gillettehunter
AH ambassador
Buying gas
I totally agree that the Sitatunga was well worth the trip. I am considering a return hunt with CFS. They have offered me a return at more than 1/2 off of the normal daily rate. Knowing what I now know I think I could be successful with them.Your incredible sitatunga was well worth the trip. Will you try for bongo again? Cameroon perhaps?
I totally agree that the Sitatunga was well worth the trip. I am considering a return hunt with CFS. They have offered me a return at more than 1/2 off of the normal daily rate. Knowing what I now know I think I could be successful with them.
Bruce
I got cramps in Zim in the heat also of the leopard blind. Very painful. I need to get a better plan for the really hot hunting. Something to add to the water you drink.Back to the lodge and a shower. After the shower a nap was in order. It was then that the cramps/charlie horses started........ I started on eating as much coarse table salt as I could. We went back out at 4 and C bought some bananas from one of the local farmers for me. We checked a couple of trail cameras and put some fresh salt in a couple of the ponds. Cameras had gorillas on them. We saw a yellow back duiker track at one as well as a bongo track. Too late to try the track. Then back to camp. Did see a mongoose cross the road. They appear to be the long nosed mongoose.
Had a nice meal and off to bed. I had cramps till close to midnight. Not a restful nights sleep......
Bruce
The clip on worked pretty well. There was a plastic sleeve that slipped over the scope and then the rest of it clamped on. I could see pretty well. Remember we were at less then 100 yds for everything that we were doing. For our purposed the thermal worked great.Love the story sitatunga looks amazing congratulations. One question how are you pleased with the pulsar and visibility at night I'm thinkin of getring the clip on rather than a full on scope since i already have a quality day scope
Oh wow...beautiful! Look at that big smile! Happy for you!! Look at the length...yes!View attachment 562869
A couple of feet from where he died.
I'm surprised you weren't interested in the duikers. Some of them are only found there. Cool little buggers.Thanks for the congrats on the Sitatunga. For those who care he measures 28 and 27 3/4 X 6 3/4. A great animal for sure.
I killed the Sitatunga on 9/27. So I have 6 more days and a morning left to hunt. Rather than a day by day I'll talk about the hi-lights. We tracked Bongo 2 more times. The first was a herd we picked up at a salt lick. Herds are difficult because when the dogs bay an animal it could easily be a female. This was a group of 5-6 animals, about as many as C will take a chance on. We went maybe 200 yds and the dogs jumped and bayed a bongo.
We rushed towards it and all of a sudden it was coming past us at about 200 mph!. The trackers later joked about getting behind trees! C had a long enough look that he was sure it was an old female. He has seen her for 6 yrs on camera and is apparently too old to breed. Generally associates near a herd, but often not in the herd. She was perhaps 12 yds from me and I could see the bush move, but not her.
We continued on the track. The herd took us up and down several steep hills. Felt kinda like elk hunting. After about 2 1/2 hrs we had a dog bark bay. Only 1 dog. We all started at top speed heading UP a steep hill. Just killed me. The dog stopped after maybe 60 seconds. Then 2-3 minutes later it bayed again for perhaps a minute.
I went until I had to stop and sit. Drank some water and when I stood back up was light headed and dizzy. I sat back down and then found a place to lay down. Only 1 dog bayed. C said "the other dogs were lazy". They didn't aid the first dog and the bongo got away. One tracker said he saw the bull. C said he saw a cow and a second animal. Without more dogs to surround and hold it we had no chance. Even if I was in better shape, with the small window of time it wasn't going to work.
With me gassed and the bongo spooked we called it for that one. On the 2nd to the last morning we stopped the truck 5 times to look at tracks. GF hogs, buffalo, sitatunga and 2 times bongo. The first set of bongo tracks looked promising so we loaded up and headed out. After about 1/2 hour or 45 min. we discovered that this bongo was part of a herd of 10-11 animals. So we called it on that herd. Too many animals. We found their tracks a second time a little further down the road.
In the machan I did get to see a sounder of 7 GF hogs. There were 2 boars in the group. Only 2 piglets and the others sows. I also saw a duiker one night. Also a palm civit came in one night. Don't think they are on quota.
Driving along the roads we would occasionally see animals. I saw a Bay duiker as well as several blue duiker. One evening we caught a couple of GF hogs on the road. Never a bongo. One female sitatunga too. One time we had a civit along side the rod. Also saw a couple of the long nosed mongooses.
I had 3 gorilla encounters that I saw them. No decent pics unfortunately. The trackers saw others on 2 more encounters.
So I ended without a bongo. In fact I hunted 14 days and had the one run past me in the bush as the only "kinda" sighting. The last 8 days we really didn't get much rain in the hunting area. We got it at the lodge, but we're hunting 15-30 miles away. The saying for bongo PH's is: No rain, no bongo.
I wasn't too interested in the duikers. Perhaps I should of been. They call them and bait them. C also said they went out and spotlighted some a couple of times. He says on a good night you can kill 10 blue duikers per hour! A slow night is 2 per hour. Occasionally they will get another duiker species. Yellow back duiker usually need to be baited. They buy a goat and kill it and let the flies get to it. The YB duikers like the maggots and after the meats rots enough they will eat that! Pretty weird.
On the last day C asked if I'd like to take a boat ride on the river. I thought that sounded like fun. We went to the nearby village to get gas. They had diesel for the trucks, but not gas. I'll add some pics. They literally poured gas into a glass bottle to measure the amount of of gas and then pour into our jug. Make due with what you have.
We also did a photo session with the trackers and their families. Some cute kids. I'll add a couple of those pics.
Bruce