Just the beginning of the .416 speaking my friend. This is a T10 focused hunt but with a lot of .416 activity.Nice job! Glad to see the R8 going to good use!
Just the beginning of the .416 speaking my friend. This is a T10 focused hunt but with a lot of .416 activity.Nice job! Glad to see the R8 going to good use!
I can only imagine that @Bob Nelson 35Whelen would tell you that your lack of success on that day was due to your choice of using a 243! Great report so far!So the 2nd full day was the red duiker calling mentioned above and the following experiences. On the way to call red duiker we were driving on a dirt road among houses on the edge of town (Louis Trichardt). As we came around a corner, Dieter said did you see that? I said no...and then he stops the truck and points...there is a caracal standing beside the road. Dieter says I've lived here all my life and never seen one in this area. I said that's the first one I've seen in the wild. It was beautiful standing there so still for a moment. You're used to seeing videos of them jumping 10 feet into the air to pull birds down but just standing there in a suburban area was outrageous.
After calling the red duiker without success, we changed directions and drove up further into the mountains to call klippies. This was a hunt I had been wanting to do for some time. Klipspringers are a really special animal and unlike anything else in the world. I don't think they have any close relatives. They have the most beautiful eyes and I've always loved how they stand on the tips of their hooves looking down at you with their head cocked sideways.
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This area we drove back into was fairly remote and undeveloped. In fact, the landowner was building a road into the back part of his land. This road climbed up into the mountains and back behind them. We would climb a little and call for awhile then keep climbing up and up.
This was probably the hardest physical day of the hunts being up in the loose rocks and cliffs. We thought we would find a target soon but we kept climbing and didn't bring any water with us. We spent hours looking for them and were all surprised by finding none. This place should have definitely turned up a few klippies but not on this day. Still it was a great day calling up in the mountains! It was a real hunt not just shooting. Good times.
Here are a few photos of the area and the sets we called from. Due to longer distances, I was borrowing Dieter's suppressed 243.
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Dieter had a klippie hunt with an older gentleman in this same area end very quickly on the first or second set of calling. It was almost at the bottom of the mountain. In comparison, we found mountains that we didn't even know were there on this day of calling. At one point, I asked Dieter where did the other guy get his...Dieter pointed way down the mountain and said down there where we parked the truck!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..
Just trying to get a rise out of Bob. I would think the 243 would do a lot of damage as well on those smaller animals. Even a 223 would probably be pretty tough on them, unless you use a really tough bullet, like a TSX.I'm not really a user of the .243 in particular but the 22 Hornet and 416 barrels were not going to work for this application. I could have brought a 3rd barrel and probably should have done so. That's one of the lessons learned as you transition among so many different types of hunting for a T10 specific trip. Nothing really covers all ofd the applications. Yes you could use a 257 Wby or 300 win mag for all of it but on the close shots you would have little steenboks and duikers raining down in pieces.
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.3 grand is a lot for Sharpe's. Time and $ are big factors in how you approach taking the T10. There is nowhere you can get all of them in one location. Some places are higher cost than others but more convenient since you are there. In this case, trophy fees were 2500 for Sharpe's grysbok and 2300 for red duiker. There is almost no place in Limpopo where you could get both of those at any cost but you can here...for some cost.
@TOBY458I can only imagine that @Bob Nelson 35Whelen would tell you that your lack of success on that day was due to your choice of using a 243! Great report so far!