Talk to your PH and ask him about typical ranges to plan for and choose a rifle and scope/ammo combo to match that. If you want a Rigby, be prepared to pay dearly. If you want CRF, you may also pay a premium. CRF is not a necessity for PG. Just saying. Don't be afraid to buy a used hunting rifle. I have found that few of them have been shot enough to matter. Clean the bore good and go with a nice used rifle. Remember this, the planning, and prep is half the fun and lasts much longer than the actual hunt.
I have been in your shoes. About 1.5yrs ago, I was invited to go on Safari in 2025 with a few friends. I was excited and started gathering up those items I would need. Binocs, clothing, new boots, rifles, etc. I was planning to hunt several PG and a Cape Buffalo. I had a nice old FN Browning Hi-Power Medallion Grade in 308 CRF which covered the PG side of things. It had been banged around a bit but had been shot only a little. I spent much of the summer refinishing the beaten up stock. In the 60's rifles with blond wood and ten coats of varnish were in vogue. I hate that. I will post a pic of the finished product that turned out great. I wanted a 416 Rigby Mauser action for the buff but found a used FN Browning Hi-Power Safari Grade in 375HH online in Alaska and bought it. I was expecting it to also be a CRF action but it turned out that FN converted to push feed in the late 60's after Winchester and Remington had done the same. Contrary to some claims, there are a few benefits to PF actions. I refinished that one also even though the wood was far more plain than the 308.
Nice lightly used Cabelas Safari Line shirts (discontinued) can be found on Ebay for next to nothing. I found items of first class gear like those shirts, hunting vests and coats from Tag Zimbabwe, Kenya-East, LL Bean, Cabelas-Safari, Orvis, etc. These are all premium products that are well made, very functional and normally quite pricey. Most arrived looking like new.
After testing and prepping, this April, I decided that I wanted to go on a PG only Safari before I took a swing at the DG buffalo pinata. Toward that end, I booked a hunt in Limpopo with the same PH for this summer. It was well worth the trip in gained experience, etc. Travel to Africa with rifles is not that difficult as long as you follow the regs and fill out all of the paperwork in advance. You PH can aid with advice and forms. Join SCI and go to local chapter meetings as all of the hunters will share experiences and advice. Following my first trip, a few things stood out that caused me to adjust my plans.
While I had found ammo that fed reliably (not all did) in my 375HH I learned a bit why PF is not the best for Africa. Most of Africa is dry, bone dry arid country in the hunting season (their winter). The dust was on everything. After two days of riding around in the land cruiser both my rifles were covered in the red dust that was everywhere. When I went to shoot a Wildebeest with the 375 it functioned fine but the next day when I was cleaning it, I noticed that the plunger type ejector was sticking and had so much grit in it that it did not want to smartly eject some of the rounds. That is not good. I detail cleaned the bolt and got it working good again and protected it more from the dust after that but the lesson was that the fixed extractor in the CRF Mauser style action of the 308 was far and away more fool proof in that dry dusty environment. I had already decided that I wanted a CRF design for the DG hunt and had already purchased the rifle in an auction the day I left on Safari but had I not done that already, I would have anyway. My PH was not at all worried about shooting buffalo with a PF rifle but his stopper was a CRF type and he still wanted a 500NE double rifle for DG work. Still keep this in mind, even some CRF actions will not feed reliably with some of the blunt nosed ammo. Test, test and retest this.
Before, my first hunt I did not even know enough to know what I did not know or what questions to ask. After that trip, I know I took too many clothes, and too much ammo. Travelling into So Africa with guns is a piece of cake but getting back into the USA is harder, slower and a PITA. Budget twice as much time at the port of entry than you think you need, lol. If it is Atlanta, budget more. Do not be afraid to buy a nice used Mauser action rifle. They are hard to wear out. Take your 300WM and hunt PG and if needed use a PH rifle for DG on your first hunt. If you go on one Safari, you will go on a few more after that. I think about Africa EVERY DAY. No joke. The place and the people are a little slice of Paradise. And the game available is 2nd to none. One week in Africa hunting will yield about 10yrs worth of big game hunting experience that could have been gathered in North American as will as tons more variety. In the USA, I had hunted and harvested, deer, wild boar, coyote, Bobcats, and a variety of small game over a 50yr hunting career. One 8 day hunt in Limpopo overshadowed all of that. That does not make me an expert on Safari but it was a great benefit to my planning for next year.
You do not need tier1 tactical optics to hunt with and with some exceptions, most shots will be shorter than 200y. However, do spend the money for first class glass on your hunting scopes. For my trip the 308 wore an old vintage Balvar 2.5-8x optic zeroed at 200y. I took five animals with it and all were 1shot kills. The 375 wore a Swarovski Z6i 1-6x illuminated optic and it performed great and having owned and hunted with one, it was worth every penny.
Another rule that I made for myself is that for each Safari, I will acquire and set up two new rifles. That is not necessary but I enjoy finding and tuning these and it makes my time between safaris more pleasant. For 2025 will need to be able to shoot at longer ranges for a few critters that like to stay out in the open and not let us get in close. PH says 200-300y for some and possibly longer. Toward that end, I have set up a Husqvarna Swedish Mauser in 30-06 with a 4-16x MIL optic that is shooting 2.25" groups at 400y and 0.5-0.6" at 100y with every load I have put thru it so far. The rifle I bought the day I left to go to Limpopo is a custom ER Shaw P14 in 375HH shown in the first pic below. It came with a 4x Burris but I swapped that for a Kahles K16i 1-6x that I already had and liked much more. Its accuracy matches the Swede even at 400y but will mainly operate at 100y and less. The 2nd pic below is the pair of FN Twins that I took this year and the last shot is of the FN Browning 308 taken in Africa after it had been refinished and was operating in its natural habitat. I bought all of these at auction and the one I paid the most for was the FN 375 mainly because I wanted it and asked the dealer to sell it to me prior to the auction ending and as such I paid top dollar. They are all lovely accurate rifles and the bbls in all of them look to be nearly new.
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