Totally agree with Pieter here. We own private land as well, and decided not to jump on this train!! It was very tempting at first but when we looked the whole thing through it is obvious that this is a crime to nature!!It definitely has an effect on the prices we as outfitters are charged. I don't do business with farmers who jumped into this new "goldrush". I think this colour breeding will one day be remembered as a crime against wildlife where the good genes were taken away from the natural gene pool to breed freaks. Like mentioned before this is definitely a pyramid scheme with no end user. There are hundreds of farmers blinded by this taking out massive bonds on family farms to set up herds. If the colour breeding cools down within the next few years you will see crocodile tears everywhere as family farms get sold off.
Yup! BRICKBURN you hit the nail on the head!Royal it was exactly the same here with Ostrich.
Farmers have to be Gamblers at heart to even stay in the industry. Perhaps that is the reason for the behaviour all around the world.
I'm hunting in South Africa in june of this year. This will be my third and final time in RSA. I have no interest in black, white, copper and pink springbok. Last time in RSA I hunted with a PH who's very big in game farming also. He farms golden wildebbest and black impala amongst others.
He showed me the prices that people were achieving at the auctions and it was hard to understand why they were selling for so much more than current trophy fees.
It gave me the impression that hunting in RSA is just all completely fake. I've always avoided small fenced areas and put and take shooting (I refuse to call it hunting), but having man made animals just makes the whole thing worse.
I can see why many people cash in on this tulipmania like craze. I can understand how the hunting industry will be affected, outfitters as well as clients. But hunting in RSA now looks more and more farcical with the increase of these mutants.
I've already booked RSA, and will be looking at wild type examples of species in their native range. But going forward I just don't see any appeal left in RSA to hunt an overpriced copper springbok. These animals must appeal to 'bone collectors' not real naturalists and hunter types.
MJ, what does the breeding of these color variants have to do with hunting? So, my question, how does it make the hunting industry fake? These animals do not get hunted. Never seen someone posing with a Golden Wildebeest before, not to mentioned paying $50-60K for one.
I was wondering the same thing marius. But I was getting jealous to because I myself don't have a pink springbuck and I love hunting springbuck.LOL
......don't ask me to name them.
as marius said, and i also dont understand why you can say all hunting in SA is fakeIt gave me the impression that hunting in RSA is just all completely fake
thats your choice and you dont have to........plenty of other run of the mill coloured animals available in large areas for you to huntBut going forward I just don't see any appeal left in RSA to hunt an overpriced copper springbok.