TheGrayRider
AH enthusiast
Post 1
Bongo - Lokomo, Cameroon, Africa. May 19, 2024. Day 2 of 14 day hunt. Northern Operations Africa.
Forest sitatunga - Lokomo, Cameroon, Africa. Day 7 of 14 day hunt.
I am very extremely grateful, blessed, and thankful to have a successful bongo and forest sitatunga hunt from May 15, 2024 to May 31, 2024 with Northern Operations Africa near Lokomo, Cameroon, Africa. I have been back to the United States about a week and a half now, and I am still reviewing and synthesizing this trip and journey and as everyone does, attempting to catch up with life, work, and family.
I kept a 20 page handwritten journal throughout this hunt so I will eventually post many of my notes. I also have about 50+ photographs to post. I will post first and mainly about the logistics of this hunt including the harsh environment of the jungle, gear that worked well, what a person should most probably bring on a hunt like this in the African jungle, and finally I will post about the actual hunts.
Bottom line/summation: Bongo killed on the second day of the hunt and forest sitatunga killed on the seventh day of the hunt. The other hunter in camp killed his bongo on the first day of the hunt and also killed his forest sitatunga on the seventh day of the hunt. We hunted dwarf forest buffaloes several times but did not get a shot. This outfitter was 100% for six bongo this year but I believe about only 60% killed a secondary animal like a forest sitatunga or dwarf forest buffalo. We also hunted duikers the second week of the safari but I missed a close shot at a blue duiker and had trouble seeing the other duikers in the extremely thick and dark jungle brush.
We also saw a silverback male wild lowland gorilla and a female lowland gorilla. Seeing these wild gorillas was a fulfilled lifelong dream for me. Additionally, we were very lucky to see three bull forest elephants while driving back to camp one evening. My PH has hunted the jungle for 6 full seasons and had only seen forest elephants on 5 other occasions. I will also post about our day trip to one of the viewing platforms at the Lobeke National Park in SE Cameroon near the border with the CAR and Congo.
Animals harvested: bongo and forest sitatunga.
Animals/Birds seen on this safari in jungle/forest: Lowland gorillas, forest elephants, bongo, forest sitatunga, yellow backed duiker, dwarf forest buffalo, blue duiker, Peters duiker, collubus monkeys, snakes (unknown), bay duiker, pygmy antelope, great blue turaco.
Firearms rented from camp: Remington Model 70 .375 H & H with 300 grain bullets for big game, and 12 gauge over-under shotgun for duiker hunting.
Unique Birds seen: Great blue turaco while in Lobeke National Park at one of the raised game viewing platforms.
Price/cost: This journey, trip, and hunt was priceless in the overall scheme of life but if you want a number then budget around the same as a brand new, loaded pickup truck.
Lessons learned or recommendations:
WHY I HUNT
I hunt because my father hunted, and he took me with him, and so we built a bond that I still cherish.
I do not need to hunt to eat, but I need to hunt to be fully who I am.
I hunt because it links me with the boy I used to be and with the young man my father was then.
I hunt because if I did not, I would have seen fewer eagles and ospreys, minks and beavers, foxes and bears, antelope and moose (AND BONGO, LOWLAND GORILLAS, AND FOREST ELEPHANTS)
I hunt because it is never boring or disappointing to be out-of-doors with a purpose, even when no game is spotted.
I hunt for the satisfying exhaustion after a long day in the woods, for the new stories that every day of hunting gives us, and for the soft snoring and dream whimpering and twitching of sleeping dogs on the backseat as we drive home through the darkness.
I hunt because it keeps my passions alive and my memories fresh and my sense alert even as my beard grows gray, and because I am afraid that if I stopped hunting, I would instantly become an old man, and because I believe that as long as I hunt, I will remain young.
Author Anonymous.
Bongo - Lokomo, Cameroon, Africa. May 19, 2024. Day 2 of 14 day hunt. Northern Operations Africa.
Forest sitatunga - Lokomo, Cameroon, Africa. Day 7 of 14 day hunt.
I am very extremely grateful, blessed, and thankful to have a successful bongo and forest sitatunga hunt from May 15, 2024 to May 31, 2024 with Northern Operations Africa near Lokomo, Cameroon, Africa. I have been back to the United States about a week and a half now, and I am still reviewing and synthesizing this trip and journey and as everyone does, attempting to catch up with life, work, and family.
I kept a 20 page handwritten journal throughout this hunt so I will eventually post many of my notes. I also have about 50+ photographs to post. I will post first and mainly about the logistics of this hunt including the harsh environment of the jungle, gear that worked well, what a person should most probably bring on a hunt like this in the African jungle, and finally I will post about the actual hunts.
Bottom line/summation: Bongo killed on the second day of the hunt and forest sitatunga killed on the seventh day of the hunt. The other hunter in camp killed his bongo on the first day of the hunt and also killed his forest sitatunga on the seventh day of the hunt. We hunted dwarf forest buffaloes several times but did not get a shot. This outfitter was 100% for six bongo this year but I believe about only 60% killed a secondary animal like a forest sitatunga or dwarf forest buffalo. We also hunted duikers the second week of the safari but I missed a close shot at a blue duiker and had trouble seeing the other duikers in the extremely thick and dark jungle brush.
We also saw a silverback male wild lowland gorilla and a female lowland gorilla. Seeing these wild gorillas was a fulfilled lifelong dream for me. Additionally, we were very lucky to see three bull forest elephants while driving back to camp one evening. My PH has hunted the jungle for 6 full seasons and had only seen forest elephants on 5 other occasions. I will also post about our day trip to one of the viewing platforms at the Lobeke National Park in SE Cameroon near the border with the CAR and Congo.
Animals harvested: bongo and forest sitatunga.
Animals/Birds seen on this safari in jungle/forest: Lowland gorillas, forest elephants, bongo, forest sitatunga, yellow backed duiker, dwarf forest buffalo, blue duiker, Peters duiker, collubus monkeys, snakes (unknown), bay duiker, pygmy antelope, great blue turaco.
Firearms rented from camp: Remington Model 70 .375 H & H with 300 grain bullets for big game, and 12 gauge over-under shotgun for duiker hunting.
Unique Birds seen: Great blue turaco while in Lobeke National Park at one of the raised game viewing platforms.
Price/cost: This journey, trip, and hunt was priceless in the overall scheme of life but if you want a number then budget around the same as a brand new, loaded pickup truck.
Lessons learned or recommendations:
- Always keep extra ammunition in your pockets. Don’t let the trackers carry the extra ammunition because you might get separated.
- Always carry a head net in your pocket in the forest. The sweat bees, mosquitos, and other insects get very thick and annoying during the heat of the day. Also, the African black ants are vicious when they bit.
- Wear gaiters over boots and pants to keep insects out of boots and as an additional layer against vegetation.
- Don’t forget the following items on a jungle safari: baby powder, head net, malaria prescription, small battery powered fan, knee or ankle gaiters, anti-inflammation tablets (Benadryl), small hunting backpack, duct-tape, first aid kit, digital camera with recharger, solar powered rechargeable battery packs, international power converter, small gifts for local children, hunting knives for trackers and skinners, instant coffee, cell phone recharging cable, stomach medicine (Pepto-Bismol), harness for small binoculars, canteen.
- Bring extra small bills for the “informal requests” from the numerous persons that want extra money at the airport including baggage handlers, some government officials, etc. It’s Africa. Just go with the flow and the culture. What flys over there will not necessarily fly in the States or Europe.
- Bring different first aid medicines in your kit for small cuts or other situations. Small cuts and bruises seem to heal much slower in the African jungle environment.
- (more forthcoming)
WHY I HUNT
I hunt because my father hunted, and he took me with him, and so we built a bond that I still cherish.
I do not need to hunt to eat, but I need to hunt to be fully who I am.
I hunt because it links me with the boy I used to be and with the young man my father was then.
I hunt because if I did not, I would have seen fewer eagles and ospreys, minks and beavers, foxes and bears, antelope and moose (AND BONGO, LOWLAND GORILLAS, AND FOREST ELEPHANTS)
I hunt because it is never boring or disappointing to be out-of-doors with a purpose, even when no game is spotted.
I hunt for the satisfying exhaustion after a long day in the woods, for the new stories that every day of hunting gives us, and for the soft snoring and dream whimpering and twitching of sleeping dogs on the backseat as we drive home through the darkness.
I hunt because it keeps my passions alive and my memories fresh and my sense alert even as my beard grows gray, and because I am afraid that if I stopped hunting, I would instantly become an old man, and because I believe that as long as I hunt, I will remain young.
Author Anonymous.