Adipose
AH veteran
Looks like there was a gun malfunction and it effected the hunter from fisting a shot when the Buff charged. Must have been a scary time.
I’m thinking the same thing, my buddy Doc shot a buffalo a little behind the shoulder with a old hornday DGX 375 , 4 days later the PH called it a loss , tough critters when shot wrongSpeaking of route causes, this all smells to poor first shot placement.
This is almost always the cause of these types of incidents. It is something that could happen to anyone even with proper training and equipment.Speaking of route causes, this all smells to poor first shot placement.
See my thread above. It could have been a 98 Mauser.Very sad situation, and I hope the PH makes a full recovery both physically and mentally. In a case like this, it may be easy to be harder on yourself than others would be. However I agree with a former poster, maybe not a bad way to go for the client. Not to be insensitive, but at 78 and with a pacemaker, he went out with his boots on so to speak. My thoughts are with his family though. Tragic? I don't know. Tragic to me is an innocent killed by a drunk driver, or the recent passengers killed in the helicopter and plane collision. I liken dangerous game hunting to skydiving, wingsuiting, and other such thrilling and dangerous pursuits. The thrill and danger is a large part of the attraction, and when things go wrong and when a participants life is lost it is not totally unexpected and we voluntarily put ourselves in that position. I would be very interested in the make and model of rifle of the client, trying to imagine what would happen that would allow one shot, but then shroud and firing pin fell out of rifle. I know some custom actions have quick release "bayonet style" quarter or half turn strikers for easy cleaning as opposed to the normal threaded in shrouds. I am thinking it must have been one of these type.
Do you ever take the opportunity to shut up? A hunter is dead and a PH seriously injured. That’s the only information you know. It’s an unfortunate situation.It is one thing to "go out with boots on" but quite another to take someone else with you. I have nearly met my maker a half dozen times while hunting. Most of those incidents could easily have been (likely would have been) a disaster for someone else's family had I not been hunting alone. One reason why I prefer to hunt alone. A 78 year-old guy with a pacemaker should have been hunting plains game. He was putting too many other guys at risk. Anyway, it appears, from what we're hearing at this point, he was either unfamiliar with his rifle or incapable of proper maintenance ... for whatever reason. Dicey health + basic unfamiliarity with the rifle = bad situation. Lucky the PH didn't get killed. He definitely wasn't ready to die.
I think you may be correct. I just checked my Mauser. Though the scenario I tested could explain the striker and shroud laying on the ground separate from the rifle, it does not appear the firing pin could reach the primer for client's first shot if the shroud was so loosely attached that it came off when the safety was released (maybe there never was a first shot? Hmmm). Not even close. I only had to look at the position of rear of cocking piece when properly fired vs where it's located when released if shroud became detached. A half inch short. Of course, as you indicate, maybe the client was using a more unconventional DGR.On a threaded shroud such as Mauser, M70, M700, etc, the firing pin shouldnt reach the primer for the first shot if not threaded in completely, at least I cant think of any possible way. Maybe that will be my project for the day. Maybe it would now that I think more about it, as the bolt notch in the cocking cam is what stops forward travel. Interesting.
Actually, we have been supplied with a wealth of information about this particular incident. Much more than is usually provided in official news releases.Do you ever take the opportunity to shut up? A hunter is dead and a PH seriously injured. That’s the only information you know. It’s an unfortunate situation.
Looks like there was a gun malfunction and it effected the hunter from firing a shot when the Buff charged. Must have been a scary time.