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Sable Antelope Hunting - Shot Placement
Sable Antelope Hunting - Shot Placement
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Would Anyone care to share their African Sable Hunting experiences with the members???
Couldn't agree more Simon.I think there is a big difference in the different areas where sable are hunted and it will all depend on each hunter, it remains his choice of the type of hunt he wants. Lets have a look at for example sable in the E.Cape or Free State, these animals don't occur naturally in these areas, generally maybe herds of max 50, these animals are worth anything from 20-30 000$ alive, so why would you be able to hunt them for roughly 5000$ each, bulls that have bad genetics, broken horns or in general not good genetics. I personally wouldn't want to hunt on a place that has 2-3 pre selected bulls, I prefer the excitement of not knowing what bull you going to run into.
Zambia and Zim have natural sable and you don't know what you going to run into.
The two main types Typical sable(common) 41.7/8 and East African sable(Roosevelt) 34 inches is min. to make Rowland Ward. So according to scale if you shoot a 44 inch common or say a 40 in Roosevelt, which is the more impressive trophy? Going 2 or 6 inches over Rowland Ward.
Mozambique: when hunting the Roosevlt sable you know you will be hunting wild free range sable, on a typical day out you might see anything from 30 to 600 sable in day. Last season we saw several bulls over 40 inches and @buffybr was around for a bull we estimate was 44 inches and later on in the season we started seeing a bull that made the 44" look like his much younger brother.
Sable are really tough animals and can handle a pounding, if he drops with your shot and looks stone, don't start the celebrations, you reload and get your scope back onto him asap and wait for at least a minute, I have seen plenty of dead sable stand and bolt, you need to be ready. @BRICKBURN , he had the perfectly placed shot on his sable last year and he still took off like a bullet, I can't remember how far the sable went, 150/200 yards into the long grass, gave us about half an hour of holding our breath looking for him.
To see free range wild sable in their natural habitat is MAJESTIC!!View attachment 55332