Ardent,
is it you in the photo with the buff? when was this?
oh, Ardent, come on...you are generalzing now!!!
Some area's in Zimbabwe is so over hunted / poached that Buffalo doesn't give you a change and may seem wilder than that of other countries buffalo...or perhaps they wanna run like hell, away from the hunter that chase them for 10 days...
Zimbabwe Buffalo was of the cheapest in Africa...not anymore, why? because it is getting harder and harder to hunt them in area's where poaching thrives - success rates isn't that good anymore...
Done some hunts on buffalo in Zimbabwe (in the past) and Mozambique and RSA with references...every hunt has his up and down moments...some of the buff in Zimbabwe had been shot while walking out of camp for 3-5km just standing there watching us...

) but the future for any hunting in africa isn't very bright. Population explosion, habitat loss, and a general complete lack of conservation for wildlife by any one from the highest levels of government to the lowliest herd boy is very rapidly drawing almost all hunting in africa to a close. I'm very glad I started hunting there when I did.
lionI'm generally not a doom and gloom type of guy- (As witnessed by my posts trying to see the bright side of a single shot for buffalo) but the future for any hunting in africa isn't very bright. Population explosion, habitat loss, and a general complete lack of conservation for wildlife by any one from the highest levels of government to the lowliest herd boy is very rapidly drawing almost all hunting in africa to a close. I'm very glad I started hunting there when I did.
The selous is a perfect example- in the late 2000's it was considered one of the surest places to find a nice bull ele. I spent 22 days looking for one there in 2009 and didn't see a single bull let alone a legal one.
Now that Mugabe has pretty much eliminated all other forms of industry he has apparently set his sights on hunting- its pretty well the only foreign cash coming into the country now so he will pursue it. If he croaks tomorrow I would be very surprised if his successor doesn't do the same thing. Grace certainly looks evil enough to do it but who knows who will really end up with the power there.
In Two years Mozambique went from a very well respected place to find an good sized tusker to being poached to nothing.
South africa? Until Zim style land reforms take place then the canned hunting there will persist- But those reforms are coming- maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow but they are on the horizon. hunting plains game there holds little enough appeal for me let alone a buffalo with an eartag or a "Cattle Raiding"lion
Botswana closed already- what are they going to do about their elephant population explosion? I suspect nothing- the poachers are going to look after it for them.
Zambia has apparently put some ele back on quota for this year- maybe, and it will be a moot point when the poachers sweep through there to get to botswana.
If you look at the type of hunt our fathers could of had in 1977 in kenya to what we could have today it's enough to make a grown man weep.
China is going to exterminate the elephant from the landscape- no amount of hand wringing by Peta, WWF, By our western governments fish and wildlife divisions or by us hunters is going to even slow it let alone stop it. The poachers will cut the face off the very last baby elephant in africa with glee- and not even hesitate for a second. They don't think like you and me. Nobody seems to talk about it but they are going to do the same for the big cats as well. They have substituted their bones for tigers into their morning #### medicine. Tell any of the guys offering "cattle raider" hunts that you want to keep all the bones from your lion (that miraculously shows up on the day or two that it is supposed to) and the price quoted you will go up.
The natives are going to look after all the rest- how is the plainsgame hunting near any village or on communal lands that you guys have been to? What happens when everyplace is near a village?
The expense of it is was it is- tourist safari Hunting africa always has and always will be for the well heeled, it was when Teddy Roosevelt did it and it still is today. To lament the cost is silly. Very,very soon (many would say its already happened) wild east africa will be no more.
In my opinion all those guys who are thinking "someday" they will go are rapidly missing the window that is slamming shut.
im good just reading about it frankly plus there still plenty of feral buff in Australia along with camels, scrub bull(feral cattle) ,pig's ,donkeys and a bunch more for me water buffalo and camels would be my game of choice
You're missing out on one of the last "big", and real experiences on the planet. Hunting Africa also supports keeping it wild, consider it.
until the poacher are dealt with it only going to get worse for me its not something that will happen anytime soon
im good just reading about it

Are you sure on those recoil numbers? When I used a 450 NE I thought that recoil was rather sedate. What velocities do you expect ?
Then the future will seem OK, because soon reading about it will be the only option.
Admittedly, we have been here before -- most notably in the years leading up to the ivory ban in 1989. Anybody remember those days, when Kynoch was out of the ammo business and vintage British double rifles were selling for next to nothing as wall-hangers, as elephant populations dropped by 50% from just a few years of poaching... Fortunately, we had something of a reprieve then, followed by some degree of recovery. But then it was the rhinos. And then the precipitous drop in wild lion populations. And now we are back to plummeting elephant populations again.
As has already been pointed out here, the 1970s game populations of east and southern Africa are no more. And they will not be coming back. Want a prediction of the immediate future -- look to the CITES convention next year in March, and lay your bets now as to whether or not lion will be getting listed as an Appendix I species. Personally, I have a pretty fair guess as to which side of the argument is the safest bet.
And as for elephant... The US shut down imports from Tanzania and Zimbabwe ... Mozambique was already shut down ... Botswana shut itself down ... and American hunters wanting to legally hunt ivory are limited to a tiny handful of tags in Namibia and RSA. Perhaps there will be come recovery in the years ahead, but each time we go through this we only recover to a partial degree of where we were before. And when we are talking about an animal that takes 40-60 years go grow into a decent trophy...
Unlike the more fortunate in this discussion, I came to African hunting much too late for my own liking -- and yet I am deeply grateful for the chance to have experienced it to the limited degree I have. Through a lot of hard work and some really good luck, I managed to at least taste the wonders of hunting on the Dark Continent, and somehow actually managed to take all of the Big 5 (excepting rhino) under fair chase conditions. I had once thought that this would feel like a wonderful accomplishment -- but more and more, it seems mostly painful to think about. Rather like what North American aboriginals must once have felt as they watched the buffalo disappear so quickly and so permanently. What I dreamed I managed to live, but it is not something my children will ever experience. Or something that their children will even be able to imagine, except possibly to read about in a dusty old volume.
It really does make a person want to cry. It is an awful and terrible loss. But so few of us living on this earth even care. And those that do care are unable to do much more than watch it unfold.
My only real advice to anyone following this thread is that if you have ANY desire to experience the hunting fields of Africa, do so now. Right now. Sell off those extra rifles, put off buying the new car, or even borrow the money from your line of credit. In a shockingly sort period of time, the door will close on many of those dreams. Some of them have already closed. When A-Zone and I were there in 2013, so far as I know we shot the two last legally hunted lioness that will ever come out of Zimbabwe -- which essentially means the last two legally hunted lioness that will come out of anywhere (unless you want to call canned lioness hunting in RSA meaningful hunting). When the 2014 season started, lioness were off the menu, and they remain so now. And so it goes.



























