In memoriam - Prayers for the American Hunter Killed by a Charging Buffalo

It would be so useful to know:
1. Was there a chance to fire any shots and if so by whom?
2. Was the buff hit?
3. If the buff was hit did it not stop due to insufficient stopping power or poor shot placement?
4. What could have been done differently, or better to help prevent something like this happening again?

To me it is sad if these opportunities to share and learn are lost.
 
Asher was my friend. I hunted many years with him and his family on their ranch in Texas. There is a legacy to that family’s hunting. Such wonderful people. It hurts my heart of all the social media attacks on his accounts and other forums. As hunters we all know there is that chance…but I think we all hope it doesn’t come. He was a good person and a good daddy. Rest in peace Asher.
 
Another article from behind 'The Daily Telegraph' paywall:

Big game hunters are not pantomime villains​

Those who pay vast sums to shoot the ‘Big 5’ in Africa do much more to protect species than their armchair critics
Patrick Galbraith
Patrick Galbraith


09 August 2025 1:30pm BST


Close up of a wide Cape Buffalo looking at the camera in the Aberdares National Park, Kenya

Cape buffalo: Westerners who travel to Africa to shoot big game don’t deserve derision

When it comes to social derision, big game hunters are right up there with paedophiles and traffic wardens. There are few things that have the potential to ruin one’s life quite as effectively as a picture of you, rifle in hand, standing next to a dead elephant. Those who can afford to go to Africa to hunt “big game” now tend to agree that the first rule of trophy hunting is no photos.

It was not surprising when the death, last week, of Asher Watkins, a big game hunter from Texas, was cheered on social media by those who would self-identify as progressive and kind.

Mr Watkins, a Texas rancher was gored to death by a Cape buffalo while hunting in South Africa. Over on the socials, thoughtful animal lovers have weighed with hopes that it “was slow and agonising”; somebody identifying as “a dad” and a Mancunian football lover notes cheerily that there’s now “one less piece of sh-- on the planet.”

It’s worth thinking about the impact of these big game hunters. To be clear, big game hunting is not poaching – it is immensely expensive, it tends to be very well organised, and annoyingly for those who condemn, it is a vital contributor to the conservation of some of the world’s most impressive species.

It might seem paradoxical but where big game hunting is managed well, the local community sees species such as elephants as having value. People will pay a lot to hunt them, in order for them to prosper, the habitat needs to be maintained. Where they aren’t seen as having value, they are often just felt to be crop-destroying pests.

There’s no getting away from it, where big game hunting flourishes, animal populations flourish too. In Zimbabwe for instance, just this summer, they had to cull elephants because the population has become too large – the reason they are doing so well is because of people like Mr Watkins. Its important to note that big game hunters target old bulls which often actually prevent younger animals from breeding – for the herd to thrive, the old buffalos must go. “The dugga boys”, the Zulus used to call them.

Botswana’s elephant population is some 130,000 and a decision was taken, after consultation with local people whose farms were being destroyed, to lift the ban on hunting, which meant a sustainable number to be shot.

Absurdly, this was met with opposition from that brilliant naturalist Joanna Lumley who lobbied the-then president to keep the ban in place. Alright for Joanna, who has precisely no farming interests in the country and plenty of money.

Over the border in Namibia, hunting brings the 82 community-owned game conservancies an average of £5.5 million a year and the hunting sector has created 15,000 jobs. Rather than poaching animals, locals take paying hunters out to track them through the bush.

The conservation argument and the economic one are frankly irrefutable – in a sense the more interesting thing about it all is the way that people like Lumley appear to feel that they should be able to dictate the way that Africans live their lives. It’s a sort of neo-colonial outlook that privileges western feelings above all else. Sure the trackers might be out of a job, sure the elephant population might plummet, but Lumley will be able to say she’s won.

A London lawyer who makes trips to Africa to hunt big game when he can afford it told me that the difference between land managed for hunting and land where there is no managed hunting “is night and day”. The wildlife in the former thrives whereas in the latter it can be dead. “How many species”, he put it to me (having returned recently from a buffalo hunt), “benefit from that post-breeding age buffalo being shot”. But the thing he really wanted me to understand is that after he’d shot his “buff”, everyone from the village came to get the meat. They even smoked the hooves together.

What hunting gives him is an understanding of a culture and a community that going on holiday simply can’t. He didn’t want to put his name to his words because it would possibly ruin his career.
nothing compares to truth.
 
Another article from behind 'The Daily Telegraph' paywall:

Big game hunters are not pantomime villains​

Those who pay vast sums to shoot the ‘Big 5’ in Africa do much more to protect species than their armchair critics
Patrick Galbraith
Patrick Galbraith


09 August 2025 1:30pm BST


Close up of a wide Cape Buffalo looking at the camera in the Aberdares National Park, Kenya

Cape buffalo: Westerners who travel to Africa to shoot big game don’t deserve derision

When it comes to social derision, big game hunters are right up there with paedophiles and traffic wardens. There are few things that have the potential to ruin one’s life quite as effectively as a picture of you, rifle in hand, standing next to a dead elephant. Those who can afford to go to Africa to hunt “big game” now tend to agree that the first rule of trophy hunting is no photos.

It was not surprising when the death, last week, of Asher Watkins, a big game hunter from Texas, was cheered on social media by those who would self-identify as progressive and kind.

Mr Watkins, a Texas rancher was gored to death by a Cape buffalo while hunting in South Africa. Over on the socials, thoughtful animal lovers have weighed with hopes that it “was slow and agonising”; somebody identifying as “a dad” and a Mancunian football lover notes cheerily that there’s now “one less piece of sh-- on the planet.”

It’s worth thinking about the impact of these big game hunters. To be clear, big game hunting is not poaching – it is immensely expensive, it tends to be very well organised, and annoyingly for those who condemn, it is a vital contributor to the conservation of some of the world’s most impressive species.

It might seem paradoxical but where big game hunting is managed well, the local community sees species such as elephants as having value. People will pay a lot to hunt them, in order for them to prosper, the habitat needs to be maintained. Where they aren’t seen as having value, they are often just felt to be crop-destroying pests.

There’s no getting away from it, where big game hunting flourishes, animal populations flourish too. In Zimbabwe for instance, just this summer, they had to cull elephants because the population has become too large – the reason they are doing so well is because of people like Mr Watkins. Its important to note that big game hunters target old bulls which often actually prevent younger animals from breeding – for the herd to thrive, the old buffalos must go. “The dugga boys”, the Zulus used to call them.

Botswana’s elephant population is some 130,000 and a decision was taken, after consultation with local people whose farms were being destroyed, to lift the ban on hunting, which meant a sustainable number to be shot.

Absurdly, this was met with opposition from that brilliant naturalist Joanna Lumley who lobbied the-then president to keep the ban in place. Alright for Joanna, who has precisely no farming interests in the country and plenty of money.

Over the border in Namibia, hunting brings the 82 community-owned game conservancies an average of £5.5 million a year and the hunting sector has created 15,000 jobs. Rather than poaching animals, locals take paying hunters out to track them through the bush.

The conservation argument and the economic one are frankly irrefutable – in a sense the more interesting thing about it all is the way that people like Lumley appear to feel that they should be able to dictate the way that Africans live their lives. It’s a sort of neo-colonial outlook that privileges western feelings above all else. Sure the trackers might be out of a job, sure the elephant population might plummet, but Lumley will be able to say she’s won.

A London lawyer who makes trips to Africa to hunt big game when he can afford it told me that the difference between land managed for hunting and land where there is no managed hunting “is night and day”. The wildlife in the former thrives whereas in the latter it can be dead. “How many species”, he put it to me (having returned recently from a buffalo hunt), “benefit from that post-breeding age buffalo being shot”. But the thing he really wanted me to understand is that after he’d shot his “buff”, everyone from the village came to get the meat. They even smoked the hooves together.

What hunting gives him is an understanding of a culture and a community that going on holiday simply can’t. He didn’t want to put his name to his words because it would possibly ruin his career.
Thanks for that! Nice article. Some of the social media replies are truly sickening.
My condolences to the family and friends in their time of loss.
 
Asher was my friend. I hunted many years with him and his family on their ranch in Texas. There is a legacy to that family’s hunting. Such wonderful people. It hurts my heart of all the social media attacks on his accounts and other forums. As hunters we all know there is that chance…but I think we all hope it doesn’t come. He was a good person and a good daddy. Rest in peace Asher.

Very sorry you lost a friend. My thoughts and prayers are with you and his family during this difficult time.
 
Since you mention it. As have others.

Who can give us chapter and verse on why game ranch buff are (are they?) nastier than free range?
 
Since you mention it. As have others.

Who can give us chapter and verse on why game ranch buff are (are they?) nastier than free range?
I think that is a worthy discussion but better on a new thread. As mention earlier let this obituary be a place to mourn and offer strength and prayers to his loved ones.
 
RIP a hunter, father and son.

Always a risk hunting in countries with dangerous game or even snakes. We can only mitigate risk so much.
 
A very well written post from one of Asher’s friends! This should go viral to silence these people who are cheering for the buffalo!!

 

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