Allure of the Ruger No1

Indeed. Luckily, @Huvius knew what he was doing! Picked this up from him when he had a brief onset of momentary insanity and decided to sell it.
 
My 450/400 NE and I connected on a South Texas nilgai this spring. 400g Swift A-frame hit him hard. Still loving my No.1! A joy to carry and hits with authority. I haven't found the recoil to be unpleasant even in the light gun.

View attachment 649651
Wow, incredible with the open sight.

Would love to hear about the hunt and what that 400gr a frame did to that nice bull
 
We'd seen this bull once before. He was huge but had funky horns. Guide wanted to pass but I was all in. He was noticeable larger in body than the others we'd seen. I wanted the biggest, baddest bull we could find. Didn't care about the horn measurements - just my preference.

We slipped up on him in a large pan using the tree line and wind to our advantage. Dropped sticks about a 100 yards away (about the limit of my comfort with open sights). He immediately sensed something was off. If you've ever had the pleasure of hunting them you'll know what I mean. They are incredibly wary and have a sixth sense tuned to the extreme. Don't think he ever saw us or winded us but that didn't stop him from leaning on that intuition.

Luckily, we were between him and his preferred exit. I took him while he was moving from left to right at about 90 yards. Right on the shoulder. He crumbled immediately and was anchored. The shot was a little high so I gave him a coup de grace in the boiler room when we walked up to end it more quickly. It wasn't needed but bullets are cheap and life is precious. In the hand I noticed all his scars from a life of fighting. One horn flipped back at an odd angle and both worn smooth from use. My best nilgai bull yet, very pleased.
 
We'd seen this bull once before. He was huge but had funky horns. Guide wanted to pass but I was all in. He was noticeable larger in body than the others we'd seen. I wanted the biggest, baddest bull we could find. Didn't care about the horn measurements - just my preference.

We slipped up on him in a large pan using the tree line and wind to our advantage. Dropped sticks about a 100 yards away (about the limit of my comfort with open sights). He immediately sensed something was off. If you've ever had the pleasure of hunting them you'll know what I mean. They are incredibly wary and have a sixth sense tuned to the extreme. Don't think he ever saw us or winded us but that didn't stop him from leaning on that intuition.

Luckily, we were between him and his preferred exit. I took him while he was moving from left to right at about 90 yards. Right on the shoulder. He crumbled immediately and was anchored. The shot was a little high so I gave him a coup de grace in the boiler room when we walked up to end it more quickly. It wasn't needed but bullets are cheap and life is precious. In the hand I noticed all his scars from a life of fighting. One horn flipped back at an odd angle and both worn smooth from use. My best nilgai bull yet, very pleased.
Thank you for that. A mature bull with iron sights is no easy task. Congratulations

Yes their sense is incredible. You will have the wind and great cover. They are walking away from you and randomly just turn around and look right at you… frustrating at time haha. They are awesome critters

I guided a wonky horn bull last week.
I never saw it until we walked up to him -but luckily the hunter was like you. The trophy is in the age and size of a monster bull.
IMG_4398.jpeg
 

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autofire wrote on LIMPOPO NORTH SAFARIS's profile.
Do you have any cull hunts available? 7 days, daily rate plus per animal price?

#plainsgame #hunting #africahunting ##LimpopoNorthSafaris ##africa
 
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