...... I thought it was so great now I am not so sure?
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Bhfs300, It was great.
It just feels different with some further knowledge. Sorry, if you felt duped.
The "petting encounters" are one more way to attract people and make money.
When I first found that the game I could hunt was available for purchase at an Auction I was very put off.
Were they domesticated? Tame? What the heck happened to "wild africa"?
Then I found out about "fences".
Where I live it is illegal to hunt game behind a fence or over bait. (save for bears)
I had to reconcile the realities of my home hunting experiences with this new culture and country.
As part of that process I spent 10 days studying in Professional Hunting School in RSA to understand the law, the animals, and how to hunt, etc. I learned a lot and continue to learn.
This course explained that the local laws and property rights are the basis of the reality on the ground. It makes sense once you knew what the laws were.
I figured out I was concerned about "Boma" (fish in a barrel) hunts or truly "put and take" hunting. As many of my fellow countrymen are.
Media hype on "canned" hunting got everyone's ire up. ie. Drugged Lions being released moments before they were shot., etc etc. The unsuspecting hunter not knowing the difference.
Shooting drugged animals is not hunting.
I made my own decision about where and what I would hunt only after exhaustive research.
Fences were eliminated by being on a large enough property that the animal could evade me and thus fences would not come into direct play.
For example, I just hunted Roosevelt Sable in an area without a fence in sight (or existence) that was about as remote and "wild" as you can get in Niassa Province in Northern Mozambique. I also chased Bushbuck for four days with a bow in a fenced property in the Eastern Cape.
Both hunts were incredibly challenging and both species were naturally occurring and self sustaining.
The fenced property was large enough and with the natural cover that the Bushbuck escaped me with impunity many times. I encountered the fence once at the entrance.
In the end I used a rifle on both hunts and took my trophies. Both trophies were taken under two hundred yards. The Sable were actually found in the same area I had seen them earlier in the day. (GPS location, never mind the PH's knew their habits. We were hunting on "Sable Road")
They are habitual.
The Bushbuck Ram I took, I had not seen in the previous four days and I had seen plenty of others. I only had one other ram that was found in the same vicinity/locale on that property during my hunt.
Both the Bushbuck and the Sable were wild, they just had different addresses.
I have watched the "wild lion" debate and I get tired of the propaganda.
There are very few places that actually do tracking or calling hunts for "wild" Lions.
Most "wild" hunts are baited, even old "Cecil".
If the Landowner/Concession holder feeds the "wild" Lions year round are they wild?
The Lion hunt story: You magically, through incredible skill and stalking prowess sneak up on the pride on a fresh kill.
The reality: You are brought round the back way to the feeding spot where your PH was radioed that the carcass was dropped and the assistant watched the Lion pride move in to the fresh offering. Your PH got the urgent radio call just before you rushed over to the area where a lion had been finally been sighted.
The absence of a fence makes you believe they are wild. They run away right?
Ring the dinner bell tomorrow at 14:00 and see what happens.
There are no pens or cages and no proof they are fed regularly and just like the "petting encounter" your view would change if you knew the entire story.
The moral of the story for me: Know what you are really buying and from whom and make your own decision.