Zim hunt day 2 (May 25, 2017)
Our 4:30 wake-up call comes early. Apparently, the camp manager either cannot tell time, or his watch is off. Better early than late though. We have a quick breakfast and depart camp at 5am.
This time, I am better prepared, having worn an undershirt for added warmth. Along our way to the hunting area, we see lion tracks that are covering our tracks from the evening before. We don’t stop to check the size, but they stretch for several miles along the way and are headed away from the camp.
As we drive in the dark, I look through the tall grass and realize how futile it would be to look for anything at night. I can only see a few feet into the bush before everything is lost in the darkness. The thought of coming across a lion in those conditions is terrifying.
It is our third day in Zim and the second day of searching Gwayi for elephant. While we did not see one yesterday, we saw miles of tracks and lots of dung. We begin to scour the land where we have secured permission to hunt. It is roughly 60,000 acres, which puts it as just over four times the size of Manhattan Island. There are many trails through the ranch – so many that we cannot even drive them all in one day. While checking a new one that we did not get to the day before, we come across signs of a large bull. The dung is not yet cold, so we estimate it is just a couple hours old.
[The closest yet that I have gotten to an elephant so far]
Wayne stops the land cruiser and the trackers head off with the Zim Parks scout in hot pursuit of the tracks. They return within 20 minutes with the unfortunate news that the bull was headed out of our area and we would have no chance of catching him.
Back to work, we keep checking the trails for signs of elephant. I keep an eye out on the horizon for actual elephants while Wayne and the guys look for tracks. Soon, we screech to a halt and it is all hands on deck. There are lots of tracks, probably 16 inches across. The trackers converse and conclude it is an old cow. There are some younger ones with her, but no sign of a bull.
[Elephant tracks - easy to see on sand, but they disappear quickly when they get off the roads]
Trust, the guide from Gwayi, tells us there is water further ahead, so we keep pushing forward. Finally, we arrive at a mud hole. There are many prints in the mud and it is obvious that elephant were here recently – perhaps only a couple hours prior. An exhaustive search is conducted and there are no signs of a bull in this herd of what is likely at least seven elephants.
Everyone gathers around to discuss. One of the trackers, Cowboy, says we can follow this herd and see where they go. Wayne asks if he wants to follow these cows in the hopes that one magically becomes a bull. I try very hard not to laugh, but Wayne is right and it would be a waste of time to chase down a poor lead.
There is more water ahead, but the road will not get us all the way there. We go as close as we can drive and park in the shade. The trackers head to the waterhole while Wayne, Henco and I break for lunch. About half an hour after we stop, Henco breaks out the drone that was brought in for some video footage as part of my safari filming package with iGala Productions. We had already eaten and are getting quite restless. We cannot do anything until the trackers return. One might wonder why we don’t just sit at the waterhole and wait for elephants to come, but that is not the kind of hunting I am here for. One also might be inclined to think we can just send up a drone and find elephants, but that just isn’t so, given the dense canopy. We would not see one more than 20-30 yards out on the ground and visibility from the air is unlikely to be any better. Aside from that, it is also rather unsporting and quite possibly of dubious legality.
Henco cannot find our scouting party and so he flied the drone back and we wait. They arrive after another half hour with the bad news – one lone cow and a lot of baboons. While we did not find them with the drone, the trackers tell us they heard it, first thinking it was bees and then realizing they were hearing the drone propellers.
We drive back to the small village and drop off our local guide, who is very tired and Sam goes to buy some bread from the general store at Gwayi Station. I wander into one of the buildings and see a pool table and a bar, but the alcohol and the bartender are in a cage similar to the money room in a casino.
[Gwayi Station - a very, very poor part of rural Africa. Still cleaner than any city in India I have seen]
A local strikes up a conversation with me. He tells me that their people are happy to see hunters coming to their country. He then asks me if I like Trump. He gives me his political opinion, which amounts to him feeling that Trump has his own money and won’t need to steal any from the government. I do not ask him what he thinks about Mugabe.
I decide that tomorrow I will bring some U.S. Dollars with me and go shopping in their town. I don’t really need to buy anything, but want to give them some direct business. I see the school across the street get out and really wish I had room in my luggage to bring all the toys I had for them. I guess that will have to wait for Namibia in July.
[Unbeknownst to me at the time, this is one of the only times I will see this sign during daylight]
We head back to camp, but there is still some daylight left. As we get to the river crossing, I see shapes several hundred yards off in the distance. Sable is the initial assessment, but we don’t have a permit for sable. We decide to get out the drone and get some nice aerial shots. Before the drone is ready, we see that they are actual tsessebee. They are supposed to be the fastest antelope in the world, so it is time to see if they can live up to their reputation. Unfortunately, they are in a no fly zone, as the drone stops before it gets to them and simply will not go past some line drawn on the map. The drone comes back and we head towards the camp. Wayne takes an alternate route in and we see a large kudu bull dart across a clearing. I am not good a assessing trophy quality, but I can tell he has a large body. Henco estimates him around 54 inches. Although there are some plains game here, they are very scarce compared to what I saw back in Limpopo last August.
The bakkie pulls around the back side of the camp and to a large waterhole. There is the large elevated blind we saw yesterday – a fine rifle blind, to be sure, but worthless as a bow blind. Today, however, there is a new ground blind set up for bow use. I head over to inspect it. We open up some shooting lanes to allow for shots on one side of the water hole, giving distances of thirty yards to the far visible side and twelve and fifteen yards to the side nearest the blind. Unfortunately, we can only shoot about one third of the area around the water and there is no easy way to block off the other entry points to force the animals closer to our blind. This, coupled with the very low game population will make for a challenging bow blind, but I will work with the hand I am dealt.
Wayne shows me the mud near the blind where a large warthog has been. I still need one and this guy allegedly has tusks like a steering wheel. If the blue wildebeest is the poor man’s buffalo, perhaps the warthog is the poor man’s elephant?
We set up Go-Pro cameras and sit in the blind for a couple hours. The only animals to come besides some birds are a troupe of baboons. They are all on the other side of the waterhole and I do not get a shot opportunity. I ponder my time in Africa and the time to come. While I do not mind sitting in a blind, that is not why I came to Zimbabwe. Wayne is a very perceptive man and probably senses this is not the hunting experience I was looking for. I do not say a word but we never come back to the blind again.
We head back to camp. Wi-Fi is still not working. Cloud comes out with some impala stew for dinner, along with chicken soup. It is very good. I eat dinner quickly and head to bed. After two days of steady hunting, I have yet to even see an elephant – any elephant. I am not worried. I have many days left and there are signs of them all over, so it is just a matter of time. I grab my journal, write down the day’s events and get some sleep.