I agree that some sort of certification by some hunting organisation would be beneficial and go a long way in identifying the bad apples that still exist... maybe something for someone to get off the ground.
As for identifying good operators, this forum is the best place to start. ASK QUESTIONS, LOTS OF QUESTIONS.
1. Ask here about the outfit/PH your are intending to hunt with. Most here will know of that PH/outfitter.
2. Ask about property sizes.
3. Property location/s.
4. Annual off-take of species. If you have a 10 000Ha area and their annual off-take of buffalo is 150 bulls, what does that tell you??
5. If you have the same size property as above and their annual lion quota is 3-4 males....
6. Ask straight out if the animals are CBL etc etc. There are many operators what are quite open about CBL / Managed / Free ranging / Self sustaining.
As mentioned about fences, SA properties HAVE to be fenced in order to legally own the animals and they are also fenced to stop not only poachers but squatters as well.
There are many many properties here that host the big 5 that are self sustaining and of a size that the animals don't even know they are fenced in. The behave in a natural manner. And it is big enough that you will die walking/stalking/chasing before a fence bothers you.
Hello Zambezi, and all others that have given their opinions so far,
I’d like to throw my two cents in, being completely new, inexperienced and uneducated to hunting in Africa. So far my experiences in hunting in Europe have luckily been formed with a few very ethical hunters, who taught me a lot.
One of the questions you put forward is “if you have a 10k hectare and 150 buffalo taken each year this should tell you everything”. Well actually this does not tell me anything, I have no figures to compare it to and would not know whether this is a lot or nothing at all. I can only compare to figures in Belgium or Scotland where I hunted before (not buffalo of course).
What I am trying to say is that there is a great lack of critical unbiased information for the prospective (first time) African hunter.
Perhaps a new thread or section in this forum could be dedicated to educating and informing people on how to recognise ethical hunting (from an advertisement or sales pitch of a ph/concession owner I mean to say).
I would very much appreciate such information as it is very hard to come by. Even this thread is a prime example of this. I do not know any of you personally or well enough to know who I should listen to, and whose advice I should take with a grain of salt. Most give eloquent and knowledgeable opinions, but I cannot as an outsider see who is to be believed, and who not.
Anyway, I’ll be going hunting (hopefully) in a few months for the first time in Africa. The only research I have done is putting my trust in the owner of the concession who is originally from the same birthplace as I am. And my taxidermist who hunted there before who said he has a nice thing going on. Every other concession holder / outfitter / broker I had spoken to all promised heaven on earth concerning ethics. Some more convincingly than others.
It is difficult to see clear in these muddy waters when even the (in my eyes) esteemed members of AH do not seem to agree on what constitutes an “ethical hunt”. Especially when the PH / outfitters / brokers also have their own stake in the game... after all they have a business to run and services to sell. So it is normal that they would defend, to the detriment of others, the aspects of hunting they do themselves.
To make it very clear, this is not an attack or criticism to anyone specific, I just do not know who or what to believe (apart from the obvious extremes of a 100hectare game farm or such).
10000 hectares for a Belgian is massive... For your information, we have a small game hunt in Flanders on 70-90 hectares. And will likely get into a big game area (wild boar and roe deer) of about 100 hectares later this year. We will have a few animals each year, but not much. Just to put things in (my) perspective.
V.