minutes and decided they must have doubled back and gone over their mountain to the next valley. We went up their mountain and when we got to the spot where they had been standing Fred spotted them on the other side of the river in a large draw between two hills. Back down the damned mountain! We finally got above them and the bull I wanted was bedded down in some shade at a little over 200 meters. I couldn’t shoot because a small bush was blocking his shoulder. Fred said we would have to wait for the sun to continue to rise and move his shade, then he would stand up and I could take him. After about 45 minutes he stood up and I put a 270 gr. Barnes TSX in his left shoulder; he ran behind some brush, and then we saw him go down. We waited about 10 minutes and walked to where he had fallen. He was not there! He had not come out of the draw, so Fred stayed on one side, I walked to the other, and we started walking up the draw. We had gone about 100 yards when Fred started yelling for me. I ran down my side of the draw and up his side; when I was about 40 yards from Fred he started yelling for me to shoot the eland. I yelled back breathlessly, “Let me get there damn it!†I made it to Fred, he pointed back down the draw where I had just run, and said, “Now shoot the damned thing!†There stood the eland at about 30 yards; I had run right past him. Don’t ask me how I didn’t see the 1,800 lbs antelope as I ran past. I fired a shot into his right shoulder and he went down again. He was lying on his side, so I put one more shot between his front legs to finish him. We had started this stalk at 8:30am and it was now a little past noon. Eland [IMG:left] [/IMG] The easy part was over, now we had to pack this thing back to the truck. Fred and Elliot went to get the truck while Ben and I started caping the bull. I recovered the three bullets: the one on the left was fired from 202 yards, the one in the center from about 40 yards, and the one on the right from about 8 feet. These are 270 gr. Barnes TSX; their recovered weights respectively are: 269.5 gr., 269.7 gr., and 269.9 gr. Bullet [IMG:left] [/IMG] Fred had managed to get the truck within about 250 meters, but we had to go up and over a ridge to get there. I decided I was going to pack out a hind leg. Packing the Eland [IMG:left] [/IMG] Everything was going well until I topped the ridge and started going downhill; I hit some loose rocks and the next thing I know I am skidding downhill at a rate that would make an alpine skier proud with a 120 lbs eland hind quarter on my shoulder. I skidded to a stop on a flat rocky outcropping, and sighed with relief. This feeling of well being lasted about two seconds then my feet went out from under me and I fell directly into a sitting position with my legs hanging over the outcropping. I looked around quickly hoping nobody had seen me, but I heard Fred laughing and knew I was screwed. I cracked my tail bone in the fall, but that did not hurt nearly as much as my pride. Day 8 My tail bone hurts! Fred, Elliot, Ben and I hung another leopard bait. There was a lot of leopard action last night, but no hits on bait. We bumped into Bill and Gert; they had seen a nice kudu while they were checking their baits, but Bill had already got one a few days ago. Fred and I decided to go look for the kudu. While we were on our way there Elliot spotted a good kudu standing in the shade on a mountain. We climbed (literally) an adjacent mountain and were able to get within about 80 meters of the kudu. It was about 12:30pm and the midday sun was beating down on us; the kudu was back in the deep shade of some mopane trees. I crawled behind a rock and rested my .338 on a tuft of grass; it was as steady a rest as sandbags on a bench. He was tough to see in the shade, but I put my crosshairs behind his shoulder and squeezed the trigger. The kudu ran out of the shade and headed over the ridge. Fred and I assumed I had hit him, so I fired a couple of shots as he ran to try to anchor him. We walked to the trees where he had been standing and didn’t find any blood. Fred asked if I had missed and I told him that there was no way I missed; I had put the crosshairs right behind his shoulder. Fred said, “You couldn’t have put them behind his shoulder he was facing you nearly head on.†Then we realized what had happened: standing in the shade he looked to me like he was broadside, facing to my right, with his head turned looking at me, so I had put it behind what I thought was his shoulder and shot. Actually I had put the crosshairs behind his hip and shot the bush behind him. We walked to where he had gone over the ridge and found some blood. Damn! One of my running shots had hit him. We tracked him for about 1.5 km then he came out of a draw about 300 meters in front of us. Fred set up the sticks, my first shot hit some brush and hit about 6 feet in front of him, and my next shot dropped him where he stood. He is a beautiful old bull; his horns are only 49â€, but they are chipped and broken from years of fighting so have a lot of character. Kudu [IMG:left] [/IMG] My running shot had hit him behind the knee on his back left leg; the killing shot had hit him high on his left shoulder. We recovered the bullet from the killing shot under the skin of the opposite shoulder and could not figure out what had happened. The Barnes TSX had failed to expand. We looked at the entrance wound and figured out the cause. My bullet had hit some brush and entered him as shown in the picture below. We found a branch about the diameter of a pencil on a small tree that was broken off where the bullet had gone through. Bullet [IMG:left] [/IMG] Day 9 We decided to go to the Omatendeka Conservancy today and look for springbuck. The wind was howling, so most of the springbuck were lying down on the plains with only their horns sticking up above the grass. I ended up getting a really nice springbuck that measured 16.5â€. I used my .338 and shot him from 140 meters; he dropped in his tracks. The wind was so strong that the others didn’t even hear the shot and continued to mill around until we got close to them. Springbuck [IMG:left] [/IMG] We took the springbuck meat to Omarumba and gave it to the chief; then went to check leopard baits. No hits on bait, and it was tough to tell if there had been any tracks because of the wind. Day 10 No hits on our baits this morning, but a huge leopard had sat under one of them. We could see the outline of his tail in the sand. When the trackers first picked up his spoor it was so large they thought it was a female lion! We decided to sit in some brush that evening and watch the bait in case he comes back. I wanted another mountain zebra, so we drove to the edge of the Tagatora plains and climbed a small mountain so we could glass. We spotted a small herd of zebra and two oryx about 1 km out on the plains. We stalked to 250 meters and I took a big stallion with my .338; he dropped immediately. Fred congratulated me on getting it right this time and not shooting a mountain zebra in the mountains. Zebra [IMG:left] [/IMG] They are much easier to load on the plains, especially if you dig holes for the back tires of the truck. Loading the Zebra [IMG:left] [/IMG] When we got back to camp, Bill and Gert were getting ready to go sit in a blind. They had a hit on one of their leopard baits! Again, I won’t spoil Bill’s report by giving all the details. Fred and I sat in the brush that evening, but did not see anything at the bait that had been getting the most traffic. Day 11 The huge leopard had come back to the bait after we left, but did not get into the tree. Fred decided we should move the bait to a limb that was about 2’ off the ground, so the bait was actually partially lying on the sand. Day 12 The huge leopard hit the bait! He had come in early in the evening, because his tracks around the bait were nearly obscured by bird tracks from that morning. Leopard Bait [IMG:left] [/IMG] We placed a pop up blind and covered it in brush. Leopard Blind [IMG:left] [/IMG] We got in the blind at 3:00pm; about 5:00pm when the sun went behind the mountain some kudus on the mountain started barking. Fred said this was their warning call and that the leopard was probably on his way. After about 15 minutes the birds started raising hell with something. Fred whispered that he is coming. It sounded like the birds were following him along a dry creek bed that ran behind our bait tree. They stopped moving about 200 meters from us and continued scolding whatever they were following. After about five minutes they started to move away from us. Damn! Damn!! We sat until after dark, and then went back to camp. Day 13 We checked all the baits and had no new hits. We spent a few more hours driving around so I could take some more pictures. Back at camp I started packing up my gear. Tomorrow is the last hunting day, so I decided if we didn’t have a new hit we would head back to Windhoek so I would have some time to shop for gifts and souvenirs before my flight. Day 14 No hits this morning. Fred and I were both disappointed that we didn’t get a leopard, but it in no way dampened my enthusiasm for the safari. There were leopard in the area and I know Fred and I gave it our best effort. That’s hunting. Overall Impressions Professional Hunter Fred Bezuidenhout was my PH; he is a great guy and excellent PH. He has some amazing stories including one about a leopard attack (he attacked the leopard), and will do everything he can to get you an opportunity at game. Fred is an honest and direct person, which I greatly appreciate. Fred [IMG:left] [/IMG] Camp The camp was exactly what I was looking for: a classic style tented camp with no luxurious lodge. The camp was clean and well kept; the tents were in good shape and the beds were comfortable. Each tent had its own shower and toilet. Tent [IMG:left] [/IMG] [IMG:left] [/IMG] [IMG:left] [/IMG] [IMG:left] [/IMG] Food The food was very good, and Lena, the cook, made some of the best fresh baked bread I have ever tasted. I thought about ditching some of my gear and seeing how many loaves I could fit in my duffle bag. She’s got Panera Bread beat all to Hell. Scenery I was lucky because of all the rain. The landscape was beautiful and I took a bunch of great pictures. [IMG:left] [/IMG] [IMG:left] [/IMG] [IMG:left] [/IMG] [IMG:left] [/IMG] [IMG:left] [/IMG] [IMG:left] [/IMG] [IMG:left] [/IMG] I would definitely recommend Vaughan’s operation to anyone who is looking for a classic, tented safari. I plan on hunting with him again. I also recommend Wendell Reich as a booking agent. He did a great job for me and I am already talking to him about a hunt in another part of the world. ____________________________________________ "Build a man a fire, and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life." Terry Pratchett. | ||
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Thanks for the report and the great pictures -- it brings back a lot of memories for me from this time last year. I think that one bait tree even looks familiar! ------------------------------- Some Pictures from Namibia Some Pictures from Zimbabwe An Elephant Story | |||
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Great report. Thanks for sharing. Sorry to hear that you did not get your leopard. Maybe next time. The trophies you did connect with are all great looking. I expecially like the old eland and the big springbuck. George "...Africa. I love it, and there is no reason for me to explore why. She affects some people that way, and those who feel as I do need no explanation." from The Last Safari | |||
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Thanks for the great report! My hunting buddy and I have booked 14 days with Vaughan next June (seven days near Etosha, seven days in the Caprivi). I can hardly wait, and these pictures just make me want to go right now. It's going to be a long year. | |||
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LEE GREAT REPORT Looks like you had a great time, can't wait to come over and see the rest of your photos 53 days and counting till I leave for Namibia Perception is reality regardless the truth! Stupid people should not breed DRSS NRA Life Member Owner of USOC Adventure TV | |||
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Dammit, Lee, you are killing me with this superb report! Man, oh, man, how much do I want to be where your words and pictures have so well described! Congratulations, my friend, on such an excellent and well reported safari! I do so miss the wide open veldt north of the fence! Mike Wilderness is my cathedral, and hunting is my prayer. | |||
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Great report and hunt! It's odd to see so much grass in Namibia, both times we have been over they have been having a drought. We're down to seven days till lift-off for two weeks, first at Ehi then Kasika in the Caprivi. "There always seems to be a big market for making the clear, complex." | |||
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Vaughan certainly does give you 100%. Great P.H.s, staff, camp, meals, and hunting area. I can't wait to get back there. Thanks for a great report, and photos. Congratulations. | |||
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Lee Thanks for a great report and congratulations to a wonderful experience | |||
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Congratulations! Great report. I just returned from Namibia and let me tell you their rains this year changed how it looks. I have never seen so much grass! Vaughan runs a super operation. | |||
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Fantastic report and excellent pictures thanks Si Vis Pacem, Para Bellum | |||
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Great post. Thanks for sharing. If you are going to carry a big stick, you've got to whack someone with it at least every once in while. | |||
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Great report Lee. I don't know about those TSX bullets, losing 1/2 a grain in a zebra! Frank "I don't know what there is about buffalo that frightens me so.....He looks like he hates you personally. He looks like you owe him money." - Robert Ruark, Horn of the Hunter, 1953 NRA Life, SAF Life, CRPA Life, DRSS lite | |||
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Congratulations on your hunt and some super trophies! Sorry about the leopard, man, those cats seem hard to come by in Namibia! I hunted there with Makadi Safaris in '99 and few people were chasing DG at that time except in the Caprivi. Your post was also very informative and well done. Thanks for sharing! On the plains of hesitation lie the bleached bones of ten thousand, who on the dawn of victory lay down their weary heads resting, and there resting, died. If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue, Or walk with Kings - nor lose the common touch... Yours is the Earth and everything that's in it, And - which is more - you'll be a Man, my son! - Rudyard Kipling Life grows grim without senseless indulgence. | |||
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Lee, great report on your safari. Hog Killer IGNORE YOUR RIGHTS AND THEY'LL GO AWAY!!! ------------------------------------ We Band of Bubbas & STC Hunting Club, The Whomper Club | |||
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Great report. 90 days 'til our first trip to Namibia. Can't view pictures on this computer but will check them out soon. Thanks again for the wonderful report. Art | |||
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Lee- Ain't Fred fun!! I have hunted with him the past two years. The next time you go to Namibia you have to go to "his" place. I posted a report on Kansimba last year. Bill Campbell on this forum has also hunted with Fred. I see he still has those stupid black shorts!! Thanks for sharing your hunt with us. Sorry you did not get a leopard. You'll just have to go back! I too know the story of Fred's leopard fight. The damn cat killed his Jack Russell. That would piss anyone off! Anyway, congrats and welcome back. John | |||
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Great report! Gotta love that Namib landscape.. thanks for sharing.. | |||
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Great pics & excellent hunt | |||
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Great report and pics. | |||
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Great report and beautiful pictures | |||
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Outstanding and comprehensive report sir. Congrats! Vaughn and a Hartmann's zebra is certainly on my short list - whether it be on top of the mountain or bottom! | |||
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Thanks for the great report and the great landscape pictures. _______________________________________________________ Hunt Report - South Africa 2022 Wade Abadie - Wild Shot Photography Website | Facebook | Instagram | |||
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Thanks guys, I appreciate all the feedback. Now I've only got thirteen months, one week, and three days until my girlfriend and I leave to hunt cape buffalo in Zim. I'm betting the time will fly right by. ____________________________________________ "Build a man a fire, and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life." Terry Pratchett. | |||
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Your breaking my heart, 360 days to go. Thanks for the pics, beautiful!!! Dulcinea What counts is what you learn after you know it all!!! | |||
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Great report! I'll be hunting with Vaughan in that area next September. Question: is that a hartebeest in the lower right of the last picture, or is it another springbok in front of a tree trunk? | |||
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wihntr, It is a springbuck. There aren't any hartebeest on this concession. ____________________________________________ "Build a man a fire, and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life." Terry Pratchett. | |||
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Excellent report!!! Congratulations on a great trip. Phil | |||
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Lee, Great story and super photos... Speaking from experience been there done that...Humility is the name of the game... Mike | |||
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Great trip Lee, and I enjoyed your recap and pictures too. Looks like Vaughan has a super bush camp there. Your description of Fred is spot-on and just as I found him...direct, hard-working and excellent company. It took us 12 days to get my leopard in the West Caprivi, and we tried just about every tactic in the book. Did he tell you the stories from his days in the Rhodesian special ops? Some amazing stuff. Regards, Bill | |||
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Fred is indeed a funny character. He is, to say the least, forthright in expressing his views of humanity and its foibles. I am not sure, though, about what I think of that beard. It does offset the Memphisian Gracelandic power of his do, however, so I think, on balance, I am in favor of it. Mike Wilderness is my cathedral, and hunting is my prayer. | |||
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Bill, Yes, I was in the Army, so a lot of our conversations revolved around the military. He also told me some of the tactics the two of you used on your leopard, in fact, one day we were puzzling over where to hang a bait and he said, "We'll pull a Bill C on them..." and we promptly hung the bait in a dead tree that was lying in the river bed. ____________________________________________ "Build a man a fire, and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life." Terry Pratchett. | |||
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mrlexma, As the beard is now totally gray, Gert has taken to calling him Santa Claus. ____________________________________________ "Build a man a fire, and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life." Terry Pratchett. | |||
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Excellent! Memories are really comming back with this report. I didn`t hunt with the same outfitter, but the areas and animals are much the same.. WOW! Thanks for sharing! You got some nice trophies as well... Anders Hunting and fishing DVDs from Mossing & Stubberud Media: www.jaktogfiskedvd.no ..and my blog at: http://andersmossing.blogspot.com | |||
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That was an excellent report. Very professional and among the best I've seen here. You certainly took and kept good notes while you were there. Can't have drunk too much each night! ___________________________________________________________________________________________ | |||
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When I was in the Army I learned an invaluable lesson: Each beer consumed adds about 25' to each mountain the following day. I managed to get by only adding about 75'-100' each evening. ____________________________________________ "Build a man a fire, and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life." Terry Pratchett. | |||
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Lucky me, I have learned that the area we will hunt in South Africa next mont is more or less flat, altitude difference less than 30 feet | |||
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30 feet???!!! Hell, Christer considering your size you won't even have to climb them you can just tiptoe and look over them. ____________________________________________ "Build a man a fire, and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life." Terry Pratchett. | |||
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Great report and great pictures, hope to go there someday Steve(NOT Shakari)Robinson NRA Life Member SCI Life Member DRSS | |||
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I hunted with Gert last summer and could not find any fault with his ability. He will hunt as hard or harder than you to get you on a quality animal. Even as the days go by he doesn't lower his expectations to get in front of mature animals. I took 4 animals and a friend took 3, all of them were mature/old and high quality. We are going back to hunt with Vaughan in 08 and have told him that we will require Gerts presence. The trackers/ skinners are the toughest guys I have ever been around. They go all day, drink very little water and then go some more. I highly recommend Vaughans outfit. You can borrow money, but you can't borrow time. Don't wait, go now. Savannah Safaris Namibia Otjitambi Trails & Safaris DRSS NRA SCI DSC TSRA TMPA | |||
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