Probably the "greenest" business in the world, as funds are made off maintaining the natural species instead of wiping them out and replacing them with a few scrawny cattle (common in much of Africa now), and protein is supplied to the locals to boot. As mentioned, no protein is wasted in Africa, everything I've hunted there has been more thoroughly gleaned of meat than anything I've seen butchered here. Even the organ meat is spirited away in a hurry, and the Lion I hunted turned into a pink skeleton in a couple hours, so even the exotic stuff is scraped to the bone. You can feel good to be a part of it, my only advice is avoid South Africa and head to Namibia and Zimbabwe (especially Zim) if you want to see real Africa.
Im a newbie to hunting, i need to hunt more in Canada first. Then when i win the lottery ill go to Africa.
No need to win the lottery in order to hunt in Africa. A Cape Buffalo and Plains Game hunt in Zimbabwe including taxidermy (unless you go way overboard) and flights will cost you around $25K-$30K. If you're disciplined you can put that kind of money away over the span of 5-6 years. Add in the fact that you pay the deposit a year before you go, then the balance of the day rates 30 days before you go, trophy fees etc after you get back, shipping 6 months after that and final taxidermy bill up to 1 year to 18 month after you return and you defray that $30K over almost 3 years so in reality if you can put a few grand away every year for 10 years you'll have amply cash.
A PG hunt in South Africa could easily be done for under $20K with the same payment schedule.
But wait until you're 55 or so before you go for the first time. If you go before you're thirty like I did you'll have the "Go Back Want" for a long, LONG time!
I guess a slightly different question might be, would there be any reason for me to hunt trophy animals rather than cull animals if I don't intend to bring trophies back?
Just trying to ask all the questions before I make plans.
I don't have a trophy room and my wife isn't interested in mounts in the house so we have to compromise since she puts up with all my hobbies. Plus, I'm trying to do this without spending 2x the money that a safari costs.
The main reason to consider a safari is to gain experience in spot and stalk, particularly with another hunter who knows what they are doing.
I'll jump in here with a little story. A few years back when I started elk hunting, my wife was against having trophies in the house. I compromised because I figured I wouldn't get anything too impressive my first time out anyways. So my plan was to just keep the antlers and mount them on the shed in the yard.
Then I stumbled across a massive bull my first season. A once in a lifetime bull. A huge 6x6 that some guys search their whole life for. It was a little shy of the boone and crocket minimum to get my name into the book, but still amazing by any means. But, I had made a deal with the wife not to have any trophies in the house, so I didn't take care to preserve it as a trophy(I didn't cut it far enough back on the shoulders, didn't keep the cape. Its now just a European mount sitting in the shed).So now I have this amazing specimen, but don't have a proper mount done to do it justice. My wife doesn't understand what that trophy means to me and to every other guy who has poured his heart and soul into a hunt. She never will. But it kills me everytime I see those antlers.
Compromise elsewhere, man. You never know how amazing your trophy might be. Not only is the trophy something to be proud of, But a good mount also shows respect to a mighty animal, preserving its glory. Trust me, You don't want to regret not having your trophy.
Sorry for the hijack but I have a related question. Does anyone hunt do a trophy hunt (i.e. no hunting cull animals) and NOT bring the trophies i.e. cape back?
To elaborate and get a bit sideways, as mentioned we're a natural predator there, and everywhere really, and it seems in our era of industrial agriculture (not knocking it, grew up on a large commercial farm) we forget our place as a natural predator, and see it as distasteful whenever we discuss any species that isn't ugly. I can tell you one thing, about hunting in Africa, it is in our genes and evolution. Set foot amongst Lions and Rhinos, with nothing between you, come around thorn trees to find something sixteen feet tall looking down at you, face a Buffalo at close range, bump into an Elephant… and you feel some sort of alive I can assure you. Your bones remember, there is a thrill, fulfillment, and a sensation that overwhelms all thoughts and cognizance of the world outside of that moment; if you find the right moment. That moment can be anywhere, Canada provide's plenty too, Africa just does it on a scale nowhere else can. Go forth and look for it!
Set foot amongst Lions and Rhinos, with nothing between you, come around thorn trees to find something sixteen feet tall looking down at you, face a Buffalo at close range, bump into an Elephant… and you feel some sort of alive I can assure you.



























