Son (in AK) sends me a video the other day (not 1, but 4 brown bear running away from him.) He only had a .454 snub-nose and NO chance if they all wanted to eat him. That's when your vision is crucial!!! (many hunters don't get an annual eye exam-and many miss shots, and sadly a few die!) Get 'em checked!That is one of the things that happen growing old! Healing up is another.
I was shooting mainly field match (before the PRS was the PRS). It comes in handy when you need to make an improvised shot in a hurry.
I went in 2021 and planned that being the hunt of a lifetime. I enjoyed it so much and now I am hooked. I went again from 7/8 thru 7/20 this year for Cape Buffalo. I have already started plans for Leopard in 2023. Africa gets into you blood.This popped in my head the other day as I was mentally planning a future safari to follow up the first safari that hasn't even happened yet. I hear all the time, " you think this is a once in a lifetime trip, but you will go back." " nobody goes to Africa just once". Which all seems to correlate pretty accurately with everyone I have spoken with that has been to Africa, and not just on this forum, but people that I have met at random that have been. Everyone loves it, and everyone I have spoken with recalls it fondly and speaks of how great the trip was. Aside from the actual flight to get there. Ha ha
So, I have a question. Has anyone ever talked to someone who hunted Africa and came back and said, "nope, not for me" I went but I just did not enjoy it and I won't go back. If so was there any particular reason, other than if they just had a bad experience with a particular outfitter or PH which can happen and can sour your taste on the whole experience. Other than that though, has anyone ever met someone who went to Africa on a hunt and just said nope this is not for me, I just don't like it?
Much the same here. It’s not so much I don’t want to go west hunting. It’s more a limited funds and where do I get the biggest bang for my buck and there’s really no comparison.I'm on the flip side of the Africa is not for me. The western U.S. is not for me. Zero interest in elk, mule deer, pronghorns, goats. None, zero, nada. Not going to spend the time or money to bag any of those animals. I have hunted whitetails in Texas and turkeys in Kansas and that's about as far as I want to go.
Edit: either is Alaska or Canada.
I can totally understand that. I will never hunt south Africa. It is just not my thing and I can completely see where it would gall a hunter of the caliber that it takes to hunt Alaska the way your friend does.I have a good friend, likely the most successful sheep hunter in Alaska (last I knew 24+ dall rams taken personally unguided) and an incredible bush pilot, who went once and was not impressed. He didn’t feel that his PH was a very good hunter and he didn’t like the entourage going through the bush. He is one of the best hunters you will ever meet, and he hunts the wildest spots on earth solo. I think if he’d done a true bush hunt for buffalo his assessment would have been different. For him, a South African ranch hunt with a PH possessing a fraction of his experience, was a doomed venture from the start. He took good trophies but he didn’t feel he hunted properly for them.
I am officially out of room for taxidermy. Although I will find new spaces Ha ha. I will continue my hunting though. As a general rule I have limited my taxidermy to "firsts" first whitetail, first turkey, first coyote that I called in. The wife and I killed a double this year when turkey hunting, both her first long beard and our first double, they got a trip to the taxidermist to get mounted fighting. Which I thought was a worthwhile mount, and something comical with them fighting. My disposable income is limited but I think I will dispose of a great deal of it on hunts in Africa for the near and foreseeable future.I know several hunters who have no interest in going. One is a brother-in-law. Funding the trip is not the issue. But all are somewhat intimidated by “new” things. There is also a perception that Africa is for “those” sorts of people.
The saddest to my mind are those who go once and are slaves to their taxidermy. They spend a week to ten days on a rack and stack ranch or concession, fill their home with stuffed fauna, and then never return because they have no room for the taxidermy.
If we are dedicated hunters and if we have normal limits of disposable income, then at some point we run out of space. Not returning to again embrace what was for these folks a life changing experience is, to my mind, the essence of madness. Photos are a great way to remember the hunt, and a lot easier on our heirs.
I cannot wait to get back to Africa. Never met anyone who’s hunted there that isn’t a fan.This popped in my head the other day as I was mentally planning a future safari to follow up the first safari that hasn't even happened yet. I hear all the time, " you think this is a once in a lifetime trip, but you will go back." " nobody goes to Africa just once". Which all seems to correlate pretty accurately with everyone I have spoken with that has been to Africa, and not just on this forum, but people that I have met at random that have been. Everyone loves it, and everyone I have spoken with recalls it fondly and speaks of how great the trip was. Aside from the actual flight to get there. Ha ha
So, I have a question. Has anyone ever talked to someone who hunted Africa and came back and said, "nope, not for me" I went but I just did not enjoy it and I won't go back. If so was there any particular reason, other than if they just had a bad experience with a particular outfitter or PH which can happen and can sour your taste on the whole experience. Other than that though, has anyone ever met someone who went to Africa on a hunt and just said nope this is not for me, I just don't like it?