channelkat
AH enthusiast
35 people!Agreed!! The joy of a wonderful hunt can lose some luster when you have to sit and sort out tips for the PH and up to 35 people on staff!
35 people!Agreed!! The joy of a wonderful hunt can lose some luster when you have to sit and sort out tips for the PH and up to 35 people on staff!
When I hunted in Cameroon this past March, at the end of the hunt I asked the outfitter how many people he had on staff that I should tip, he told me he had a staff of 35. It's at that very moment all the excitement of your safari evaporates!!35 people!
I completely agree.One thing I try to ask clients is to include our game scouts.....they live in the Bush 24/7....but only suggest k200 max each...which at moment is around usd 11 to 12....so an extra usd 150 or so...as 10 or 11 depending on comings and goings...peanuts but makes them feel involved and they are very happy....
I had around 25 on my Cameroon hunt. When you have that many you don’t tip individually and have no interaction with most of them. My PH said the standard was to leave $1500 for the two weeks for the camp. I did that, on the final morning all staff gathered before I left, my PH announced the tip and had the local camp manager count the money in front of staff before he took it to be exchanged for local currency. I don’t know how it was divided. That’s up to them. That’s why I say to ask the PH before your hunt.When I hunted in Cameroon this past March, at the end of the hunt I asked the outfitter how many people he had on staff that I should tip, he told me he had a staff of 35. It's at that very moment all the excitement of your safari evaporates!!
I had around 25 on my Cameroon hunt. When you have that many you don’t tip individually and have no interaction with most of them. My PH said the standard was to leave $1500 for the two weeks for the camp. I did that, on the final morning all staff gathered before I left, my PH announced the tip and had the local camp manager count the money in front of staff before he took it to be exchanged for local currency. I don’t know how it was divided. That’s up to them. That’s why I say to ask the PH before your hunt.
What is the VAT tax rate in Germany? Paying a mandatory 19% VAT seems much more stressful to me. I really don’t understand the European resistance to tipping when you pay this every day in your home countries.My PH said the standard was to leave $1500 for the two weeks for the camp.
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That it is a "hell of an story". I would lough for one hour...
Thanks good, we dont have that stress in Germany. Here the "tipps" are "mostly unkommen, sometimes forbitten".
We go to an hunt.
We want there an good time.
We dont want to speak about tipping and we dont want to make notes, lists or exell-lists, pp.
Sorry gentleman, this is al "little bit crasy".
My friends and I hunt every year in africa and other places.
We did it very easy and fair:
a.)
We pay for the hunt. Correct and before the hunt.
We are sure, that the outfitter, the PH, etc. is paying his people fair and corretcly, that they can have an "standart living in that country".
And we are sure, that everbody gives hin best. We except this. We had payed for this.
(I did it in my job also, I work for my paying, I dont takes any kind of tipps, even if I get this offered.)
b.)
We are friendly and correct to every single person.
Allways.
c.)
Outfitter and PHs get no tips.
If we had an good time, we invited them for an good eating on the last day, in an good restaurant, pp.
d.)
The natives get 20 - 40 dollars at the last day.
And sometimes an beer or coke in the evening.
Sometimes we invited them also in the restaurant also (depent onthe varianty).
e.)
Game scouts, rangers and police-man, pp, get nothing.
That is couroption (one big proboem in Africa, as you know).
Best wishes from Berlin.
We are here for an exibition.
Our outfitter had a suggested tip sheet and separate envelopes for each person/group and the amounts were reasonable. Each PH brought their own tracker and I noticed every time I went back to the skinning shack my tracker was skinning my animals. I noticed that the sheet listed skinners separately so I asked my PH about it and he said there are other skinners who prepped hides, skulls and such. I have my tracker extra.
Because each PH brought their own tracker, it gave me the impression that the "tip" was all of what he made that 5 days. I suppose the outfitter may have paid him something but I can't help but feel like that wasn't the case.With all the "tipping guides" that I have seen here and in camp I haven't seen one that really shows what the tracker should get.
Granted, if every shot is perfect and a single shot is all that is needed for each animal then perhaps the guides for them is about right. But one misplaced shot or bad hit and that tracker is going to earn his tips and more.
On my last hunt I had a kudu that just refused to die. It was a good shot through both lungs but he held in there. My tracker followed him for more than a mile before we got into a position to finish him off. I also made a bad shot on a cull animal and a couple hours later we had it in the truck.
When it came time to settle up tip wise I gave my tracker close to double what was suggested plus a Leatherman Wave that I carried with me. In my book he earned it and more.
That explains precisely what a tip is for. A hunt costs a lot of money especially one were big five animals are concerned, so one can expect that every person involved gives his/her utmost to make the client successful and happy. If an outfitter or ph tells the client even before the hunt has commenced, the tip is normally in the region of xxx, then I know what kind of person I‘m dealing with. And think to myself it might be the best to cancel the booking.On my last hunt I had a kudu that just refused to die. It was a good shot through both lungs but he held in there. My tracker followed him for more than a mile before we got into a position to finish him off. I also made a bad shot on a cull animal and a couple hours later we had it in the truck.
when in roma do like the romans is an expression that worth is weight of gold in here ...What is the VAT tax rate in Germany? Paying a mandatory 19% VAT seems much more stressful to me. I really don’t understand the European resistance to tipping when you pay this every day in your home countries.
Because VAT is an Government tax. Tipping is something completely different, not comparable to tax. In the US guest are forced to tip in order to keep the waiters/waitresses alive 'cause the employers just pay them a pittance.What is the VAT tax rate in Germany? Paying a mandatory 19% VAT seems much more stressful to me. I really don’t understand the European resistance to tipping when you pay this every day in your home countries.
Yes tipping is something completely different. We are encouraged to pay a discretionary tip for service. You are forced to pay a required high sales tax on every purchase. I’d think it would be a nice change for you to actually know who that money is going to when you can hand it to them in person as a thank you at the end of a safari.Because VAT is a Government tax. Tipping is something completely different, not comparable to tax. In the US guest are forced to tip in order to keep the waiters/waitresses alive 'cause the employers just pay them a pittance.
If I’ve learned anything from this thread it’s that staff must dread the arrival of Continental European clients..
I disagree. In general Europeans are very well liked by staff, outfitter and ph. I‘m a resident of South Africa which means I‘m permitted to hunt on my own. Obviously I always take a local guide along, he knows both the area plus the animals. Tips are small but the local blacks are always happy when I‘m back again.
What is the VAT tax rate in Germany? Paying a mandatory 19% VAT seems much more stressful to me. I really don’t understand the European resistance to tipping when you pay this every day in your home countries.
If I’ve learned anything from this thread it’s that staff must dread the arrival of Continental European clients..