Favorite caliber for cape buffalo?

Welcome to AH.
Used a .416 Ruger on my only buffalo. One shot kill. A .375 would have done the job.
A .458 Lott will be used on my next… Just because I have one.
Hopefully I’ll get to chase a few more buff. I’d like to use my .375 H&H and .375 Wby. Once again, because I have them.
Although I think the Lott will perform the best, I really like the .416 Ruger.
 
I have killed a lot of buff with 416 Rigby it has always worked great
 
Used 300 win mag...it worked....also 416 rigby and 470.....would say out of the 3 the 416 rigby a very good choice for general hunting of them.....as it will generally have a scope on it....I love iron sights...but don't think they are for everyone.....pains me to say it but that 375 h&h thing also works very well.....:X3:
 
I don't have a favorite caliber for cape buffalo. I don't have enough money to buy all the wonderful calibers to make that decision. What is effective? I got mine with a 375H&H and only because I used my brother's gun as a memorial hunt in his name when he died.
 
Think a .300 WSM is enough? Scope or iron s

I don't have a favorite caliber for cape buffalo. I don't have enough money to buy all the wonderful calibers to make that decision. What is effective? I got mine with a 375H&H and only because I used my brother's gun as a memorial hunt in his name when he died.
Well, that sir blows all the other chamberings and rifles out of the water. Great tribute.
 
For Cape buffalo, a .375 Holland & Holland Magnum (wide V backsights and uncovered ivory bead foresight) loaded with 300Gr premium grade expanding bullets has always suited me best. Based upon current market choices, I am (at the moment) using the 300Gr Barnes TSX. If availability was not an issue, then I would also prefer Swift A Frames or Federal Premium Trophy Bonded Bear Claws.

P.S: Modern sportsmen might prefer a low power telescopic sight (not too high magnification) instead of iron sights, if they feel more confident in it’s ability to make a cleaner initial shot. But I stipulate that the mounts should be quick detachable for follow up work in the thickets/dense vegetation.
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I’ve used a 375H&H and a 458 Win Mag to shoot my buffalo with. I made good first shots with both calibers. I will say that the 458 had a much more noticeable effect on the buffalo than the 375H&H did. My next buffalo will be hunted with a 404Jeffery. I’ve not used that caliber on buffalo but did great on a hippo I shot. At some point I will use a 416 Rem to try and shoot a buffalo as well.

Find something, in an adequate and legal caliber that you can shoot accurately on a consistent basis, practice, a lot with said rifle/cartridge and then go have fun.
 
Matter of choice. I started young, instead of fancy cars I bought hunts. Also the cost of lion, elephant, were less expensive. Today’s prices take my breath away.. the countries were wilder and more exciting. I have said before I have been a lucky man. I gritted my teeth and spent the money. Still glad I did,
 
Rapier or broadsword. Both work, and neither work if the bullet is in the wrong place. As the client, you have one overriding responsibility - put the first bullet in exactly the right place. Do that and everyone goes back to camp to celebrate your bull. Blow that first shot and very bad things can happen and likely not you.

For a first buffalo, I would strongly recommend the rapier rather than the broadsword. If you have done a bit of deer hunting, then I suspect you are very comfortable with a scoped bolt action rifle. The easiest transition is to a .375 of similar configuration. Load it with a quality 300 gr bullet like a Swift A-Frame and it will kill any buffalo that ever lived just as dead as a .416 or any other forty something.

Scope it. On a thirty day safari to East Africa in the fifties, you could play around with open sights, heck even wound and lose a buffalo or two and no one would care. On today's typical 7-10 day buffalo hunts your one and only shot at your trophy of a lifetime may be a old bull standing seventy yards away with three of his pals in very dark brush. The shot window to your bull is a foot in diameter. With a scoped .375 off the sticks that is an absolutely makeable shot because you can clearly differentiate your bull from the others and see the shot window. With open sights, or worse yet, a double with open sights you will see a black blob and get to test your ethics as a hunter of whether or not to walk away.

Secondly, the .375 is the most versatile rifle you can take to Africa. By that I don't mean it is a good compromise. Rather, no one has yet created a more versatile chambering for everything that walks on the continent. On one typical buffalo hunt in Moz, I took a great bull, and a great selection of plains game ranging from an 8lb Suni through sable and Lichtenstein Hartebeest to a two-thousand pound Livingstone Eland. All were taken with the same rifle, load, and scope.

I own a .404, 500/416, 450, and .470. I shoot them all very well. All four of my buffalo were killed with a .375. All were killed with one shot, though two were given insurance shots after they were down, and none went more than 25 yards are so. When it is time to pack up for another trip to Africa, it will again be a .375 that accompanies me. Nothing is more versatile.
 
975 grain arrow, fixed 2 blade broadhead from a Mathews Monster Safari bow. Stalk one of these to less than 30 yards without a gun if you want to feel a rush.
 
I have used 404 Jeffrey with 400 grain TSX, 450-400 with Hornady bonded, and 416 Rigby with 400 grain TSX.

Rigby has gotten it done the quickest. I plan to use 470 and 458 Lott for the next ones.
 
.470 NE, if I can get close enough.

.416 Rigby, if I need to use a scope.
 

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