As always,
@Hunter-Habib you are the voice of wisdom based on a lifetime of experience.
I have hunted two CBL lionesses and enjoyed both hunts. Those were tracking hunts where on the second one, we found lioness tracks on top of ours. She knew we were tracking her and decided to hunt us hunters! While traversing through areas with brush tall and thick enough for lions to hide within 3 meters of the lioness trail, I wasn’t scared but that lioness darn sure had my attention! Certainly tracking a truly wild lion would be as or probably more dangerous!
The anti climax of CBL hunts are lions be they wild or CBL have NO fear of humans. At 50 meters where any lion could truely be dangerous, a CBL sits or lays almost motionless piercing the hunter with their amber daggers of eyes. For anyone with above average shooting ability, the kill shot is pretty easy. Let me add that only a darn fool would prevoke any lion to charge. Sucide by lion would not be enjoyable...
Aren’t most wild lion hunts conducted using bait? Now, sitting quietly in a blind close to lion bait is a certainly an art, but if conducted correctly is there any danger? Perhaps not so long as the hunter delivers a bullet into the lion’s kill zone. But, if a hunter flinches on the shot, or the lion moves as the hunter is squeezing the trigger, then there is a wounded lion for the PH to “sort out”.
Personally, I prefer tracking hunts. I sit in my blind for many hours over many days to slay a couple whitetails every November. After a couple days, well it gets a little boring. Now, there is a time and place for setting up an ambush to bushwhack an animal. For me, it is satisfying to track an animal and figure out where the animal WILL be and go forward to set up an ambush there.
So, to each their own form of lion hunting. Wild lion if one can afford them and if they enjoy many nights in a blind waiting, and waiting. Or, a properly executed CBL hunt from a reputable PH outfitter for the rest of us.
Certainly the longer a CBL is feeding itself, the likelihood of a challenging hunt will increase with time. But that increase may not be proportional. How long does a CBL take to “go wild”? A few days perhaps to reach maybe 75% (just a guess). Afterward, CBL’s slowly become more wild over the next days and weeks. A study of such based on a sample set of 50 would be very interesting. A hypothesis could be CBL’s go 75% wild in an average of three days with a rapidly decreasing rate over the following days and weeks. A second hypothesis could be CBL’s only on average only reach a 95% wild state after three months.
How do we judge if a lion is truly wild? What criteria do we use? How do we quantify those criteria? What about smart and dumb lions? Certainly even wild lions have differing degrees of intelligence.
So there are many variables to wild lions and CBL’s. Hunting each also has many variables. What about the outfitter? Is the PH ethical or not? Based on what degree of ethical behavior? Gosh knows. Once again, to each their own.
Hunt safely, shoot well.