JimP
AH ambassador
- Joined
- Dec 14, 2014
- Messages
- 5,011
- Reaction score
- 11,962
- Location
- Gypsum, Co
- Media
- 64
- Member of
- NRA, RMEF
- Hunted
- US (Utah, Arizona, Idaho, Colorado, Nevada. Canada (British Colombia), South Africa (Eastern Cape)
It's been my experience that the high fences in South Africa exist but you may not ever experience them. The animals on most farms are owned by the landowner and they try to keep a vast amount of these animals in the hunting area for the paying clients.
On both of my trips to the Eastern Cape I would of thought that I was hunting elk in the low country of Colorado or Utah rather than a high fence in South Africa. The animals are truly wild and react to hunters the same way that you would expect for a wild animal to react.
Sure they are high fence but the properties are also vast and contain varied terrine for you to hunt. My last trip the only time that I would of known that it was high fence was when we passed through the gates on our way in or out.
On both of my trips to the Eastern Cape I would of thought that I was hunting elk in the low country of Colorado or Utah rather than a high fence in South Africa. The animals are truly wild and react to hunters the same way that you would expect for a wild animal to react.
Sure they are high fence but the properties are also vast and contain varied terrine for you to hunt. My last trip the only time that I would of known that it was high fence was when we passed through the gates on our way in or out.