@Tim BlackwellWe'll we've made the long haul to Africa Sky and their fantastic hospitality. As per usual I can't sleep, it's 3am currently....
One cancelled flight, and one lost bag to deal with thus far, we are hoping the latter may show up in East London later this morning! Looking forward to caching up with the KMG team very soon.
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@Tim BlackwellOK so we've had such a hectic week that I've had no time for updates! A combination of full moon, wildly fluctuating temperatures and heat have made going tough! We've been back after dark every day and only had one lunch back at the lodge. But the great trophies are stacking up! Lunch on Day 7 now and finally some downtime.....
DAY 1 saw us head an hour north of camp to hunt Kudu for Matt in some very big bluff country. I was feeling quite crook and slowing the boys down a bit. But we pressed on in the heat.
Late morning the guys found a big bull in a steep valley but lost him before they could get in range.
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Changing tactics for the afternoon, we went to sit and wait over an area where we thought they'd move towards for water given the heat. We eventually found a bachelor mob of 7 bulls, but the only mature one was a big unicorn! One horn!
It was after 5.30pm and we were actually packed up and leaving the property when we spied another bull. The guys hastily got on the sticks, but a 270m frontal shot was all that he would offer. Matt squeezed the trigger on his HS Precision 300Wby, and it looked good, but the bull staggered off, following the others.
We gave chase and found blood, but unfortunately ran out of light to secure him. I felt for my mate, not how I wanted his first African experience to commence!
TBC....
That bushbuck ram is so good, for a second I thought it was an nyala! My congratulations to Matt!Day 6
Was dedicated to Matt's Bushbuck. We headed to our chosen property at first light and headed straight for the highest hill. Taking up position there, we commenced the glassing and waiting game! Having hunted Bushbuck myself, I could see it was prime country.
After an hour or so, the first couple of Bushbuck ewes stepped out of the thickets to feed. Along with them, Nyala, Duiker, Kudu, and bulk warthog! But no Bushbuck rams.
We patiently kept glassing the surrounding valleys, all taking turns at looking in different directions. The hours rolled by, lunchtime came and went. Most of us took turns in an afternoon nap. We were seeing heaps of ewes, probably more than 30 all up, but the rams were staying well hidden!
After holding our position for a marathon 7 hours, Marius decided a change of position was in order for the last hours of daylight. We sat glassing a steep mountain side covered in thick thornbush and lantana. Somehow, after half an hour, our eagle-eyed PH picked up a Bushbuck ram a kilometre away. None of us could see it!
We closed in, Matt moving in closer to the edge of the open country with Marius, while we stayed back to watch. Eventually he picked up the ram again, half way up the near-vertical slope under a bush. He couldn't see his horns, but knew by his huge thick neck and roman-nose, that he was looking at an old Ram. Experience pays!
Matt got set up on the sticks but couldn't get enough elevation standing. They had to spread the sticks and shoot from the kneeling position due to the steep uphill angle required. Matt said he could only just make out the ram's outline, but a small gap in line with his front leg allowed him to poke a 180gn Accu-bond right where it needed to go.
The resultant recovery was a tough job, and we all spilt some claret to go with plenty of sweat. But it's all worth it for an old Ram like this. The Eastern Cape's own royal game!
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That bushbuck ram is so good, for a second I thought it was an nyala! My congratulations to Matt!