Buffalo Hunt in the Northern Territory Australia ended very badly

Some, very few, of us are fortunate to have access to hunt animals like these without the regulation and overseeing of a PH or Guide.
Sometimes, shit happens.
With or without a PH, sometimes to a PH, it matters little, if it's going to happen then it's going to happen.
Most of the time it's going to go right and sometimes it isn't.

Dangerous game hunting involves a chance of a risk.

If you want to negate that risk, stay home, watch TV.

I spent quite a bit of my time hunting buffalo and feral Oxen in remote areas without any company, let alone back-up.
Yes, the chance of it going bad was reasonable but I would have never changed it for the World.

Physical impact not-withstanding I would not expect these circumstances to have changed this particular hunters methods very much at all.
 
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do you use a bow&arrow on these hunts? if so get a good life insurance policy. well i don,t stand in the middle of the road for fun and i don,t hunt large animals that can-will kill me if they get a chance with out proper backup and a crossbow is not proper backup to me by a long shot. while it,s true you can still be killed with proper backup the odds go way down with proper backup.
 
do you use a bow&arrow on these hunts? if so get a good life insurance policy. well i don,t stand in the middle of the road for fun and i don,t hunt large animals that can-will kill me if they get a chance with out proper backup and a crossbow is not proper backup to me by a long shot. while it,s true you can still be killed with proper backup the odds go way down with proper backup.

Me neither. I want to see my grand kids grow up.
 
A crossbow for backup??My oh my...

Lucky to be alive....I ques next time sanity will prevail....

Let’s say it was a hard lesson!
 
The point is the shot needs to be in the right spot no matter what weapon!

Correct but do not have somebody backing you up with a crossbow on DG....unless you are a fool.....and then if the brown stuff hits the fan do not cry about it and expect sympathy....you got what you deserved....pay the animal you hunt the respect it deserves....
 
Some, very few, of us are fortunate to have access to hunt animals like these without the regulation and overseeing of a PH or Guide.
Sometimes, shit happens.
With or without a PH, sometimes to a PH, it matters little, if it's going to happen then it's going to happen.
Most of the time it's going to go right and sometimes it isn't.

Dangerous game hunting involves a chance of a risk.

If you want to negate that risk, stay home, watch TV.

I spent quite a bit of my time hunting buffalo and feral Oxen in remote areas without any company, let alone back-up.
Yes, the chance of it going bad was reasonable but I would have never changed it for the World.

Physical impact not-withstanding I would not expect these circumstances to have changed this particular hunters methods very much at all.

Correct...

However if you are stupid enough to have somebody back you up with a crossbow on DG game and it does not work out well blame yourself....don't expect any sympathy....no medication I know of for lack of common sense....
 
Man, there are some righteous attitudes here. I probably should exercise some of the common sense referred to here and not respond, but then I was also a bowhunter in my youth. I’m both a safari client (blessed) in a humble way as well as a local lad. It’s difficult to describe the risks we take every day. I don’t carry a rifle when I walk my dog or take the rubbish to the bin outside the yard - I just try to be observant and careful and see the buffalo first and from a distance, avoiding blind spots and thick cover. The word “back-up” has been mentioned numerous times here in relation to the crossbow. I don’t know these guys but I can tell you what the situation did not involve. It did not involve one guy saying to the other, “Hey, I’d like to hunt a buffalo with my bow. Would you please guide me and protect me with your crossbow?” It was just a case of two guys setting-out on an adventure (that became a misadventure) with their archery gear, similar to what happens in North America in bear country (yes, some bowhunters carry a firearm, but many don’t). In the bush you have a mindset of doing what you can with what you’ve got. I was once threatened by a tremendous buffalo bull and all I had was a .22-250. Thankfully both me and the bull and the other guys survived the encounter, but when I told the story a particular safari hunter from the city was quite judgemental about the rifle I was carrying. Of course I should’ve planned it better, but I was out with my Aboriginal friends trying to find kangaroo, turkey or pig, and at the time the .22-250 seemed like a good choice. I’ve tried to learn from my mistakes and modify my behaviours to stay as safe as possible while still living life. But that doesn’t mean I don’t find myself in tricky situations from time-to-time. At present I don’t have a big bore rifle, and I feel uncomfortable without it. I will still take my wife fishing and bird-watching, carrying my .300H&H, but I know that isn’t ideal for close surprises - so we walk carefully and try to set a course away from blind spots. We live with the nagging reality that we could be killed or injured each day. We try to be sensible and careful, but accidents can still happen. If ever something bad happens to me I can guarantee it will be because I made a mistake that armchair quarterbacks can enjoy dissecting. The bloke in Gove made a mistake. Ian Gibson made a mistake. Everyone who lives in the bush makes mistakes no matter how hard you try not to. Sometimes you have some luck and sometimes you don’t. So I’m not going to join-in with kicking this guy while he’s down. Of course, your mileage may vary and you have the right to voice different views.

On a related topic, it’s worth researching what Bill Negley thought about bowhunting with rifle back-up, and also reading some of Don Thomas’s articles from when he was bowhunting on Melville - not to prove anything, but just to consider another viewpoint (a viewpoint that I never adopted myself as a bowhunter, but respected theirs). I may be wrong, but I thought there was an old ABA rule that stipulated members need to have a back-up rifle present when bowhunting buffalo, a rule ignored at least 50% of the time (my guess).

So, I probably should’ve kept quiet, but then I probably don’t have the brains to, as evidenced by the two times (or three?) that I found myself uncomfortably close to wonderful bull buffalos with only my longbow in hand - long story! Cheers!
 
@Dr Ray, Any updates on this young man's condition?
 
I've never been a fan of bow hunting in general much less for the larger dangerous game. The way I look at it I'd much rather get shot with a rifle than an arrow any day. No offense to any bowhunters , just my two cents. Hope everyone involved is ok!
 
In the end I have to agree with benkk about it just turning into a misadventure and stuff happens. God knows I've done things that were probably just as reckless lol
 
even the great hill and bear had backup when bow hunting DG, these bow hunters were not out on a lark or just wondering out in the bush. they were hunting a very large animal that had more than enough power to kill them. and as a arrow kills not by shock, but mostly by letting enough blood out to cause death and its not a instant right now stop or death. in your post you even admitt to running into buffalo with only a bow without getting stomped, but it could have gone bady for you in a new york minute.
 
BenKK, thank for the informative description of life in your part of the world.(y)

I suggest that there is a difference between managing day to day risk by giving it your best shot, as you described, and deliberately going looking for trouble when inadequately prepared for what may happen.
 
That’s a fair point, Sir, and all the times I’ve been in frightening situations I was wishing I was better prepared or had better equipment.

And then there are the times I just quickly need to answer the call of nature and duck into the bush, only to have buffalo appear close by - poor things must be traumatised! I bet Paul can relate!
 
I read on the bowhunters forum that he will be okay.

The comments on Facebook wishing him slow and painful death, and the same for his family, are staggering.

That's the "animal lovers" for you. An animal is worth more to them than a human being. I have family members that have quit talking to me decades ago due to my passion for hunting.
 
And then there are the times I just quickly need to answer the call of nature and duck into the bush, only to have buffalo appear close by - poor things must be traumatised! I bet Paul can relate!

Is this the Territory equivalent of bear spray ?:LOL::LOL:
 
That's the "animal lovers" for you. An animal is worth more to them than a human being. I have family members that have quit talking to me decades ago due to my passion for hunting.

Sad part is, this is the world of love and tolerance in which we now live.
 

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Grz63 wrote on Werty's profile.
(cont'd)
Rockies museum,
CM Russel museum and lewis and Clark interpretative center
Horseback riding in Summer star ranch
Charlo bison range and Garnet ghost town
Flathead lake, road to the sun and hiking in Glacier NP
and back to SLC (via Ogden and Logan)
Grz63 wrote on Werty's profile.
Good Morning,
I plan to visit MT next Sept.
May I ask you to give me your comments; do I forget something ? are my choices worthy ? Thank you in advance
Philippe (France)

Start in Billings, Then visit little big horn battlefield,
MT grizzly encounter,
a hot springs (do you have good spots ?)
Looking to buy a 375 H&H or .416 Rem Mag if anyone has anything they want to let go of
 
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