Cleathorn
AH veteran
Hey Bob – it’s a typical African hunting story. On that trip, I was hosting a group of 6 new-to-Africa hunters. I try and take a group of employees every year as an employee recognition event. So when I go, I don’t book specific species nor make a target list. I just try and go out with different people each day, and if we see something interesting, I’ll hunt.
For the most part, I only hunt animals that I have not previously hunted (the exception is DG, I’ll hunt DG if/when ever I can).
On this hunt, the rifles were delayed for 6 days. The gun saga was one of several issues this year that gave rise to the OP. Anyway, rather than sitting around gloating about the guns being in New York while we were in Africa, we borrowed some guns and went hunting.
Since I take a large group every year, the PHs I use go out of their way to find new and interesting properties. In this case, there was a farm about an hour from where we had been primarily hunting. The owner/PH of that farm wanted to show it to me as a future destination. The farm hadn’t been hunted since 2019 because of Covid, and it wasn’t being booked and hunted this year because it was in the process of being sold. Frankly it was sold because of Covid. The owner/PH that would be managing it was with me. It was a beautiful property, lots of game, and in need of some game management.
My PH had a 25-06 in the truck for hunting the open plains game like Blesbok, Springbuck, Impala, etc. I had one of my kids with me, so we set up on a small but elevated ridge over an open pan to take some Blesbok and Springbuck. The ridge was about 150 yards from the front edge of the pan but gave us great vantage point.
As we were watching some Springbuck, we could see some Eland moving along the brushy flat about 50 yards inside the brush. These Eland hadn’t been seen by anyone in a long time. As we watched them, it became obviously that 1 of these Eland wasn’t like the others. The body was about right for a mature bull – large, stocky and in that brownish to blue hue. But the horns seemed larger than expected. We initially thought that maybe the bull was younger than we were estimating, and the body was small relative to the horns. So, we put a stalk on the small group to get a closer look.
We got to a point inside 100 yards of where the Eland would pass. As the bull we were looking at stepped into an opening, it was obvious that it was in fact a large, mature bull. The horns were just unusually large.
So, I had a Cape Eland larger than I was ever likely to see again standing inside of 100 yards, and I had a borrowed 25-06 in my hands. It wasn’t even a discussion. I settled the cross hairs on the point of the shoulder, switched of the safety, settled into the trigger, and squeezed. The bullet hit exactly where I was holding, and the big bull took 2 steps forward, stopped for about 10 seconds and collapsed.
I am a big supporter of “use enough gun.” I usually err to the upside. However, a 25-06 with a 120gr bullet at that range is traveling faster and carrying more than, or about the same, energy as a 7mm mag with a 150 gr bullet at 200 yards or a 300 win mag with a 180 grain bullet at 300 yards. Few if anyone would question using a 7mm at 200 or a 300 win mag at 300 on a Cape Eland. I am not real interested in the never ending “which gun is best” debate. That discussion is great fodder for campfires and internet forums, it is just not for me anymore. If the hunter/shooter does enough practice to keep his/her wits about them, stays focused, and places the shot properly, almost any gun works on almost all game. Thick skinned DG obviously requires something different, but keep in mind that Hemmingway shot his rhino with his preferred “sweet shooting” 30-06.
While I am not interested in the “which gun is best” discussion, I am very interested in getting people into the field and enjoying the experience. I travel for work and hunting a lot. Traveling sucks right now, it just does. I’ve made 9 trans-oceanic trips in 2022 already this year including 4 to Europe, 3 to Africa and 2 to Australia. I have been delayed for 24 hours or more, or had luggage delayed or lost altogether, on 7 of 9 trips.
On the 1 trip this year that I did take guns, the guns were delayed in New York for 6 days after a cancelled flight left me in New York for an extra 24 hours.
The guns caught up to me in RSA and I then went to Zimbabwe from RSA with all 4 guns. While there, United and RSA had a brief dispute, and United could not fly any weapons too, or from, Africa.
The issue between United and RSA was resolved in about 2 days. However, during that time, the various agents and brokers that arranged travel with firearms did a very good job of getting the message out to their clients in Africa. I was among them. So, like most people, I had to devise a plan.
Since my and 2 companions were traveling on United Polaris class tickets, changing airlines was a very costly proposition. So, we decided that we were going to take the expensive scopes off the rifles, put the scopes in our luggage, and turn the guns into the Zimbabwe police. It was cheaper to buy new guns than change planes. I would still describe the decision to abandon 4 guns in Africa so that we would return home as a hassle. Fortunately, the issue was resolved. However, until travel issues are resolved, my guns are likely to stay home, and I won’t take anything that doesn’t fit in the carryon. I’ll still go, but I’ll travel light, borrow guns, and enjoy the new experiences of getting know the various guns that others use in Africa and around the world.