BJH65
AH enthusiast
Your first African Safari predated mine by 20 years. I was 9 years old then and my pretend rifle back then was a stick that I used to slay imaginary lions and tigers with! The biggest difference I have found is the internet and various online gun auctions/gun sellers that make it much easier to obtain a variety of African DG rifles new or used, as well as ammunition. Thankfully Barnes and Hornady still manufacture DG ammunition which always seems to be available.Kenya, 1974. My life's first African safari. Back in those days, if you wanted a big bore rifle & weren't a hand loader... You had 3 calibers to choose from (based on the factory loaded ammunition which was on the market).
A) .375 Holland & Holland Magnum-
300Gr Winchester Super X Silver Tips
300Gr Winchester Super X gilding metal jacketed FMJ flat nosed solids
270Gr Remington Core Lokt
300Gr Remington gilding metal jacketed FMJ round nosed solids
300Gr RWS Kegelspitze soft points (just introduced in 1974)
300Gr RWS steel jacketed FMJ round nosed solids (just introduced in 1974)
B) .458 Winchester Magnum-
510Gr Winchester Super Speed soft points
500Gr Winchester Super Speed gilding metal jacketed FMJ round nosed solids
510Gr Remington soft points
500Gr Remington gilding metal jacketed FMJ round nosed solids
C) .404 Jeffery-
400Gr RWS thin steel jacketed FMJ round nosed solids (just introduced in 1974)
The only commercially manufactured control round feed magazine rifles on the market back in those days, were the BRNO ZKK series and the Inter Arms Whitworth series.
I chose to put my faith in my white hunter's loaner rifle- A .375 Holland & Holland Magnum BRNO ZKK602 and 300Gr RWS factory loads. I did not regret my decision.
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Tanzania, 2023. My most recent African Safari to date.
Officially, there are supposed to be lots of ammunition choices on the market for a wide variety of big bore calibers. Perhaps, but at the time of this Safari... Only Barnes ammunition seemed possible to source from the United States.
The only commercially manufactured big bore control round feed magazine rifles on the market, are the Winchester Model 70 Safari Express (offered in .375 Holland & Holland Magnum, .416 Remington Magnum and .458 Winchester Magnum) and the Ruger Hawkeye African (offered in .375 Ruger and .416 Ruger). Depending upon who you ask, Winchester hasn't manufactured a new run of Model 70 Safari Express rifles in quite a while.
I chose to put my faith in my son-in-law's .375 Holland & Holland Magnum Remington Model 700 Custom (with an M-16 extractor fitted for extra reliability) and the 300Gr Barnes TSX factory load. I did not regret my decision.
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The more things change, the more they stay the same.
Barring elephant (which mandates a thickly jacketed or monometal solid bullet preferably flattened at the point) or the great cats (which mandate quicker expanding lead cored bullets), I would personally be quite content employing the Barnes TSX against everything else that Africa might offer me.