gillie
AH senior member
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2009
- Messages
- 85
- Reaction score
- 111
- Location
- South Africa
- Media
- 35
- Hunted
- South Africa, Namibia, Zimbabwe
Afternoon all
I have been toying with the idea of writing a hunting report from another angle... that of an African "insider". Yes the actual hunt might be pretty much the same as any one else would experience. But the build up and getting there will obviously differ a bit. This is not a hunting report as yet, but just an introduction almost to the actual report that will follow somewhere in middle October.
I am generally a biltong hunter, not after trophies (although I do have a few mounts up against the wall) and only after the meat. Let me take you a couple of steps back, back to 2013 when I observed an elephant hunt in the Caprivi. It was the month of August and my brother in law and I drove up, first to Gobabis in Namibia and from there on to the Caprivi. Long story short, we spent about 5 days in the Caprivi and that is where the big game bug bit. We saw spoor of elephant and lion in camp, went fishing in the swamps and our on way there, walked on the spoor of the same lions that were in camp just a couple of days before. The PH assured us that the lion were long gone and after the buffalo herds of the enjoining national park. The whole trip saw us driving almost 4,000 km (2485 miles) in a week.
Upon returning to South Africa, I purchased my third rifle and first brand new rifle... a CZ550 in 375 H&H Magnum. The wait for the license was agonizingly long and after 3 months I went back to the dealer, license in hand and collected my new pride and joy. I reloaded for the rifle from the start and used 300gr Sierra GameKings. They proved to be pretty accurate. The recoil of the 375 was something to get used to as the biggest rifle I used before that was limited to a 30-06 and 12 ga shotgun. Slowly but surely I became more proficient with the bigger 375 and in 2014 harvested a kudu cow and gemsbok bull with the rifle and said bullet. The 375 packs a punch and soon it became my new favorite and I almost sold my 30-06 as I didn't think I would still need it. Fortunately, sanity prevailed and I kept the 30-06 in the safe!
During 2015 the idea of a big game hunt started to gain momentum. I was busy getting quotes and special offerings started to pop up everywhere. The biggest limiting factor I think to most hunters, is cost, even more so when you earn in South African Rand and the hunts are paid in US Dollars. I got shown a really good deal in Mozambique. I thought this was it. I discussed it with the Mrs and her initial response was not the response I wanted or hoped for, but after thinking about it, her voice of reason started to make a lot of sense. The Moz hunt was also not perhaps exactly what I was looking for. I would let it stand over to the next year and do it properly, and not a half assed and rushed event. I decided that I would buy the hunt for myself as a 40th birthday present and I kind of reluctantly let the 2015 hunt pass without taking the offer.
Since deciding to let the hunt stand over to 2016, first thing I had to sort out for myself was "Where". Sure, South African hunts are cheap relative to the US Dollar hunts in neighboring countries, but this was not what I was after. The "When" I was less concerned about and the "what" was pretty obvious as well after a while... cape buffalo ! As I was looking for a more classical hunt... find tracks, follow, repeat until one finds the right bull, I was pretty open to any country, it all depended on where I could get a deal.
Fast forward to early 2016 when I saw an advertisement on this site by Martin Pieters that caught my eye. The thread was titled "Self guided Buffalo Hunt for My South Africa Mates". I read the details and pretty much knew this was the hunt I was looking for. I let my buddy know about the details as he was coming along. The deal would entail camping in the bush, outfitting yourself and then hunting with a ph and two trackers, provided by Martin Pieters. We started chatting and the rest is history. This was about the end of February 2016.
Since then we probably exchanged close to 80 emails, load development has been done, permits have been applied for and a whole lot of other administrative stuff finished off. So this is where we are at at the moment...
Leaving Jozi at 04:00 on the 29th of September, arrive Bulawayo the same day by road, leave the next morning with PH Mike and drive to camp. The 7 days of hunting starts the 1st of October. Fishing rods will be packed for the idle days. Shooting 350gr North Forks Softs at 2400 fps with Cup Nose solids in the same weight and pretty much the same velocity out of the 375 HH Mag.
This intro grew on itself...Apologies.
Can't really wait for the trip to start, still a couple of things to sort out before hitting the road though. Will report back during middle of October. Weather in SA is starting to heat up, October in Zim will be HOT HOT HOT, but at least it won't be a surprise.
Later
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