375Fox
AH legend
- Joined
- Feb 19, 2020
- Messages
- 4,272
- Reaction score
- 14,190
- Location
- Pennsylvania
- Media
- 172
- Hunted
- Zambia, Namibia, South Africa, Zimbabwe, Cameroon
Captive Bred LionsCBL?
Captive Bred LionsCBL?
What did you not like about this? I always thought it would be a lot of funCull hunting warthogs. I just really did not enjoy it.
I never hunted wild lion and probably will never able to.I absolutely love hunting lion (it’s my #1 pick out of all of Africa’s Big 5) and was fortunate enough to begin hunting them at a time when the concept of captive bred lions was completely unknown in Africa. Then, captive bred lion hunting slowly began to gain prominence as a budget alternative to the increasingly expensive hunts for truly wild lion.
So I hunted one captive bred lion in South Africa, just to see whether or not it could even remotely hold a candle to the real thing (as my white hunter was promising). Not even close. And I immediately resolved that henceforth, I would only hunt truly wild lion in places like Tanzania… even if it’s more expensive than hunting captive bred lions.
Nevertheless, I don’t advocate for a ban on captive bred lion hunting on mere principle. It offers a relatively economical route for several aspiring hunters on a budget to be able to get a taste of what lion hunting is like. And game farms definitely play their role in wildlife conservation.
Still… personally speaking, it’s just not for me.
Agreed. They are truly one of the few animals in Africa which can't be contained by high fences.What did you not like about this? I always thought it would be a lot of fun
A gentleman of principle, you are.I never hunted wild lion and probably will never able to.
But for sure I won't shoot any captive bred, hand fed lion after seeing the lion breeding farms in SA.
Conservation or not it was heart breaking least to say.
However each on it's own.
Essentially the same as a tower "shoot" in this country. It isn't intended to be hunting.We once did a 200 bird pheasant shoot in Poland, It took the second drive to work out that all the birds were brought out in cages and literally thrown from the cages. Appalling.
Mark CZ
It’s one of favorite events yearly. That said, it’s a shoot not a hunt.This exact topic came up around the grill yesterday while waiting for the doves to start flying. 3 or 4 of the guys had done a “continental shoot” and to a man none cared to repeat it. Shooting pheasant thrown from a tower doesn’t seem right.
I did a 2 day pheasant hunt in west Texas - a fund raiser for a local service club - on private land donated and marked. First day we were covered up with hunters. Second day we were on our own. Never saw a pheasant. Won't do that one again.
Are the holes in the bills where they had something so the roosters wouldn’t peck and fight one another? And then removed before being liberated.There are a lot of places doing that in US and charging an arm and a leg.
Clueless so called wild bird hunters can't even see the holes in pheasants beaks.
I hunt the ColbyGoodland area at least once a year.I was unaware we had any pheasants in West Texas.
It is why I usually hunt western Kansas.
High volume shoots are done like that. Some people are for that, some are not.
There have been shoots with 1000 - 2000 birds per day. No other way. (photo from internet)
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Agree. Been to a game farm in RSA once and that was enough for me . Granted there are some larger properties and good outfitters there, but better options elsewhere in my opinion . Sorry if that hurts peoples feelings .I think everyone here generally discusses their favorite hunts. Are there any hunts that no longer interest you or you wouldn’t repeat? I’ve been lucky and got to hunt quite a few different regions and outfitters. I’ve never had a bad hunt but think I’ve learned more what I want and don’t want with each trip. This is my list
1. The commercial game farm hunt in Limpopo. I’d be really glad to hunt bushbuck or warthogs or a dedicated kudu hunt in the mountains on very non-commercial properties, but seeing farmed species, color variants, or ear tags would ruin my hunt now. It’s generally too commercialized for the hunting I want now.
2. Estate hunting in New Zealand. I’ve had some PMs telling me otherwise, but the wild deer and farmed deer have very different temperaments from what I observed. I got to see 3 deer estates while I was there. I’d be excited to hunt free range deer or tahr again, but one estate stag is enough for me.
3. Single tag hunts in western US. I’m not a collector. I like going to see new areas and hunting styles and getting in all the days I booked. My biggest concern on these type hunts is finishing on the first day. I’m not one to pass trophy animals just to extend the hunt. I’ve only done one hunt like this for mule deer. Outfitter, guide, and area were great, but I took my mule deer on first afternoon, and hunt was over. I’d go as a group or with multiple tags in my pocket, but only one tag is too much of a potential limiter to me.
Hahaha!!! Sorry but that’s exactly what I love about dove hunting - versus freezing my arse off in a tree stand or goose blind for 12 hours!!Dove hunting in 100 degrees with dusty wind blowing my hat off. F that all day long.