Not ALL wild lion hunting is on bait!So CBL hunting is more challenging than wild lion hunting typically? I'm thinking with CBL you are shooting off sticks or off-hand and it sounds like with wild lions most of the time you'll have your rifle propped on the front rail of the blind, could even have a set of sticks holding the rear of the rifle steady.
So CBL hunting is more challenging than wild lion hunting typically? I'm thinking with CBL you are shooting off sticks or off-hand and it sounds like with wild lions most of the time you'll have your rifle propped on the front rail of the blind, could even have a set of short sticks holding the rear of the rifle steady.
So CBL hunting is more challenging than wild lion hunting typically? I'm thinking with CBL you are shooting off sticks or off-hand and it sounds like with wild lions most of the time you'll have your rifle propped on the front rail of the blind, could even have a set of short sticks holding the rear of the rifle steady.
Never...
You are not talking about the whole hunting experience only about which one will provide the more challenging taking off the shot....
Hunting wild lions is not just about taking the shot...rather about the whole experience of finding lions, tracking or baiting them, hunting the animals needed for bait, checking baits every day, adapting and changing plans, outwitting your pray, actually getting them onto the bait, positioning the blind, building the blind, getting into the blind, waiting in anticipation, determining the age of the lion and if everything works out concluding a successful hunt by carefully squeezing the trigger and placing the shot where it needs to go....
CBL the outcome is inevitable, wild lions it is uncertain and requires a lot more skill, experience and effort, not just the skill of the trackers but all involved.....
I definitely understand what you are saying but for the guest hunter the main challenge -- his main job -- is to make an accurate shot, not just on lion, but any dangerous game. Aside from extensive pre-hunt practice, the three main things that affect this, are distance, clarity of shot (through brush, etc.), and the steadiness of the rest available to him. Having a great experience is just incidental and if you have a great long challenging hunt and then blow the shot, then everything good up to then goes down the drain, so to speak.
"Having a great experience is just incidental....." you and I must come from different planets. The experience, the hunt is everything to me. For instance, I would much rather have a 28" free range Nyala from the Zambezi Delta of Mozambique that I hunted for two weeks than a 30" protein enhanced bull that probably has a name from a fenced farm (apologies to a couple of our sponsors). One reason a leopard hunt is so much fun is sharing the strategy and experience of trying to get one on a bait at all with one's PH. Though I realize it is unfortunately not the case, anyone should be able to shoot competently. Else, they have no business attempting to kill a game animal in the first place.I definitely understand what you are saying but for the guest hunter the main challenge -- his main job -- is to make an accurate shot, not just on lion, but any dangerous game. Aside from extensive pre-hunt practice, the three main things that affect this, are distance, clarity of shot (through brush, etc.), and the steadiness of the rest available to him. Having a great experience is just incidental and if you have a great long challenging hunt and then blow the shot, then everything good up to then goes down the drain, so to speak.