African Game Fees?

X-man

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Since we're getting walloped by another snow storm, I'm home today and turned on the tv to check out the Olympic hockey game. I also caught the tail-end of Nosler's Magnum Hunt TV on WildTV. The host, Tim Heald (sp?) was on a leopard hunt. He took the shot and hit the cat, but it wasn't instantly mortal. His PH decided that the better part of valor was to return at first light and start tracking the wounded animal.

I can't fault the PH for not trying to track it in the dark. You'd have to be insane to go into the bush after a wounded leopard at night. Unfortunately, the tracker discovered the remains of the large tom the next morning. The PH figured the lions had got at him. They'd basically eaten everything but the head, paws and a few scraps of hide. The PH looked more upset than the hunter and seemed to have tears in his eyes as he apologized to his client.

In such cases, is the client charged for the animal, or are they permitted to harvest another cat without extra expense? I'm not thinking so much about the disappointed tv host, but the average hunter who scrimped and saved every penny he could for a decade to afford his first and likely only dangerous game hunt in his lifetime.

I've never been lucky enough to hunt the Dark Continent, but I have dreamed of going one day. So I can appreciate just how disappointing such a scenario would be if it was my hunt. I am aware of the general policy that if you shoot and draw blood, the outfitter charges the game fee, regardless whether the animal is ever recovered. However, there's a big dollar difference between your average plains game animal and say a leopard, lion or elephant. We're talking hundreds vs. thousands or even tens of thousands.

I plead complete ignorance, so would be interested to hear from guys who have actually hunted Africa. :)
 
I wounded an Eland in 2007, had a second where I could have shot again but they had gone behind some brush and I wasn't sure in the split second which Bull I had shot.

Cost me $1600, never found it. I would have hated to shoot the wrong one the second time and had it cost me $3200.

It bothered me for quite a while, not so much the money but that I blew the shot.
 
I nailed a blue wildebeast in what my PH and I thought was a perfect shot. I could easily have hit him again as he ran away but didn't. We never found it and I was down $950 for the effort and I learned a valuable lesson, keep friggin' shooting.

I can't imagine what that leopard head cost him?
 
The first day of our first trip to Namibia, we spotted a huge gemsbok. After a long stalk, we ended up in the middle of many animals and had lost track of the big bull. Suddenly a bull walked out and my PH said that was him. I didn't think it was and questioned him but he told me to shoot. I did. A few seconds later the big bull walked out and you could see that he knew he screwed up. He told me to shoot the second bull and he'd take care of the fee on the first. I gained a lot of respect for him right there!
 
It is the rule in Africa and pretty much every where else........blood = pay. The PHs don't set the fees, either they are Gov't set with a percentage added for the outfit or by landowners on private lands with a percentage for the outfit. When an animal is lost most operators FORGET to tell land owners or Gov't officials and the fee goes right in their pockets. When a guy who has hunted hard and is a reasonably nice guy, blows a shot or there is a screw up like Sheeps most operators FORGIVE the lost fee. I had the same thing happen in Namibia, PH told me to shoot a lone bull gemsbok, we walked up to it to find a 30" bull laying there, I gave him a WTF look and he said "Oh vell, I needed a cape anyvay" and that was the last that was said about that gemsbok. The two blue duikers that I removed large portions of their heads with the shotgun, were instantly demoted from trophy to camp meat. It all has a lot to do with what kind of a guy you are, dinks will pay for all hits and easy going good guys won't in a lot of cases.
In the case of high end and dangerous game you will ALWAYS pay, and there is usually a Gov't representative or landowner representative along to make sure everything is above board. You should have seen the entourage I had for elephant in Bot, 2 PHs, 2 trackers, a village rep and a Gov't game warden, no hope of an SSS on that hunt !!!!
 
I nailed a blue wildebeast in what my PH and I thought was a perfect shot. I could easily have hit him again as he ran away but didn't. We never found it and I was down $950 for the effort and I learned a valuable lesson, keep friggin' shooting.

I can't imagine what that leopard head cost him?

MH, you broke the golden rule of shooting wildebeest..........."keep shooting till it's down then give it 2 more"......I'd have to say pound for pound they are the toughest critter over there, good thing the buff aren't as tough as the wildebeest, or the statistics would run about 50/50 as to who wins........I took mine right on the point of the shoulder quartering into me at about 150 mtrs with a 200 gn A-frame from my 300 Wby, right at dusk, he shuddered and took off, I hit him 4 more times running until I caught the spine on the 5th shot (planned shot of course ;)) That first shot would have leveled a caribou about the same size but didn't even stagger him.

 
Two wildbeeste, one with the .375 and 270 grain TSXs and one with a .416 Rigby.

The first one took a double lung hit which exited, and somehow managed to run an estimated 400 yards through the bush spreading blood and chunks of lung and wildebeast all the way. The second took a quartering toward hit with a 400 grain TSX and stumbled or bounced about 50 feet before going down, but with its legs under and head held high. Due to the bush screening a follow-up shot, we approached to about 50 yards and I gave him another through both shoulders and he actually got up before falling down again. Oddly, neither bullet exited.

"Poorman's buffalo" is a fitting name.
 
One of the posters on AR has a sigline that fits perfectly here.

"Famous last words of a trophy fee gone bad: Don't shoot again...you hit him hard the first time."
 
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