I haven't decided yet. I'm in the infancy of planning that trip. I would really love to shoot both the lion and lioness, to have rug mounts in my man cave.Which country in Africa? It makes a difference. - dan
I haven't decided yet. I'm in the infancy of planning that trip. I would really love to shoot both the lion and lioness, to have rug mounts in my man cave.Which country in Africa? It makes a difference. - dan
I would determine where that is "legal" and go there. That is more than enough to kill the biggest cat, if you hit it correctly.Does anyone know what the legal minimal cartridge to hunt lions in Aftrica? I have a Merkel 9.3x74R SXS double rifle.
Thanks!
Zambia and Zim accept 9.3's, from memory. SA it seemed to depend where the outfitter works. When I was there i mostly saw 30-06 and 375 rifles. - danI haven't decided yet. I'm in the infancy of planning that trip. I would really love to shoot both the lion and lioness, to have rug mounts in my man cave.
When I hear lion and lioness in the same sentence its usually captive bred hunts. Might not what you’re looking for, make sure you ask pointed questions in your research.I haven't decided yet. I'm in the infancy of planning that trip. I would really love to shoot both the lion and lioness, to have rug mounts in my man cave.
I would never hunt such animals.When I hear lion and lioness in the same sentence its usually captive bred hunts. Might not what you’re looking for, make sure you ask pointed questions in your research.
Didn’t think you would; on purpose anyway. Things aren’t always as they appear, therefore the caution. Do with it as you will.I would never hunt such animals.
I would not consider myself a hunter, if I killed a caged animal that was released; shame on people who do. As I mentioned twice already, "I'm just starting to plan, I'm in no hurry."Didn’t think you would; on purpose anyway. Things aren’t always as they appear, therefore the caution. Do with it as you will.
Do some research on this topic. Some of the hunters shooting these released-yesterday, often-drugged lions are well aware of the situation. Others have had the hunt presented to them as a death-defying white-knuckle pitting of man against a wild beast...which is about as far from reality as it can be. Those guys are not present when the farm owners roll the lion out of the truck the day before and then hurry away before it recovers its senses and begins begging for food.I would not consider myself a hunter, if I killed a caged animal that was released; shame on people who do. As I mentioned twice already, "I'm just starting to plan, I'm in no hurry."
I was snooping around the Accurate Reloading forum, which has a lot of info on African hunting, and saw a lion hunt being offered right now, priced as follows:How much is a tag for a male lion ?