Africa At Last

Soon there is going to be a piece on a proper buffalo killed by an R8 I'm sure of it.
I gave you a Like when really...... :ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO:

You just had to say that out loud......:

The R8 will work, but there are better....[options with examples ..].

Are you typing in your sleep again?

Wake up you are having a nightmare.

Remember Only You Can Keep the Dream Alive.

I just couldn't resist an open line like that. But maybe one day someone will post a hunt report killing a proper buff with an R8.

:ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO:
 
I gave you a Like when really...... :ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO:

You just had to say that out loud......:

The R8 will work, but there are better....[options with examples ..].

Are you typing in your sleep again?

Wake up you are having a nightmare.

Remember Only You Can Keep the Dream Alive.

I just couldn't resist an open line like that. But maybe one day someone will post a hunt report killing a proper buff with an R8.

:ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO:
As much as I will never own a Blaser we must face the facts they do work and hunters go back home alive using them in Africa. If it was a R93 different story.

But for this brilliant piece of writing I surely hope to read of a result with a proper buffalo.
 
As much as I will never own a Blaser we must face the facts they do work and hunters go back home alive using them in Africa. If it was a R93 different story.

But for this brilliant piece of writing I surely hope to read of a result with a proper buffalo.

Just my opinion on hunting.....regardless of species.

As long as the hunt is a fair chase hunt.

Unless the hunter {client} self proclaims he killed an improper buffalo for any number of reasons; all buffalo are proper buffalo ....no matter in what country or with what weapon the hunter chose to kill his/her buffalo.
 
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You should have a book deal - you are a consistently entertaining writer! Whomever put the false notion in your head that “writing is not your strength” should be buried under those cow-pies.

Too kind. Never thought I had it in me.
I'm starting to think the red dust inspires. I'll keep going.
 
Day 7 – Stripes.

Slept like the dead. That really deep sleep where you wake up and await your heart to start moving again. I’m pretty sure I left my body. At last, some really good sleep and I’m grateful.

As I’m assembling something in a stupor that resembles a clothed homo sapiens, Bucky the wonder dog squeezes under the tent flap and checks on me. “What's taking so long human?”

Have i told you about Bucky?
He's the PH's German hunting terrier that will stand on his hind feet and twirl around as a dance to beg for a piece of rusk at tea time period

He is surprisingly well trained and rides on top of the Land Cruiser until an animal is injured and then he is sent in to find them and keep them busy, while the hunters come in to finish them off. I believe the idea is to keep a wounded buffalo distracted and focused on a dancing, yipping, little dog instead of flattening the hunter.

He's also pretty cute and wants to crawl on your lap as if he’s starved for attention. I'm sure if my daughter was here, she'd have him sleeping in her bed at night and ruin him completely within hours.

What is a rusk? A rusk is literally a dried-out chunk of bread that tastes like a biscuit or a pancake and is about the size of a woman's fist which you dip into tea until it's just soft enough not to break a tooth.

It's Afrikaans based and I suspect because somebody lost a bet, but PH says it’s from the Boer days when they went out into the field and this was how they did it.
The American equivalent would be a biscotti. Come to think of it, I'm not even sure those are American, but I’m not a fan of them either, so there's that.

0545 launch.

Bombed out of the LC just a mile or two down the tree line because crusty was spotted right at the edge of the tight stuff stuffing his face. Solo. Big bull. Chatty Cathy is very excited.

For those of you that know about sailing, we were essentially tacking toward him and trying to stay downwind. I guess you could call this bastardization of terminology “tacking tracking.”
PH says he can now be proud to say he was there when we coined the term.

Ol Crusty is up sun from us and I can't help noticing how gorgeous the pre-dawn sunrise is. It has this beautiful pea green layer in the middle between the orange/mahogany lower layer and the deep blue/purple frosting layer which then shifts to become a glowing orange ember stripe and then a lemon yellow. And by that time, the best part of it is you can start to see the thorns before they hit you in the face.

PH says the bull’s face looks white to him but we need to wait until there's more light. It might be Frank. We are still too far away to shoot anyway.

A side moment for thoughts on stalking:

Between the aardvark digging pitfalls in the middle of nowhere where you can drop a leg up to the hip, the deadfall and the dodging of branches, I begin to feel that I'm witnessing some type of new age Tai chi with rifles and shooting sticks. The ducking, the bending, the high stepping, the freezing mid-step while holding one leg suspended, and the hula hoop maneuvers to avoid entanglements.

Hardest part for me in this whole thing is similar to challenges during bow hunting. Remembering to breathe.

Now since I'm allergic to just about anything on the planet with a cellulose cell wall, it is rare that both nostrils are fully open. I hear myself breathing and switch to mouth breather mode and then when that seems too loud, I hold my breath without thinking about it. Next, I'm bursting for air and realize a big gasp is not helpful to the situation.

“Innnn the nose… ouuuuut the mouuuuth Daniel-san.” - Mr. Miyagi.

It’s too dark to see the ground and I accidentally kick a rock. PH turns to me and whispers “do you like soccer?”
“Yes.”
“Don’t play it right now.”
Then he steps on some deadfall and makes a bunch of noise and hides his sheepish grin in the low light. I pretend not to notice.

Even if you have soft upper grass, there's still that small inch where it has first pushed above the surface of mother that is stiff and crackly and you get into this mode where you have a little pause as you put your weight down to find out how big the crunch is going to be before you put your full weight onto it. I hate that part.

We almost have enough light. The baby powder puffer says we're still in a good place with the wind. The slow Tai chi stealth mode march closed 90 yards in about the last hour and the Buffalo is just feeding at the edge of the black thicket. We are now facing a very bright sunrise and crusty casually eats his way in and out of the black curtain of stabby and heinous things. Then, for no reason apparent to us, he vanishes and my hope dies a little.

Prayers are uttered for crusty bottoms to stay around but it is not to be. It seems the bulls are equipped with some type of photovoltaic sensor and when the ambient light is nearly sufficient for humans to see, the signal is given and they start moving into the thick stuff. This reminds me a LOT of late season old whitetail bucks that go fully nocturnal.

We wait in hope that he changes his mind but instead, he moves deeper. The wind shifts on us (dammit.) We back out to circle around from the other side.

Upon the walk back to the LC, Bucky looks particularly disappointed in us.
I think he's just pissed off that we didn't give him the whole rusk.

We come upon a very large sable bull that appears about 20 yards from us.
When you first walk up on a sable you could be fooled that they are a domestic animal because they don't really run away in fear. But that would be a mistake.
It seems upon further inspection that they're kind of an arrogant bastard that will stare you down. It reminds me of being in a pen with a domestic bovine bull. Some of them will come at you and some won’t and you never really know.

Today Mr. Sable decided he was going to back off but I did notice the PH tensed up and took off his safety. Noted for later.
I did get a good picture of him showing his butt to the camera and strangely, with a weird grin on his face.

On the way around to take another go at crusty we see some zebra and decide to go for a stalk and let crusty bottoms get settled in for the morning.

There are tsessebe and go away birds everywhere in a sort of grid formation. They're like some perverted motto from the visa card commercials. They are everywhere you DON’T want them to be. They seem to exist to spook everything you're trying to stalk and call attention to the fact that you're there. I begin to have visions of a cull hunt where all I do is massacre go away birds and tsessebe.
PH says to be sure to invite him because he has some payback to dish out.

The zebra runs. Busted by a bird. PH asks if I want to see what a 458 win mag has on a go away bird.

Suddenly the realization snaps into place. They both function as forward reconnaissance for the Buffalo in exchange for not being brutalized. The whole lot of them are organized. Next time I kill something I'm going to check for earpieces and neck mics.

We circle around to the backside of the thicket but are never able to find any more tracks of the Buffalo. However, as Ze Germans say, Das ist besser als ins Hemd zu scheißen.

Time for lunch.

The crow’s nest spots a herd of zebras a few miles down the road and we drive on past, cut the engine, and drift to a halt and then circle around a few 100 yards away for a downwind approach.

Today's core exercise and yoga routine involves some type of crawling on hands and knees to cover ground. I find I prefer this to the Buffalo Butt Shuffle.
It seems the devil is controlling the wind but we manage to get within 100 yards and stand up behind a tree that looks like the singing bush from the Three Amigos. Only with thorns. Lots of thorns. And thankfully it doesn't start singing because that would just be weird.

A big zebra that we think is a good stallion finally steps kindly into a position that gives us a shot and I drop him. However, upon inspection, it turns out he is a she. It’s my first zebra though so I'm still happy even though I would have preferred a stallion.

What I'm not happy about is the song that jumps into my head.

“I met her in a bar down in West Soho where they drink champagne and it tastes just like coca-coooola. C O L A Cohoola.

*Pushes the button to switch tracks*
(Also… eww)

“Well you should see polythene Pam. She’s so good looking but she looks like a man!”
Hmmm… that’s not much better John. We’ll move along with no music please.

After we get the zebra to the skinning yard, the conversation turns back to our primary quarry. PH is getting a bit worried and I think he's worried that I'm worried. Lots more comments about clients getting Buffalo on their last day. Don't be anxious. This happens all the time.

I reassure him I won't be soul crushed and planned to go down swinging but if he has anything in his bag of tricks, now is the time to pull it out.

He still looks nervous but I leave it alone. He’s working his ass off.

On second thought, I don’t leave it alone. What this guy needs is a dose of obnoxious client to keep him in the game.

I proceed to tell him there are no real bulls in this area. I’ve only seen black blobs that I can't quite make out with my naked eye before dawn.
He mentions that we saw Frank at the waterhole near camp with the spotlight in a mildly concerned “is this guy serious?” manner.

I tell him Frank is probably animatronics like at an amusement park and maybe he and the tracker are excellent actors that put on a good show after they “see” them and I don’t.
I mean I haven't actually had proof of life of Buffalo to this point. Perhaps someone straps on some Buffalo hoof clogs and runs around like the crazies that would make big foot footprints in the woods.

After an initially alarmed face he realizes I'm messing with him and the tension breaks and we have some good chuckles including one story he shares about a client from Germany that is hunting with a friend and wounds an animal but after they don't find it for the next day proceeds to gaslight everyone telling them that he missed and refuses to pay for it. So he asks me not “to go all German on him.”
Agreement reached.

We walk up the back mountain behind the lodge in the failing light to see if anybody snuck in on us. We run some tracks all the way into the moonlight but come up with nothing.

Dinner, wine, early bed.

Quote of the day:
“Don’t go all German on me.” - PH

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Day 8 – Mud, thorns, and more mud and more thorns.

The last vestiges of phlegm cling tenaciously but are banished. My lube system for the rifle will have to stick with off the shelf products. Pity.
Mugabe has not responded to any of my care packages. Also a pity.
Coffee, clothes, weapons check and off we go.

0 animals anywhere this morning because they're all bedded down from the wind. It's sharp today. Scouting is fruitless for the first hour and a half.
After sunrise we switched to tactics of checking the places that are easy to detect fresh spoor coming to and from water sources. We have a lively discussion of pronouncing it “spoowah” vs the ‘Merican’ way, “spore” and agree to disagree on who is correct.

There's one water hole with a dilapidated old blind which I refer to as PH's summer home. For the last four days there have been no buffalo tracks there but today it looks like they were here performing Riverdance and some idiot called for an encore and got it.

Chatty Cathy goes into his trance and does the monk thing. Then he does something we did not expect. He speaks!
“Da bahfoolow wahz heeyah.”
No shit Sherlock. I was expecting something a little more exciting.
This guy. Such a kidder.

Marching up a long rocky uphill path, I tell the pH I'm starting to get the hang of this tracking thing and I think I see a large bull track right over there.
“That’s a BF Goodrich.”
Big toothy grin. Shit talking starts early today

Chef has caught on that I don’t really eat before late morning so he has started packing breakfast to go for when the stomach rumbles at 0900. It's an omelet and a toasted sandwich of wildebeest liver pate’ with some crumbled white onion. Interesting and enjoyable.
Ship's log day 8- increase tip for chef.

On the stalk, Chatty Cathy is drinking an orange Fanta. Suddenly he stops. It's trance time. With the ethereal mists starting to swirl around him, he stoops to check something on the ground and I work my way forward to get a view.
STOMP! He crushes the aluminum can and tucks it into his pocket.
We continue for about 37 seconds when I get stuck on a piece of sickle Bush that is trying to RIP my ear off and he turns and gives me the keep it quiet hand motion.
Uhhh. Ya. I’ll be all over that.

Soon we find an extra special buffalo patty that gets three of the four possible tests, the exception being the probe test. Bulls were bedding here this morning in the sun. However, we never find them.

Just before lunch we sneak into a blind by a water hole to see if we could get a warthog to stop by. Nope. Skunked there too.

Afternoon hunt was the toughest one yet. We knew what section they went into and we crawled into the really thick thorns and proceeded to move in very slow stealth mode for over 4 hours. Only this time there were not only the normal sicklebush, we also got the added bonus of a mixture of dead ones that would snap and break and fall if you touched them. As an added bonus, they had a bunch of broken off ones which, when you ducked all the way until your ears were scratching your ankles to get under the first few, would be ready to stab you in the eye as soon as you looked up.

Ever since the military days, I’ve worked to control my language but there are some situations where a man just shouldn’t be held accountable for what comes out of his mouth. 4 hours in thorns and suddenly one of them whips in your face, slices your nose and then lodges itself deeply into your cheek. When you pull it away, the skin comes with it. Like getting punched in the mouth, it is instantly infuriating.

“… and he carries a reminder of every glove that’s laid him down or cut him till he cried out in his anger and his pain ‘I am leaving! I am leaving! But the fighter still remains.”

I’m soaking wet from head to toe when we finally hear them moving and feeding ahead of us. Bloody good job finding them in this hellish thornpocalypse.
Log a tip increase for Chatty.

Like a sadistic game of red light green light with the green light being hearing them moving and the red light being that you don’t, we try to approach as carefully as possible.

They’re moving towards one of the roads and we’re gaining ground when we hear a weird noise and pH and chatty Kathy both looked at each other with a questioning look.
“Water?” mouths pH. “Mud” mouths Chatty. (you have to really watch closely in order to read lips with that strong accent.) The goopy sucking sounds plus splattering sounds tell us they're having a heyday about 30 yards ahead of us in the mud. The only problem is the almost impenetrable hedge impeding us from getting there. We start finding a way through.

By the time we get to the mud, they are gone but we can still hear them moving so we slogged through as carefully as we could and started chasing mud rubs. We somehow ended up with them on three sides of us, left, right, and straight ahead. The sun is down and it's almost too dark to see. Almost.

A cow steps out in front of us at 40 yards chewing her cud and performing rear recon. She and several of the rest take off but the one to the right of us for some reason stays. We freeze and wait until he resumes movement.

He's coming towards us so we get on the sticks and wait as the waxing 3 quarter moon slowly takes its position of power over the fading dusk. I turn the volume down on the reticle start thinking about interpolating shooting locations on the large black blobs.

Instead of coming out, the bull turns away from us and we follow him until we emerge from the thorns in an opening. No sign of any of them. Dammit.

We are only about 50 yards from the LC so we head that direction when we hear more crunching sounds coming toward us like a D8 dozer but without the diesel engine. Maybe a Tesla D8 dozer clearing the forest would sound like this.

No time to do anything but put the rifle on PH’s shoulder and watch and hope. We can see shadows in the moonlight at this point but pH has better night vision than me. 4 cows and a young bull step out, casually glance our way, and then move down the tree line but it sounds like another big one is still to come. I resist the voice in my head that wants to shoot all 4 of them.

We sit there waiting for big boy to step out, trying to control our breath, trying to focus in the fading light. I happen to look up and notice that the area they came out is directly beneath where the Southern Cross and it’s buddy “2 pointers” stars direct you to due south.

Now, it would be amazing if I were able to tell you that I dropped a Buffalo bull right there in that sweet spot under the constellation. But that's not how this story goes.

We wait another 10 minutes even though we know it's too dark already because I can count my fingers on the ground in the moon shadow.
I can sense that bastard in the thicket with a shit-eating grin on his face watching the clock run out.
I safe the rifle. My mood black as his soul. We go.

Not much talk until camp. Everybody is pissed. PH checks his go-go gadget watch. Covered over 12 miles today, most of it crouching and crawling through thorns. My face is bleeding, my shirt is ruined, I'm soaked in sweat, and we all have mud up to our knees, but there's a feeling of satisfaction.

We caught those muddy devils and looked them in the eye.

Zebra tenderloin and backstrap for dinner after a shower which was easily 20 minutes and was barely sufficient.

I tell chatty Kathy I'm seriously impressed he was able to find them. He's bashful. I get 2 words that resemble “my pleasure” as if he spent his life working at Chick-fil-A. I leave it at that.

We're not done yet. Now we're in it for spite.

Quote of the day: “Diz wind ees sheet” – Chatty Cathy

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@Datchew, Man, I'm pulling for you to get a crack at one of those buffalo. Sounds like you had a fantastic hunt either way but having a buffalo as a tangible reminder of your adventure would be awesome.

Appreciate you taking the time to share the adventure with us here.
 
This report is getting better every post. What I forget, probably read it, where is it taking place? KZN?
 
This report is getting better every post. What I forget, probably read it, where is it taking place? KZN?

It's in a property located inside or adjacent to Madikwe in South Africa. If you happen to find a location on earth with the highest density of overgrown sicklebush, you'll be there. :D



Day 9 – A beat down with thorns for dessert.

Bucky exploits a defensive gap in my tent door before my alarm goes off in order to check on me.

I lay there like a corpse, confident my lack of movement will conceal me. The strategy fails and he puts a little foot up and pushes on the blanket near my face to notify me of my failure. There’s a lot of those going around. Thanks little buddy for pointing out one more.

His face is all “Yah howzit mah boi! Let’s hunt, yebboh!” Then he leaves. Demonstrating energy that I'm sorely lacking.
Coming Bucky.
We can’t all run buck-ass nekkid into the world you know. You could at least bring some coffee or something to make up for your dose of unwanted enthusiasm.

Except for my wake up call visit, we run the typical morning routine but as an added exception, I grab the fellas for a brief prayer for safety and success because I’m feeling a bit wreckless berserker, execute all prisoners immediately. I'm grumpy and something's gonna get shot.

Focus mate.
Frank just needs to give me one mistake to make this happen. Just one.

On the ride out I’m in my reverie, staring at the hypnotic headlights opening a minor view into the dark red dirt roads. Then I'm snapped out of by an above average level of pounding on the roof from the crow’s nest.
Strap on that gear. We’re joining the dark.

We shortly end up in the thick stuff and it seems we're coming up on them based on the growing level of excitement over piles of crap. Chatty can hear them but I can't.
I tell myself I set about this voluntarily while I pull a broken off thorn out of the top of my left ear and wipe the blood.
Questions start to come to me as to why. But I’m in no mood for talk to myself about it this early so we kick the tape player until something suitable comes on.

"Looking out at the road rushing under my wheels
I don't know how to tell you all just how crazy this life feels
Look around for the friends that I used to turn to to pull me through
Looking into their eyes I see them running too"

The wind is wrong suddenly. We realize it too late. The trail winds like demented cinnamon roll pattern in this stuff so they can make you follow a path they devised for an upwind location that betrays your scent.
If they’re that smart, I’m more intimidated and start thinking like that boat captain in Jaws, “We’re gonna need a bigger gun!”

We hear the commotion and give chase with not quite enough caution paid to the thorns. My tilley hat is folded and shoved inside my jacket under my left armpit. The jacket is zipped to the chest. The hat is gone when we emerge and I have no time or inclination to go back for it.

The devils have crossed 500 yards of open ground already as I emerge from the thicket. PH and Chatty are already on glass but all I can see if a dust cloud.
It appears we don't have ground speed advantage by a long shot.

Walking back to the truck, PH says he’s frustrated. They haven’t given you a single chance in 9 days. Not one!
“What did you do to piss off the buffalo gods?”
“I showed up.”

He says this area of madikwe is some of the hardest hunting he’s ever done and he’s PH’d in several countries and all the big 5 and others.
I make the mistake of asking why that is.
The entire place is overgrown, very few burns, thousands of acres of impenetrable thorns, random water that isn’t predictable from season to season, and so on. But the genetics are excellent and if you’re up for a hard hunt, this is where you really earn it.
Still… he says he’s never seen hunting this hard for buffalo.

I note in the ledger for the record that PH is attempting to be encouraging and quickly change the subject.

This must be how Jonah felt before the crew tossed him overboard.
on that topic I happen to hold a very strong opinion that I would make a terrible prophet and I hope God agrees with me.

Lunch is quiet. Too quiet.

Afternoon was a complete fail. No parts were missing.

We find tracks and the wind is steady as we stalk in but as the path gets denser and denser like Mirkwood Forrest in Bilbo’s adventure, we exchange looks and finally PH spits out what we’re all thinking. We’re never going to be able to approach them quietly in this stuff. It’s just too thick.


We let Chatty Cathy soldier on and we back out to where we think we’ll see them exit in case he bumps them.
He doesn’t and we don’t.
We cover 8 miles and return cut and bleeding. And hatless!!!
There’s one more chance tomorrow morning before the long trek to the airport.

Chef redeems morale with a stunning 2nd zebra portion with just salt and pepper grilled over leadwood coals. It was exceedingly good and I'm not sure why so much better than the previous evening.
He coupled it with some wine from Cape Town area that meets my criteria – I only drink wine I can’t see through.
Everything is delicious. So perfect for the mood. Cheer is restored.


Quote of the day:

(Two of us watching Chatty Cathy in his trance)
“There, he’s on it! He moved his hands from behind his back to the front” – me
“I think he’s peeing.” - PH

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Day 10 – Departure, disappointment, and an unexpected delight.

Morning routine. We go through the motions. But we all feel it. Looming failure.
Faces show it. Body language betrays it.
Even Bucky is not immune. He lumps over in the corner but he keeps an eye on the box of rusks. Just in the chance.

That tempting warm cozy bed of self-pity beckons.
The room is exceedingly comfortable with a roaring fire against the frosty cold outside.
The sheets are turned down.
There are little mints on the pillow.
Just come on in.

Aw to hell with that rot. Out we go.
After all, chances are as good today as they are any other day.
I’m here to hunt.

“Do not go gentle into that good night...”

Today we walk out of camp, isolating the engine noise variable.
Takes me longer to gain my night vision than it used to and I stumble a few times, barely able to stay behind PH and Chatty, steering mostly by sound.

Eventually the eyes remember night mode and we’re walking with nothing but starlight. I think I can start to see legs moving. The African sky I stunning.

The moon has already made scarce and there is no pre-dawn light yet. Orion’s arrow head and his left foot are about to drop over the edge of the world.

There is nothing around us. Anywhere.
Like there was a rapture for all the African animals.

Something grabs my eye. A shooting start. Only it has a slow, comet-like tail and makes a long, bright, smear across the sky.
We stop and enjoy it and I manage to capture a decent picture or 2. The smartphone can make a decent photographer out of even the most casual observer.
A quick prayer for the delightful parting gift.

Dawn comes. The sun seems to always be soft and red first thing here.
The animals are moving now. Maybe they didn’t make the cut on the rapture. Probably post-tribbers. Still no sign of any buffalo.
We radio in chef to pick us up for one last drive around the area but outside a nice drive and the lovely morning, nothing.

On the way back, Chef is at the wheel and Chatty and PH are on the observation deck, still looking, but in vain. Or perhaps playing poker. I don’t know because I can’t see them.

A big giraffe bull steps out in front of the LC and runs in front of us with apparently no idea how to get off the road.
His lanky but graceful “run” is something everyone should get to watch up close.

Chef is irritated that he won’t get his big patchwork butt out of the way and steals a glance at me to see if I’m also irritated.

“Traffic.”
He grins and relaxes.
“Eets bad toodeh.”

It’s such a beautiful morning.
I’m going to miss Africa.


“If you can dream—and not make dreams your master;
If you can think—and not make thoughts your aim;
If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster
And treat those two impostors just the same”

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Long sticker acacia is nasty but blackthorn is worse. Hook shaped thorns that grab and tear at you. Buffalo seem to love the stuff.

Great write up! That pup reminds me of my two hunting dogs. Fourteen year-old French Britt "Puppy" can still dance on her hind legs for a treat. Ten year-old Lab Ellie is a seventy pound lap dog. Not content to sleep with me, she has to sleep on me, holding onto something with paw or chin. I think the only decent nights' sleeps I've had the last decade have been when hunting in Africa ... while she stays home. Too much love. I don't spoil my dogs but I won't stop them from loving me.

Anyone know the proper name of giveaway birds? I don't recall them where I was hunting in RSA.
 
Day 3 – Who hunts a buffalo in a swamp?!

Hyena woke me up a 0400. They sound like an animal feeling sorry for themselves. I guess because they’re so butt ugly. Couldn’t get back to sleep so stumbled out for early coffee.

Departed at standard 0530, breaking the pattern of “half hour earlier each day.” I did not argue against this.

Chatty Cathy had us on the same buffalo as we tracked yesterday. I tried to be respectful in asking (dubiously) whether he truly could tell. He and PH were willing to walk me through it. This one’s rear foot had one half of the hoof that was shorter and turned inward making it easy to identify. So that’s a thing I guess. I squinted my eyes and pursed my lips and nodded slowly as if I now truly grasped this esoteric interpretation of spoor. They bought it.

We tracked old crusty up and over a mountain and through thickets and down the other side, honoring the turd testing rules the whole way. Lots of mud in many areas.
Eventually, we got within approximately 50 yards from them and PH said he could see a horn so I began to get excited. Focused. Only I couldn’t see a damn thing and he could have been making it all up for all I knew. Then the wind swirled and betrayed us and after a short stampede like an old John Wayne movie, the command decision was made to have lunch.

Lunch was a slice of cheese and ham between 2 pieces of wonder bread and 2 hardboiled eggs. My eggs were next to impossible to peel and I ended up chopping it in half and scooping out egg with my knife. PH and Cathy had no such trouble. I begin to suspect that they’re in league together to give me the hard to peel eggs. I’ll keep an eye on them. Literally they sneak around for a living so I find my own suspicious assumption to be reasonable.

Back at the camp for a pitstop, I notice the camp staff housekeeper lady already managed to get clean sheets on the bed and generally sort everything out. God bless her, I’m sure she cussed when she saw all the blood streaks from my scratches. Hopefully she’s good with getting blood out. I add a bigger tip in my mental balance sheet for her.

Out again in the afternoon. There’s a lot of water here. Like a lot. PH says the mountain is springing leaks and they didn’t even need Moses to whack it with a stick because of the high water table. He’s never seen this much water and he’s NOT happy about it because the buffalo now have 6-8 water sources instead of 2-3. Also… it’s creates long, gently flowing streams down the roads which effectively turns the road into a 2-3 mile drinking trough and a mud pit. In some areas I need to have brought my wellingtons. We slog on, determined, and starting to look like swine that have crawled through muck.

We chase the ever elusive quarry late into the evening until sundown and moonrise like tracking feral pigs. Bits of hair on the barbwire trees, mud rubs against thorns and trunks, and each sample of crusty mud is starting to be more and more dry and hard as we go. We’re out of light, we're not gaining on him. Time to hang it up and start back.

Pushing through the thorns, I realize I’m performing triage actively. Protect the eyes, some of the face, the family jewels, and just let the rest go. Ho Lee crap these things like to grab at you.

Eventually, we emerge from the thorns and there is a massive pile of crap steaming before us. PH says "ol boi" must have held it in for quite some time while he was going through the thorns and then let it all out once he got clear. It was like the triceratops scene in the original Jurassic Park but with no Jeff Goldblum (thankfully.)

Impala heart and liver in gravy over toast for dinner appetizer. Fabulous.

Quote of the day: “Now THAT’s a heap of bullshit.” (Not metaphorical)

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Nice Impala & Zebra....congrats on a wonderful safari....

There is always tomorrow to go back for the elusive Black Death of Africa.
 
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Great report, you had the entire AH community pulling for you and your team. That report was the probably the most well written that I can recall. Now the question when do you return? And when we will be along trough your excellent writing skills?
 

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THAT'S AFRICA SAFARI wrote on tommy1005's profile.
Happy birthday Tommy1005 we hope the year ahead is filled with alot of hunting!
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We hope the year ahead is filled with alot of hunting!
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Happy birthday! May the year ahead be filled with alot of hunting!
Hemmingway "Out of Africa" dinner for our clients

We love going the extra mile for our clients. The best feeling in the world is our clients going "Wow! this is amazing thank you"
Having had a successful hunt, having happy clients leave camp. There is nothing better.
Knowing that they will return again next year as a friend.
 
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