7mm08mo
Well-known member
Sounds like an awesome trip. South Africa was good to me last year, I was in port Elizabeth and Jeffries bay, and of course hunting. Sounds like we had similar experiences with the disparity in housing.
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We bought what was shown in my first post from Ducks Unlimited. That is the closest thing to a "contract" we had. After purchase, the outfitter follows up with a 20 page document outlining how things work, prices, accomodations, and a lot of fine print. In there you will find the same verbiage as the website "prices subject to change without notice".Looks like a great trip. Nice animals.
Did you have a contract? I would be pissed if they jacked the prices around.
That must have been an amazing experience. I had done some research on the topic prior to the trip but it was worse than I had imagined. I didnt think that we'd be seeing bodies in the ditches along the highway, but we did. Apparently, its a pretty normal occurance to find murdered mining claim jumpers from Zimbabwe left out as a warning to others.Glad things worked out well in the end, and congrats on some beautiful animals and memories. I spent about a week in South Africa in early 2020 doing some qualitative research for a humanitarian organization. That meant I spent time doing in-depth interviews with people in their homes in Jo-burg and Durban, mostly in the townships. I studied up on Apartheid and some of the colonial history. Very eye opening and disturbing in ways I didn't anticipate.
And that flight over the Atlantic is no picnic for a guy who can't sleep on planes.
Again, congrats on a very memorable trip.
Wow, beautiful! Thanks for the hunt and the great pictures.Franschhoek
While it's little more than an hour outside of Cape Town, its a very different place. It feels much safer and is absolutely stunning in every regard. Its serious wine country with more wineries than one could visit in a month. We stayed right downtown, walked to the wine tram and all the local restaurants.
Anyone who spends any time in the Western Cape needs to check it out. I'll let the photos speak for themselves:
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Peppering you w/ questions:
Were the cull animals free, discounted?
Did you and your wife enter with specific trophy animals to hunt and your PH focused on those trophy animals with additional opportunities incidental to the hunt? i.e. cross an animal they sought to cull or another quality trophy species not on your intended list?
When guides hopped aboard from concession areas, did you tip them that same day or are those specified tips at the end of your stay?
You mentioned range on trophy animals outside the high $ choices are much more skittish thus range is in/upwards 400 yards and your missed shot. I've not fired big game rounds through a suppressor. Were you comfortable with suppressors prior to your trip or was that an adjustment at their range?
We're using their firearms as well. Curious, why suppressors? Allow more opportunity for follow-up shots or are there concession requirements?
I understand J-burg a person can convert USD to SA Rands. Did you find a need or stayed w/USD?
On the property attached to the lodge they're getting hunted every single day for 6+ months of the year. On the concessions, it seemed like a 2-3 times per week (at least at the ones we visited). I really didn't mind the raised difficulty level though, the added challenge made it a more gratifying experience. If everything was as tame as the sable, eland, and other big expensive critters it would've been pretty dull.Sounds Ike the blesbuck and springbuck were getting too much pressure. Should not have been that difficult. One can easily tell which properties let outfitters shoot from the trucks. Makes hunting very difficult.
Seems like a different kind of place than we were at. As I mentioned earlier, properties were 2000-4000 acres. I know there are larger concessions out there but we didn't hunt on them. There was not a day of hunting or a property where we did not encounter all 4 fences at some point or another.That property was 167K acres and less than half accessible.
There weren't many impala on the main property or the concessions we hunted. If someone wanted to harvest one, they had to pay extra. A few of the hunters in my group did just that and shot some medium size impala on a concession near the end of the week.I'm rather surprised impala were not on the list. That's usually a given. Your wife's blesbuck is exceptional. And your cow gemsbuck. Did you get to keep her horns? Sometimes not allowed for management animals.
Ironically enough, I went out to dinner with my family when I got home. There was a live band playing. The first song I heard them play? Africa by Toto... can't make that stuff up, lol.Africa is a magical place. Too bad a lot of the continent is riddled with pain and misery.
I look forward to going back one day!
Also, I sure hope you blasted "Africa" by Toto once you landed. If not, that's a hell of a missed opportunity.