SOUTH AFRICA: TERMINATOR 10 Day Group Hunt with KMG Hunting Safaris in East Cape RSA July 25-August 5

What a beautiful Sable!
Thanks. We took some great animals this trip.

Was awesome to share the experience with my son.
 
An absolute perfect hunt, well done by all.
 
You could stop with the reports now and it would have been a helluva trip! Great animals!
 
You could stop with the reports now and it would have been a helluva trip! Great animals!
True story :)

Thank you
 
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An absolute perfect hunt, well done by all.
My apologies, I assumed that the hunt was complete. Heck it could stop here and would be a complete success. Please Sir, continue with the report. We are all enjoying your writing style and of course the trophies.
 
My apologies, I assumed that the hunt was complete. Heck it could stop here and would be a complete success. Please Sir, continue with the report. We are all enjoying your writing style and of course the trophies.
Thank you for the compliments

And yes, we had a great hunt. Everyone was blown away by this time and already making plans to come back

We have rebooked for 2026 already
 
Was in Montana for a few days so....picking back up with the hunt report...

Day 5 Lincoln & Ben
Day 5 found Ben looking for his Kudu and/or Red Hartebeest. So his PH Lloyd had him on a large, low fence ranch that held good numbers of both.

They glassed multiple Kudu bulls and a couple Hartebeest but nothing that Lloyd considered worthy so they didn't even do a stalk on Day 5. But Ben and Jessica had a great day looking for animals in beautiful country and enjoyed lunch on a mountaintop. So it was on to Day 6 for Ben.

Meanwhile, Lincoln was looking for either a Zebra or Blue WB on Day 5 and hunting the same giant (90,000 acres) free ranch ranch where Derek and Ben had already connected on zebra stallions.

They started the morning on a hilltop glassing for targets. After about 30 minutes Marius spotted a group of Blue WB about a mile away feeding on a slope in the sun, both getting something to eat and basting in the warmth of the sunlight after a chilly night. Marius broke out his spotting scope to confirm if there was a shooter bull in the group and was satisfied that there were two worthy bulls in the group.

They loaded into the Land Cruiser and took a road that went down the hill and got closer to the feeding Wildebeest. When they parked, they were about 600 yards from the animals and marked a landmark pile of rocks on the hilltop near where the BWB were feeding. Marius plotted a circular route to the backside of that hill, which would both get the wind in their favor and keep them hidden as they closed to within shooting range. If things went as planned the hunting party would crest the hill near the landmark and be within 200 yards of the target bull.

For once, things went as planned. After about a 30 minute stalk, the team was just below the crest of the hill near the landmark rock pile. When they crept to the crest of the hill, the herd was contently feeding below them about 170 yards away, unaware of the hunters. Slowly Marius positioned the shooting sticks and Lincoln settled into them. His .300 WMS was sighted in for 200 so it was a point blank hold on the shoulder of the Bull. Lincoln squeezed the trigger and Marius could see that the shot was good, landing right in the crease behind the shoulder.

The Blue WB bucked as the 180 grain Norma Bondstrike bullet slammed into his shoulder and the whole heard took off running. Lincoln, quickly worked the bolt and shoved another shell into the chamber of his rifle. With Marius coaching him, Lincoln got back on the bull and was preparing to squeeze off a 2nd shot...but the bull collapsed into the tall grass. After a couple kicks, the bull expired and the team congratulated Lincoln on a fine Blue Wildebeest.

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Photos were taken and then the Bull was loaded into the truck and taken to the skinning shed at the ranch and dropped off. The team retired to the lodge for lunch and a little relaxation before heading out to resume the search for a Zebra.

The zebra were on the feet now that the day had warmed up some and Marius quickly located a group and ruled them out.

A short drive to another area of the ranch found the team on a high spot and quickly a 2nd group of zebra was spotted only 500 yards away. This time there was a nice stallion at the rear of the group, so the group grabbed the rifle and shooting sticks. The wind was mostly in their face, so they made a slight circle to insure they would be approaching from directly down wind. Slowly they moved closer to the zebra, using one bush after the other to shield them from the zebra who slowly moving while they feed.

When they got 180 yards out, they ran out of cover bushes and Marius set the sticks next to the last bush between Lincoln and the group of Zebra. The target stallion was mostly facing away so they waited for him to turn some exposing his shoulder and chest. It only took a couple minutes of patience and the stallion turned to his right, almost broadside, just slightly quartering away.

The Burchell's Zebra are beautiful but one feature of their hide is very helpful to hunters....the triangle of stripes on the Zebra's shoulder gives a perfect aiming point. Bad luck for the zebra....but hunters love the built in "bullseye" and Lincoln settled into the shooting sticks and took advantaged of that triangle. For the 2nd time that day Lincoln's rifle roared and once again Lincoln's shot was good. Marius could see the dust fly when the bullet slammed the stallion right next to the tip of the "triangle". The Zebra staggered at the shot, then he and his females all took off running. Once again Lincoln worked the bolt...and once again his target animal collapsed before he could fire a second shot.

So Lincoln ended Day 5 with a "Double" of fine trophies. A zebra rug was high on Lincoln's list of things he wanted from the trip, right behind his long dreamed of Kudu.

And now he had one. :)



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Day 5 Skip

As we were driving back to the lodge after taking our Gemsbok and Sable, Nick our PH got a phone call.

A ranch not far from our lodge had found two lambs killed on consecutive nights by a Caracal that had apparently moved into their property. They called Nick to see if he could come hunt the Caracal and save their lambs from further destruction.

When he isn't guiding hunters for big game, Nick runs a pack of predator hounds that are trained for Jackals and Caracals. If he has a hunter available he will guide the hunter for the chance to take a Caracal. If he doesn't have a hunter, he will just hunt the offending predator himself as the ranchers will pay him a bounty for eliminating the offending predator.

So when he got the call, Nick asked Derek and I if one of us would be interested in hunting the Caracal in the morning. It wasn't on my radar but I just could not pass up the experience that was served up to me by the hunting gods so I said "Let's do it!"

So the next morning saw Nick meeting us at the lodge before daybreak. His pack of hounds was in a trailer pulled by his hounds man, a gentleman Nick employed to care for, exercise and train his hounds.
We left in time to be at the site of the kill, where the 2nd dead lamb was laying at first light. Hopefully the cat had been feeding during the night and would still be close.

We arrived and Nick fetched his "striker" hounds out....his best hounds that were excellent at finding the scent of the offending predator and get the pack started on the trail. Nick lead the striker hounds to the dead lamb and they circled the dead animal for a minute, then let out a loud howl and were straining at the leash. Nick ordered the pack unloaded from the truck then released the striker hounds, who took off like a shot away from the dead lambs.

The experience was exactly like hunting mountain lions with dogs out west here in the U.S.....only the cat is much smaller :)

We followed on foot for almost a mile but when the pack went over a hill and through a valley, Nick had his tracker grab the truck and Derek and I road with the truck around to the other side of the valley a caught up with the pack. We could hear a tremendous howling as the pack had now tree'd the offending Caracal.

Nick explained that we had to sneak in while the cat was focused on the pack of dogs below the tree because if the cat saw us, he might jump from the tree and take off again.

Nick handed me his 9mm Sig Sauer pistol since we did not want to blast the cat with my .300 Wby plains game rifle. We approached the tree'd cat slowly, trying to keep a tree between us and the cat at all times. I got about 10 yards from "the tree" and I could see the cat about 40 feet above us in the tree, snarling at the dogs below.

I have my CPL and carry a pistol every day in Michigan and other states that reciprocate/respect Michigan's carry license and practice shooting a .40 S&W and 9mm a lot. But all that practice is classic "home defense"....a human center mass sized target level with me and less than 10 yards away. I am a good shot but man, this was different. I was to shoot almost straight up, like 80 degree angle... at a small target maybe 15 yards above me and 10 yards over.

I located the cat in the tree. He was facing me so I lined up the pistol's sights on his chest at the base of his neck and slowly squeezed the trigger.

The pistol cracked and the cat came tumbling down out of the tree! The sheep/lamb population on that ranch was once again safe. The ranch owners daughter had tagged along to watch the show and we was most pleased and said her parents were most grateful for us taking care of their problem cat.

Quickly the hounds man raced in to restrain the pack and keep them from tearing up the dead cat. Nick raced in and grabbed the dead cat to save the hide while the hounds man tried to restrain 15 fired up dogs. I was happy that they got the cat in one piece.

I will have him mounted full body crouching and put him on a ledge in my family room....will look pretty cool up there.

So that was an unexpected trophy added to my hunt and a unique experience.

After the photos we delivered the cat to the skinning shed, ate lunch and set out to look for a Bushbuck for Derek without success. The Bushbuck had been shy for the first 5 days so the next day Derek would be back out looking for a Bushbuck in a new area we had not hunted yet.

Derek still had an Impala and I was hoping for a Common Reedbuck so we had plenty to hunt yet while looking for a Bushbuck for Derek early and late.

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Congrats on that massive kudu and glad you all had a great time. Thanks for sharing
KMG definitely gonna be an option for next year.
Ahmad
 
Congrats on that massive kudu and glad you all had a great time. Thanks for sharing
KMG definitely gonna be an option for next year.
Ahmad
Marius always provides a great hunt

We had four hunters in camp and the KMG team took great care of all of us. We are rebooked for 2026
 
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Caracal with hounds is a great hunt. Congratulations!
 
Caracal with hounds is a great hunt. Congratulations!
Yea, It wasn’t in the plan but I got the opportunity and glad I took it

Thanks
 
Thank you for sharing. I have a hunt planned with KMG in spring of 2026.
Looking forward to the rest of your adventures.
 
Thank you for sharing. I have a hunt planned with KMG in spring of 2026.
Looking forward to the rest of your adventures.
Yeah, I need to finish this off lol
Been busy getting ready to hunt here in the US but need to pick it back up
 

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Grz63 wrote on x84958's profile.
Good Morning x84958
I have read your post about Jamy Traut and your hunt in Caprivi. I am planning such a hunt for 2026, Oct with Jamy.
Just a question , because I will combine Caprivi and Panorama for PG, is the daily rate the same the week long, I mean the one for Caprivi or when in Panorama it will be a PG rate ?
thank you and congrats for your story.
Best regards
Philippe from France
dlmac wrote on Buckums's profile.
ok, will do.
 
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