This a good thread with plenty of good comments. I did read all eleven pages, but please keep in mind the my memory, reading comprehension, and attention span is not what it once was.
We all hunt for our own personal reasons. My biggest enjoyment is walking and tracking in remote areas off the beaten path. It has been my good fortune to have hunted areas where few white men have ever set foot. Some of these hunts come at a price and I have not killed a long list of animals. Even going to Mozambique or Zimbabwe will require more time because of additional travel time and expense along with higher freight for trophies. We do not even want to talk about the expense of charter aircraft.
Other people want to hunt to kill 10 or 12 specific animals and want to do it in a week. This is the experience they enjoy. I will not criticize a hunter for this and just hope they do not do it in a 200 acre kennel on animals release that day.
That being said I have never hunted a fenced operation in South Africa. The closest I have come to hunting a fenced area was the Save Valley Conservancy. It is 850,000 acres with only perimeter fence. The only time I saw the fence was driving in and the day we left. It is a beautiful area, I hunted with one of the best operators in all of Africa, and had a great time. BUT, (there had to be a but) it had a different feel. Multiple roads, bridges, watering holes, ranch houses, etc just did not make it feel like old Africa. Again it is a great area, the hunting was very good and not easy, and many people think it is the best place on earth. I do feel a little sorrow for hunters who have never slept in a fly camp, have not been the only hunter on 1/2 million acre concession and not see another person the entire trip, never tracked an animal for 10 hours without crossing a road, never spent time in a true East Africa tented camp, have not been charged by elephants or walked up on a wild lion in the dark, or be one of the few white people a tribe has ever seen (that takes days of traveling by truck, canoe, and walking in the Congo)
Do we at times place too much emphasis on cost, of course we do, it is human nature. One of the last threads I started on AH was about how high conservation efforts ranked when choosing an operator for Africa (
Conservation, how important is it when choosing an outfitter:
https://www.africahunting.com/threa...rtant-is-it-when-choosing-an-outfitter.25518/). It did not generate many responses but it is very important to me. At times we (meaning me) beat up the south African operators a little, but without them there would be little to no wildlife in South Africa. Just another good example of if it pays it stays.
Save your money, buy the best possible hunt you can that fits your needs. Personally I could never afford a cheap hunt.