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It is extremely unfortunate that fencing is a criterion in choosing an acceptable hunt. Sure, there are some areas left that aren't fenced, but I am far more put off on a hunt by seeing locals wandering around with their bicycles and cattle than knowing that in the far distance there is a fence to keep the two apart. The criterion that should perhaps be applied to a certain category is 'sustainable' as many have said, and that really just means breeding herds.
perhaps the answer is to create three categories, open, full disclosure and clients choose:
1. Unfenced, wild areas, example Selous, Zambezi Valley, etc.
2. Fenced game farms or areas with sustainable populations, example Save Conservancy and the larger South African farms. Not minimum size, just sustainable.
3. Place and take.
Obviously the price would diminish from category 1 to 3.
Do not pour scorn on class 3, it definitely has it's place to a certain sector including the biltong hunters. A word of caution from one who has lived here all my life and understands the 'African way'. The game breeding industry in South Africa generates a large amount of internal economic well being, AND it delineates and protects vast areas of land, albeit some in small pockets. Destroy that and see how long before it turns into squatters and goats!
In summary, choose your category and pay your money, but keep your lofty opinions and critisisms of the categories you don't like to yourself, because ALL ARE NECESSARY.
Agreed Kevin, but think that it needs to be stated that Option 3 is certainly the exception and not the norm for South Africa.