Chasing The Tiny 10 South Africa - The Journey Begins

I will post them separately to keep topics on track. I would like to keep the hunting report focused on that experience as the other 2 topics should also be focused.
We are dying to hear what happened in Polokwane!
 
We are dying to hear what happened in Polokwane!
Oh you will my friend...just want to set that up separately. It was a shocking experience and would be very distracting from this hunt report.
 
When I first saw the mountains I was going to be hunting klipspringer in I definitely thought I had bitten off a lot more than I could chew!! It took 2 1/2 days to get a pretty good ram. This was in Limpopo also near Thabazimbi..
That area is really something isn't it? Beautiful country but not easy to traverse! There were several times I had to stop while climbing to catch my breath and it was hot! Mountain climbing in the heat is not easy. I fell once in the loose rock and thankfully our tracker Vusi was right below me and I fell into him instead of hitting the rock and breaking bones or guns.
 
Hunting the tiny ten is very rewarding and you are very correct on the planning needed. Especially for the oribi and suni. All I need is the sharps grysbok. Tried hard in Mozambique but just couldn't get one to slow down below mach 5. Congratz on your success so far. Looking forward to the rest of your report.
 
Hunting the tiny ten is very rewarding and you are very correct on the planning needed. Especially for the oribi and suni. All I need is the sharps grysbok. Tried hard in Mozambique but just couldn't get one to slow down below mach 5. Congratz on your success so far. Looking forward to the rest of your report.
Dave you bring up a good point. The speed of these little guys is amazing and they are super paranoid and on high alert a lot of time. It's like they have been drinking energy drinks and eating a lot of sugar and caffeine! Then for a moment they might stand still and they glow like a little jewel. Stunning creatures.
 
If you think that’s a lot, start shopping Suni prices in RSA. $7-10k (trophy fee, doesn’t include daily rates) is the pricing I was quoted by 5 or 7 different outfitters over the last 2 years. For that amount of money I’ll go to Mozambique.

$3k on a Sharpe’s is a lot. I think mine was like $450 or $500 in Zim granted I was DG hunting and paying a much higher daily rate.
A famous outfitter offered me a suni in SA for$4000. I joked and said " and they say Sable is expensive". But 7k for suni in SA is really crazy.
The journey to tiny ten is a good chance to see different areas and to meet many people.
I connected with Red Duiker in my hunt near louis trichardt and failed on Sharpe’s which make it good excuse to go back one day. It was very diverse terrain and very beautiful.
 
This next post is very challenging for me. Let’s call it what to do with a bad day in the field.

We went back to the big mountains where the klippies were and this time we were going to grab one of the farm workers to help us find them. We drove in early and picked him up and headed back to the big hills to find them. Before we could get very far, there comes the sound you want to hear…the tracker is tapping on the roof and has seen something. There just on the hill to our right are 3 klippies in the rocks.

We bail out of the truck quickly and I grab the borrowed .243 rifle. I setup on the sticks while Dieter is glassing the rocks and he says there is a male and 2 females. He ranges and says 173. The scope is at full magnification and I roll it back a bit and try to get steady. I find the male standing on his toes looking down at us and I get the reticle on him. I’m not feeling very steady and the reticle is moving in little circles. I know there isn’t much time and I try to slow my breathing…then squeeze the trigger. In the recoil I see the klippie going down and I reload. Oddly, I didn’t hear the hit very well. I look at Dieter and the tracker and say did he fall? They say he jumped. Oh crap…

The 2 females are still on their rock and staring down below them at something we can’t see. I say they must be looking at the male. I stay on the sticks to see if he climbs back up to them and after 5 minutes there is nothing. We agree that if the females move and he is mobile, he will follow them. So we wait longer…nothing. I look at Dieter and he says, “I didn’t see the puff of hair behind him after the shot like normal.” At this point, I’m praying for a clean miss.

We go forward and find the smallest drops of blood…crap. We track the drops up into the rocks above where he was standing when I shot. He is mobile and not bleeding much. We lose the trail off and on again in the rocks. The trackers scour the side of the mountain and find bits and pieces of sign in the rocky hillside. This isn’t good. I’m actually feeling a little sick. Some time goes by and the trackers find the sign that the male has rejoined the females and now they have climbed below us and actually walked past the truck to leave the area. My heart drops.

We backtracked a bit and called a couple of times to see if they will raise their heads to look at us. Nothing happens. Dieter looks at me and says he’s gone…and I know he’s right. He says what do you want to do? I’m silent for a long time…and then I say this was a big goal on this trip…I’ve wounded him but thankfully he’s back with his females and mobile…I can’t feel good right now and I can’t continue hunting for another klippie…I had my shot and blew it. We are done with klippies on this trip and I don’t deserve another shot…plus I just paid for the wounded one. We load and drive back to the lodge and it’s a long drive in silence.

I tell you the truth…I had tears in my eyes as we left the property because it felt so bad to have wounded a special creature like a klippie. I could make excuses about the miss but it’s my responsibility and I took the shot even though I was unsteady on the sticks. I realized afterwards that I didn’t hold high enough for the distance of the shot. I’ve had a lot of success in 40 years of hunting and it cut me that I had failed on this shot. That night I had to retell the story around the fire and that was hard too. It’s a miserable feeling and still hurts when I think about it and write these words…but I have always told the truth in my hunt reports and I’m always learning from the good, the bad and the ugly.

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Tough luck on the klippie! At least he got back with his ladies.

I missed my first shot on my ram when a leg broke on the shooting sticks, after working so hard up and down that freaking mountain for 2 1/2 days. Lucky for me his ewe didn’t run and he jumped back on his rock and I made a good shot. I have never felt that sick on a hunt before.
 
We got back to the lodge after that terrible morning and ate something and then I laid down for a bit to try and relax. Later that afternoon, Dieter said let’s go back out and drive around some with the 416. That sounded like a good idea so we picked up the tracker and drove around for awhile. We stopped and Dieter said let’s go walk up and look at that waterhole. We sneak in and find the waterhole is full of game…eland, zebra, gemsbok and wildebeest. We have the wind so we settle in to see what can happen. We have been looking for an exceptional wildebeest and there might be one here.

The 3 of us settle down into the dirt and a short time later, the elands start to leave the water first. They turn and start walking towards us…hmmm, ok. Then the zebras follow them…ok. In short order, the elands and zebras are just across the dirt road from us and looking our way. We get real low and hold steady while that old eland cow is staring holes into us. Then she relaxes and moves on taking the group with her. Somehow, the wind holds in our favor but that will change as the animals get downwind of us. Dieter whispers, hey that old wildebeest is going to walk right past us! He says get ready and stand when I tell you. The wildebeest passes with some trees between us and I stand and get on the sticks. Dieter makes a sound and stops the wildebeest with a tree right on the vitals…so I adjust for a behind the shoulder shot and squeeze the trigger. There is an obvious hit and the bull kicks and runs forward. A short run later and he falls right in the middle of the road.

We get up to him and find it’s a clean double lung shot with the 416. Wildebeest do not go down easily and it’s nice to see the clean hit…especially after the tough morning loss. What an old man wildebeest he is. Fantastic dagga boy type wildebeest.

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Congrats and love the write up so far. I have 7 of the ten and hope to finish it off on a trip to Mozambique in the next couple of years.

HH
The red duiker, suni and oribi. Great pics and nice Nyala!

HH
 
There is more to come from both the 22 Hornet and the 416. Hunt's not over yet!
 
This next post is very challenging for me. Let’s call it what to do with a bad day in the field.

We went back to the big mountains where the klippies were and this time we were going to grab one of the farm workers to help us find them. We drove in early and picked him up and headed back to the big hills to find them. Before we could get very far, there comes the sound you want to hear…the tracker is tapping on the roof and has seen something. There just on the hill to our right are 3 klippies in the rocks.

We bail out of the truck quickly and I grab the borrowed .243 rifle. I setup on the sticks while Dieter is glassing the rocks and he says there is a male and 2 females. He ranges and says 173. The scope is at full magnification and I roll it back a bit and try to get steady. I find the male standing on his toes looking down at us and I get the reticle on him. I’m not feeling very steady and the reticle is moving in little circles. I know there isn’t much time and I try to slow my breathing…then squeeze the trigger. In the recoil I see the klippie going down and I reload. Oddly, I didn’t hear the hit very well. I look at Dieter and the tracker and say did he fall? They say he jumped. Oh crap…

The 2 females are still on their rock and staring down below them at something we can’t see. I say they must be looking at the male. I stay on the sticks to see if he climbs back up to them and after 5 minutes there is nothing. We agree that if the females move and he is mobile, he will follow them. So we wait longer…nothing. I look at Dieter and he says, “I didn’t see the puff of hair behind him after the shot like normal.” At this point, I’m praying for a clean miss.

We go forward and find the smallest drops of blood…crap. We track the drops up into the rocks above where he was standing when I shot. He is mobile and not bleeding much. We lose the trail off and on again in the rocks. The trackers scour the side of the mountain and find bits and pieces of sign in the rocky hillside. This isn’t good. I’m actually feeling a little sick. Some time goes by and the trackers find the sign that the male has rejoined the females and now they have climbed below us and actually walked past the truck to leave the area. My heart drops.

We backtracked a bit and called a couple of times to see if they will raise their heads to look at us. Nothing happens. Dieter looks at me and says he’s gone…and I know he’s right. He says what do you want to do? I’m silent for a long time…and then I say this was a big goal on this trip…I’ve wounded him but thankfully he’s back with his females and mobile…I can’t feel good right now and I can’t continue hunting for another klippie…I had my shot and blew it. We are done with klippies on this trip and I don’t deserve another shot…plus I just paid for the wounded one. We load and drive back to the lodge and it’s a long drive in silence.

I tell you the truth…I had tears in my eyes as we left the property because it felt so bad to have wounded a special creature like a klippie. I could make excuses about the miss but it’s my responsibility and I took the shot even though I was unsteady on the sticks. I realized afterwards that I didn’t hold high enough for the distance of the shot. I’ve had a lot of success in 40 years of hunting and it cut me that I had failed on this shot. That night I had to retell the story around the fire and that was hard too. It’s a miserable feeling and still hurts when I think about it and write these words…but I have always told the truth in my hunt reports and I’m always learning from the good, the bad and the ugly.

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That’s a tough one on the Klippie. Did y’all go back the next day? A lot of times they’ll use the same rocks/spots at similar times since they have a pretty small core area.
 
Good question Bill. The next day will get posted tonight but I know the landowner of the klippie property had his guys comb the mountainside again and no recovery...so we think the klippie recovered. When I ran through my shot process again, I realized that I had incorrectly used the multi line reticle on the borrowed gun. Again no excuses...but next time I will be using my gear that I am familiar with. Also, I should not have sent the shot with the wobble I was experiencing. No excuse for that and I know better.
 
The next day comes early and we are off to our 3rd attempt for red duiker. This morning has a lot of mist and fog and I forgot to mention that we got some moisture in the form of a hail storm of all things! This was the first water they had received since February. They are in a bad drought as many of you know…worst in 40 years some have said.

It’s always interesting to me how the weather changing has an effect on the animal patterns. This weather change turned out to be exactly what we needed for red duiker. Every other time they had been running around with their butts on fire. This morning they were calm and slow moving like someone had taken their caffeine away and doubled their sleeping pill prescription. We saw 10 this morning but the first one mattered the most!

As we drove back into the property to go to our first calling location, we came around a corner and I was shocked to see a red duiker standing in a small patch of weeds. I started to grab the 22 Hornet and Dieter said use Richard’s .308 in case he goes into cover. I got the duiker in the scope just as he turned away from us and started walking away…again, it was remarkable that he was walking and not a red streak of speed. I put the reticle on the tail and squeezed the trigger. I couldn’t see him after the recoil and said tell me he’s down?!? Dieter runs forward and yells we got him! A wave of relief hit me and then I ran forward. It’s hard to express the feelings when looking down at this little red duiker the size of a large rabbit. He was absolutely beautiful….and there might have been a little dance on the forest floor by 4 grown men looking at a little red antelope.

Dieter looks at him more closely and says this is the biggest red duiker I have ever seen. He looks at Vusi and says bring me the tape measure from the truck. What is this? We never measure animals out in the field. We always do that back at the skinning shed. I ask and he says Rowland Ward minimum is 2.5” and this one is a LOT bigger than that. He rolls out the tape and it goes past 2.5…to 3…to 3.5! Wow. Normally another inch is nothing but it’s almost 50% past RW minimum. What a stunning red duiker. My heart is full and we just sit there looking at this little beast of a duiker.

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That’s the way a Safari goes. From dragging a lip to euphoria.Way to go!
 

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autofire wrote on LIMPOPO NORTH SAFARIS's profile.
Do you have any cull hunts available? 7 days, daily rate plus per animal price?

#plainsgame #hunting #africahunting ##LimpopoNorthSafaris ##africa
Grz63 wrote on roklok's profile.
Hi Roklok
I read your post on Caprivi. Congratulations.
I plan to hunt there for buff in 2026 oct.
How was the land, very dry ? But à lot of buffs ?
Thank you / merci
Philippe
 
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