Vintageguy
AH enthusiast
Talk about “Choot it! Choot it!”. Seriously though, he’s lucky that bull didn’t stick that horn tip in his bum or kidneys.
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I'll play devil's advocate. How is this different to shooting a Leopard off a hunter/PH/tracker?I watched this before you posted here.
Interesting video for sure and a lot of lessons to learn.
What bothered me most was somebody takes a shot at the buffalo while the buffalo is still tangled with the guy??? WTF?
IMHO nobody should take a shot at an animal when it's tangled with someone unless it's point blank.I'll play devil's advocate. How is this different to shooting a Leopard off a hunter/PH/tracker?
Yes, I do know the PH. He is the gentleman handling the double rifle.Where did this happen? Does anyone know the PH?
He did well and waited till he had a clear shot unlike that first shot.Yes, I do know the PH. He is the gentleman handling the double rifle.
Dont know the gentleman shooting the bolt. I have a feeling that could be the hunter.He did well and waited till he had a clear shot unlike that first shot.
The Boddington story shows how that can go too thoughI'll play devil's advocate. How is this different to shooting a Leopard off a hunter/PH/tracker?
The first shot was not the PH.The PH shot a running buff with a man on board. Stopped and killed the Buffalo and saved everybody from further injury.
Bravo to him for that.
There's no explanation of the first shot taken for some reason.Here is the story below the video.
This is the story about how quickly things can go wrong, doesn't matter how well you handle it. This is a reminder to everyone out there to always be vigilant and remember how dangerous these animals are.
The buffalo was shot with a bow, perfect shot placement but the arrow got deflected by a bone and didn't get enough penetration. Myself, PH/Outfitter and the client walked on the tracks for a few kilometers, good blood all the way but we didn't find a dead buff. We called in the vehicle so the client can switch from bow to rifle. We backtracked about 100 meters to have a buffer between us and last spot of blood. Landowner and manager arrived with dogs to assist us since it was getting dark quickly. While we were busy getting the client's rifle ready the guys with dogs went into the buffer zone to see if the dogs pick up the blood. 30 seconds later they came back at speed. The buffalo clearly circled around and was much closer than the 100 meters we cleared. The PH couldn't take a shot because of the manager in the way, him and me circled around to let the guy pass and get a side-on shot on the buffalo. The buffalo was too fast and caught up with the guy, throwing him up in the air. Once he dropped and was clear the PH finished of the buffalo.
The unlucky guy had the hole cleaned and stitched up, no permanent damage but he's now part of the club, have the story to tell and the video to back it up.
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The result is the same. Either you take the shot, or someone is getting mauled.The Boddington story shows how that can go too though