Rockwall205
AH member
- Joined
- Feb 3, 2025
- Messages
- 26
- Reaction score
- 111
- Location
- Rockwall, Texas
- Member of
- Life member of SCI and DSC
- Hunted
- South Africa, Zimbabwe,Tanzania, Cameroon
Choose the Leopard specialists and get it righty the first timeI fear you are correct @rookhawk !!! Lou Hallamore my ph said “craig no matter what your told, leopard is 50-50.”. That’s why i have saved him till last. While hope is eternal I know it might take several hunts to get him
So excited for you my friend…you give me hope on my own leopard try!!! Looking forward to your pictures with your Rigby double !!!
In all seriousness if you have $57000 to hunt you are wealthyAfter being on our great site for so many years now becoming an Ambassador I thought this might be a good time to post my experience towards my vision of taking the big 5. I have gotten concerned when reading so many members say they could “never possibly get the big 5” due to cost. While I fully understand cost is in the eyes of the beholder my hope is to share you don’t have to be wealthy to obtain your goal. The following are my costs for the Big 5 without tip or air for perspective:
1. Cape Buffalo Zim $13,000
2. Rhino while the dart hunt was won at auction cost $6,000
3. Male CBL lion $6,500
4. Bull Elephant $15,000
5. Leopard $17,000 going in June 2025
Total $57,500
While this is a lot of money to me given I am not wealthy but I have done well as a senior executive it is still far less than one wild lion hunt or 60-70 pound elephant hunt
My point is set your vision then go after it as I have on your terms and no one else’s as long as it’s legal
Could also be spread out over a decade or so.In all seriousness if you have $57000 to hunt you are wealthy
Or a lifetime!Could also be spread out over a decade or so.
I don’t agree that Leopards have to be only a 50-50 proposition. In many areas it is accurate, but there are places where success runs consistently high, abound 80-90%. The Luangwa Valley, Selous Game Reserve, Niassa Game Reserve are areas where success tends to be very high. What these areas have in common is being huge areas of what is essentially wilderness hence lots of prey species and not a lot of pressure.I fear you are correct @rookhawk !!! Lou Hallamore my ph said “craig no matter what your told, leopard is 50-50.”. That’s why i have saved him till last. While hope is eternal I know it might take several hunts to get him
Out of what you listed…the Leopard is riskiest (I realize you did the others already)I fear you are correct @rookhawk !!! Lou Hallamore my ph said “craig no matter what your told, leopard is 50-50.”. That’s why i have saved him till last. While hope is eternal I know it might take several hunts to get him
I don’t agree that Leopards have to be only a 50-50 proposition. In many areas it is accurate, but there are places where success runs consistently high, abound 80-90%. The Luangwa Valley, Selous Game Reserve, Niassa Game Reserve are areas where success tends to be very high. What these areas have in common is being huge areas of what is essentially wilderness hence lots of prey species and not a lot of pressure.
I believe that way too many areas have difficult leopard hunting and lower success for a variety of reasons, but people book these hunts because they get a relatively good deal and they’re ‘sold’ on these hunts. The problem is, too many aspiring leopard hunters have to go on multiple hunts just to see a cat in the tree.
It is often less expensive to go on a more expensive leopard hunt in a premium area and get a leopard on one safari than it is to go on 3, 4, 5 less costly safaris before you eventually shoot a leopard. I’ve hunted leopards 4 times, not on dedicated leopard hunts but rather on general bag safaris. Of those 4 leopards hunts I’ve killed 3 nice large Toms. Two were shot on the first day of sitting, 2-3 hours total for each Tom, one in AM and the other in PM. One was killed by tracking in Botswana, first morning of that safari. Those hunts were all during the first half of each areas season. The only unsuccessful hunt was one I knew would be tough going in, but wanted to give it a try anyway. It was the last hunt of the season, October into November, very hot, tons of bushpig and warthog babies running around everywhere, so getting a Tom in the tree was very tough. We did manage to get 2 big Tom’s to feed, but we zigged and they zagged so we were at one tree when a Tom was at the other. This happened repeatedly.
When I’ve hunted earlier in the season, we’ve shot good cats right away each time. This was hunting in prime leopard areas that were more expensive than a typical leopard hunt can be bought for, but I killed big Tom’s on each hunt.
If you want to kill a leopard on one hunt book a great area before most game drop their young, first half of season, and go with a PH who is truly a good leopard hunter. Not all PH’s are skilled, passionate leopard hunters and more areas are marginal than are great. My .02.
And yet no one thinks about spending nearly that on a vehicle every few years. Most Americans have more money than they think. It’s how you choose to spend it.In all seriousness if you have $57000 to hunt you are wealthy
But you only have to go once!Of course..
I’d say there are many 100%/99% opportunities…
You pay for them too. The guys here know that
I don’t mean overpay…just pay