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South Africa: Adroda Safari’s Free Range Hunt Report
Michelle and I have just returned from a long Holiday in Africa, arriving in Johannesburg on 9 June and departed on 26 June. The trip was broken into two separate adventures across South Africa and Zimbabwe, this is part one! As usual, I tend to get a bit long winded at times but there should be plenty of pics to keep you interested!
Safari Operator/PH: Adroda Safari’s with PH owner/operator Adrian Salter
Area: South Africa Provinces Mpumalanga and KwaZulu-Natal
For those that are new or unfamiliar with the South African Provinces, I’ve attached a map, courtesy of embassyworld.com. Due to the proximity to Johannesburg, no additional in-country flight connections were required.
Flight Reservations: @TRAVEL EXPRESS with the late Lori Spears
Dates of Hunt: 9 – 18 June 2021
Weapons:
#1. Weatherby Mark 5 Outfitter FDE, 300 Weatherby with 3-12x Bushnell Long Range Hunting Scope (MIL/MIL). Hand loaded with 200gr Nosler Accubond at 3000fps.
#2. Christensen Arms Ridgeline, 6.5x284 Norma with Zeiss Victory 4-16x50 FL. Hand loaded with 140gr Nosler Accubond at 2900 fps.
Both rifles outfitted with the Spartan Precision fitting for the Davros head which was installed on my vanguard tripod as well as the Spartan Precision tactical bi-pod I brought along in my luggage.
Rifle Case: Pelican Storm 3300
Rifle Clearing Service: Africa Sky Guesthouse
Targeted Animals: Serval, Fallow Deer, Reedbuck, Mountain Reedbuck, Vaal Rhebok, Eland, Nyala
Animals taken: Fallow, Reedbuck x 2, Mountain Reedbuck, Vaal Rhebok, Nyala, Common Duiker and Springbok
Preface
I began discussions with Adroda Safaris in September 2019 after reading about a hunt report on another website and his ability to provide free range hunting for certain species. Adrian and I seemed to hit it off well and made plans for a 10-day hunt in June 2021. We solidified the dates during 2020 DSC as I was booking another adventure in Zimbabwe and wanted one trip to Africa. Adrian was very accommodating and a plan was now in place! COVID shutdowns quickly followed but the only impacts were to re-schedule flights after Delta cancelled with Lori @ Travel Express to Qatar airlines. We will miss you, Lori!
Qatar’s additional legs and flight times casued an additional day of travel onto both the front and back ends of the trip. We also needed to account for additional time while in Africa for COVID testing and results. All the detailed planning worked out perfectly and we had no travel interruptions until our Dallas to Pensacola flight was delayed at the very end of our journey.
A few words about Adrian, he is a young PH but has accumulated a vast amount of experience from plains game to dangerous game. He has a large pack of well-kept hounds and travels across southern Africa supporting leopard hound hunts as well as taking care of problem animals. I mentioned well kept, but better put, he cares for all his dogs. If they are injured, they go to the vet no matter the cost. If they can’t hunt, they are not discarded but are kept and taken care of at his house. If you are interested in a hound leopard or bush pig hunt anywhere in Southern Africa, or any other type of plains or dangerous game hunt, give Adrian a call.
Adrian and I discussed the type of open terrain we would be hunting from open cattle pastures to the treeless grasslands of the foothills to the Drakensburg Mountain Range. I purchased the 300 Wby and decided on the 200 grain Accubond for the heavier weight, bonded construction and good ballistic coefficient with long shots expected. I already had a Savage Long Range Hunter in 6.5x284 and had used the 140 grain Accubond with great performance on ~ 8 whitetail deer from close to long range. The Savage is exceedingly heavy and picked up the Christensen Arms Ridgeline for this trip knowing we would be climbing and walking at higher elevations. I believed I was set for the hunt!
Day 1, arrival in Johannesburg on Wednesday 9 June: The Qatar flight from Doha touches down at 0400 and Michelle and I know the drill. Get to the head of the Passport line as quickly as possible and collect our bags. Everything went smoothly and we were headed out the doors to the receiving area in minutes. Gilbert from Africa Sky was there and we exchanged greetings as it’s been a few years since we’ve last seen each other. The good folks from @RiflePermits were also awaiting other hunters and they recognized me from a previous trip and we all had a good reunion! I used Africa Sky to clear our weapons as we would be staying with them on two separate occasions during our trip.
We were the first into the SAPS office and had our weapons cleared in minutes and back out into the lobby to meet with Adrian who had just arrived since the COVID curfew ended at 0400. Adrian had heard Michelle likes red wine and surprises her with a bottle at the airport, nice touch!
We load all four of our checked bags into the Land Cruiser and feel the bite of the 5 degree C air! Coming from Florida this was a bit of a shock but we were prepared as Adrian had sent some pictures of snow-covered hills and told us to dress warm! I tossed out the soft rifle cases and we added additional warm jackets and boots the day before we left!
We traveled about 250 km out of Johannesburg towards our first hunting area in Mpumalanga for Serval and Fallow Deer and met up with a local PH Axel Engman at his Hummingbird Bed and Breakfast near Ermelo. Greetings quickly turned into Axel showing us pictures of a grand Fallow deer he has been chasing over the past 3 years, with the latest sighting a few months earlier in April! Ok, now I was excited as we shivered in the 2 degree C air!
The hunting lodge was approximately 20 minutes away and as we traveled cross country on dirt roads through farm fields still full of maize with high grass alongside the roadways. All the rain that had fallen earlier in the year caused heavy growth and the weather hadn’t turned cold until the week before we arrived and the crops had yet to be harvested.
As we followed Axel in his vehicle, he slowed and there was a Serval on the border of the grass and maize in broad daylight visible for just a few moments before it disappeared! We continued on seeing Duiker and then another Serval by 0830! The heck with being tired after 40 hours of travel, I was pumped!
The farm was once a game farm but was being reverted back to a cattle farm, a 2800 Hectare property of mostly hilly wide-open grassland. There were color variations of Blesbok behind a game fence on the property as well as high fence around an apple orchard to keep out the animals on the property which included Blesbok, Mountain Reedbuck, Vaal Rhebok, Serval, Waterbuck, Duiker and Springbok.
We settled our bags into the stone lodge that felt like being inside a freezer with the stone holding the cold! Our room was nice and the savior was a heater in the bathroom which we left on for two straight days. The bed had an electric blanket so it wasn’t unbearable but stepping barefoot onto the floor was like walking on ice! A few pictures of the very nice lodge.
Common area
I grab both rifles and Axel, Adrian and I head out to verify zero. I wouldn’t mention this but it’s important we all check zero, but it turned out to be a chuckle for us over the next couple of days. We put a 4 x 6 shoot-n-see target on a big tree, at least four feet across, and backed out to about 185 yards. The 6.5 x 284 hit just above the bull and was exactly where I expected it to land. I grab the 300 Wby and promptly miss the entire tree! What the heck? It must have landed somewhere but we can’t find a splash anywhere on the tree. Ok, I’m not satisfied yet as I want to shoot longer range, we back off close to 300 yards after placing the target on a large horizontal limb higher off the ground to ensure clear line of sight and take a shot with each rifle, a little left of center on both but good height. The wind had started blowing hard and had pushed both bullets to the left. I was satisfied with the shots and shooting off the back of the truck but what the heck happened on that first shot from the 300?
We head back to the lodge for lunch and a quick “lie down” before heading out to see if we can find the big Fallow deer. I set the alarm before Michelle and I nod off for an hour.
We all gather in the early afternoon and I grab the 300 Wby as we leave the lodge and head off the property to a free-range hunting area 20-25 minutes away. As we open the low fence cattle gate, I realize we are now hunting in Africa again, even though it’s a European species we are after, as it’s been 3 long years since the last two Zimbabwe safaris in 2018!
We bounce deeper into the hunting area down a two track, cattle everywhere in sight and we see a group of Blesbok on the hillside. The area is mainly open grassland with some patches of brush, small groups of trees spread across the hills and valleys. Michelle shoots them with the Olympus E-M1.
The bakkie stops part way up the spine of a ridge and the four of us begin a slow walk across the rocky ground and up the hill. It’s not long before eight or nine fallow does are in front of us running from our right to left, headed towards the neighbors fence which we don’t have permission to hunt.
We continue up and reach the crest as a lone fallow buck moves quickly across the hillside a couple hundred yards away, headed in the same direction as the does. Michelle is able to get a shot with the camera, but long distance, overcast skies and moving makes a tough shot but it's a buck!
We are roughly paralleling the neighbors fence line and the PHs spot a herd of fallow down below us in the bottom of the valley but on the neighbor’s property. I finally figure out where they are looking and can see some small bucks and does but the PHs have spotted the big fallow on the edge of a thicket with some does. It takes me a bit to locate the big guy 330 yards away while Michelle and Adrian use her camera to snap a photo and zoom in on the view screen of her Olympus EM1 Mk 3. They give me a glimpse and I take a deep breath!
We are stuck, the light is failing and the fallow don’t look like they are interested in moving up out of the valley onto “our” side of the fence. Adrian and Axel have a quick discussion and decide to WhatsApp the neighbor, what can we lose except a “no”? Fallow are now out feeding including some young bucks, about 450 yards out.
We settle in waiting for a response, watching and waiting as the light continues to dim as shooting time is quickly coming to an end, especially down on the valley floor. Michelle and I spot another good buck up in the trees pointed in the right direction but still 350 plus yards away as we keep tabs on him while waiting for an answer from the farmer.
Seconds seem like minutes which seem like hours as time goes by as evening is upon us. I’m sitting on my rear just enjoying the evening thinking about possible moves we should make in the morning to try and intercept the big buck if they come across the fence and feed during the night. To give a wider view of the area of the fallow, I circled the area in red.
A reply comes in via WhatsApp, it’s a go! Adrian had sweetened the trophy fee to the landowner, whether that made a difference or not, I’m not sure. I’m sitting with Michelle a few yards up the hill and slide down to them with my tri-pod set up for a sitting position, snap in the rifle to the Spartan Precision adapter/fitting and ask for the range, 330 yards. I dial in 1.2 mils of elevation and try and find the buck. The big fallow disappears into the brushy bottom and disappears. Time is about up, as the thin crosshairs are getting hard to see against the dark background. The does begin to emerge on the other side of the draw and climb up the slope, Adrian does a good job of guiding my sight picture to them. “Just wait, the buck will follow” Adrian whispers. “What’s the range” I ask, now 370 yards, another .3 mils dialed in as the buck emerges. He stops in front of some brush slightly quartering away as I place the crosshairs up the front leg, exhale and send the round.
The red up arrow in the photo is where the buck was standing at the shot, moving up from the green thicket below.
A resounding thump is heard almost half a second later (.44 seconds to be exact) as the buck stumbles up the hill a few yards and tips over. Congratulations all around as both PHs are ecstatic as we got the big guy! We all begin to pick our way down the steep rocky hill, Michelle and I fall behind as we take our time trying not to break a leg or poke out an eye on a branch, now 50 hours without a solid sleep! We break out our lights as Adrian and Axel guide us to them and we first see the old warrior.
I’m shocked at his body size, heavily palmated antlers, worn down top points, and long guard points (G1 and 2’s?) as I place my hand on him in emotion and thank the old monarch. We try and set up a few photos with the last vestiges of a sky but will need to rely on lights for the pictures.
He is old and gray, some of the bottom teeth are loose in his mouth. If this wasn’t such a bountiful year due to the rains, he may not have made it much longer. Perfect animal to take out of the herd before he would die a long death.
Axel hikes back to the bakkie and has to come around through the other farm to get to us. Thirty to 45 minutes later we see lights in the trees behind us and can hear the truck chugging up the hill, breaking through the brush. We load up the fallow after cutting loose excess barbed wire stuck in the truck chassis. We shine for Serval on the way home but come up empty, it’s gotten very cold without the warmth of the sun and few animals of any type are seen, made all the more difficult with the heavy ground cover. We celebrate with dinner, drinks and cluster around the warm fireplace with some nice red wine until much later than we planned all getting to know each other a bit better. What a long but satisfying first day!
I’m always interested in bullet performance, the 200 grain Accubond did a fantastic job with full penetration, breaking the shoulders with just a small exit wound indicating limited expansion but to be expected with the impact velocity of ~2350 fps. I was pleased with the bullet performance and all the time I have spent at the range definitely paid off.
More to come as I put the report together for Day 2!
Michelle and I have just returned from a long Holiday in Africa, arriving in Johannesburg on 9 June and departed on 26 June. The trip was broken into two separate adventures across South Africa and Zimbabwe, this is part one! As usual, I tend to get a bit long winded at times but there should be plenty of pics to keep you interested!
Safari Operator/PH: Adroda Safari’s with PH owner/operator Adrian Salter
Area: South Africa Provinces Mpumalanga and KwaZulu-Natal
For those that are new or unfamiliar with the South African Provinces, I’ve attached a map, courtesy of embassyworld.com. Due to the proximity to Johannesburg, no additional in-country flight connections were required.
Flight Reservations: @TRAVEL EXPRESS with the late Lori Spears
Dates of Hunt: 9 – 18 June 2021
Weapons:
#1. Weatherby Mark 5 Outfitter FDE, 300 Weatherby with 3-12x Bushnell Long Range Hunting Scope (MIL/MIL). Hand loaded with 200gr Nosler Accubond at 3000fps.
#2. Christensen Arms Ridgeline, 6.5x284 Norma with Zeiss Victory 4-16x50 FL. Hand loaded with 140gr Nosler Accubond at 2900 fps.
Both rifles outfitted with the Spartan Precision fitting for the Davros head which was installed on my vanguard tripod as well as the Spartan Precision tactical bi-pod I brought along in my luggage.
Rifle Case: Pelican Storm 3300
Rifle Clearing Service: Africa Sky Guesthouse
Targeted Animals: Serval, Fallow Deer, Reedbuck, Mountain Reedbuck, Vaal Rhebok, Eland, Nyala
Animals taken: Fallow, Reedbuck x 2, Mountain Reedbuck, Vaal Rhebok, Nyala, Common Duiker and Springbok
Preface
I began discussions with Adroda Safaris in September 2019 after reading about a hunt report on another website and his ability to provide free range hunting for certain species. Adrian and I seemed to hit it off well and made plans for a 10-day hunt in June 2021. We solidified the dates during 2020 DSC as I was booking another adventure in Zimbabwe and wanted one trip to Africa. Adrian was very accommodating and a plan was now in place! COVID shutdowns quickly followed but the only impacts were to re-schedule flights after Delta cancelled with Lori @ Travel Express to Qatar airlines. We will miss you, Lori!
Qatar’s additional legs and flight times casued an additional day of travel onto both the front and back ends of the trip. We also needed to account for additional time while in Africa for COVID testing and results. All the detailed planning worked out perfectly and we had no travel interruptions until our Dallas to Pensacola flight was delayed at the very end of our journey.
A few words about Adrian, he is a young PH but has accumulated a vast amount of experience from plains game to dangerous game. He has a large pack of well-kept hounds and travels across southern Africa supporting leopard hound hunts as well as taking care of problem animals. I mentioned well kept, but better put, he cares for all his dogs. If they are injured, they go to the vet no matter the cost. If they can’t hunt, they are not discarded but are kept and taken care of at his house. If you are interested in a hound leopard or bush pig hunt anywhere in Southern Africa, or any other type of plains or dangerous game hunt, give Adrian a call.
Adrian and I discussed the type of open terrain we would be hunting from open cattle pastures to the treeless grasslands of the foothills to the Drakensburg Mountain Range. I purchased the 300 Wby and decided on the 200 grain Accubond for the heavier weight, bonded construction and good ballistic coefficient with long shots expected. I already had a Savage Long Range Hunter in 6.5x284 and had used the 140 grain Accubond with great performance on ~ 8 whitetail deer from close to long range. The Savage is exceedingly heavy and picked up the Christensen Arms Ridgeline for this trip knowing we would be climbing and walking at higher elevations. I believed I was set for the hunt!
Day 1, arrival in Johannesburg on Wednesday 9 June: The Qatar flight from Doha touches down at 0400 and Michelle and I know the drill. Get to the head of the Passport line as quickly as possible and collect our bags. Everything went smoothly and we were headed out the doors to the receiving area in minutes. Gilbert from Africa Sky was there and we exchanged greetings as it’s been a few years since we’ve last seen each other. The good folks from @RiflePermits were also awaiting other hunters and they recognized me from a previous trip and we all had a good reunion! I used Africa Sky to clear our weapons as we would be staying with them on two separate occasions during our trip.
We were the first into the SAPS office and had our weapons cleared in minutes and back out into the lobby to meet with Adrian who had just arrived since the COVID curfew ended at 0400. Adrian had heard Michelle likes red wine and surprises her with a bottle at the airport, nice touch!
We load all four of our checked bags into the Land Cruiser and feel the bite of the 5 degree C air! Coming from Florida this was a bit of a shock but we were prepared as Adrian had sent some pictures of snow-covered hills and told us to dress warm! I tossed out the soft rifle cases and we added additional warm jackets and boots the day before we left!
We traveled about 250 km out of Johannesburg towards our first hunting area in Mpumalanga for Serval and Fallow Deer and met up with a local PH Axel Engman at his Hummingbird Bed and Breakfast near Ermelo. Greetings quickly turned into Axel showing us pictures of a grand Fallow deer he has been chasing over the past 3 years, with the latest sighting a few months earlier in April! Ok, now I was excited as we shivered in the 2 degree C air!
The hunting lodge was approximately 20 minutes away and as we traveled cross country on dirt roads through farm fields still full of maize with high grass alongside the roadways. All the rain that had fallen earlier in the year caused heavy growth and the weather hadn’t turned cold until the week before we arrived and the crops had yet to be harvested.
As we followed Axel in his vehicle, he slowed and there was a Serval on the border of the grass and maize in broad daylight visible for just a few moments before it disappeared! We continued on seeing Duiker and then another Serval by 0830! The heck with being tired after 40 hours of travel, I was pumped!
The farm was once a game farm but was being reverted back to a cattle farm, a 2800 Hectare property of mostly hilly wide-open grassland. There were color variations of Blesbok behind a game fence on the property as well as high fence around an apple orchard to keep out the animals on the property which included Blesbok, Mountain Reedbuck, Vaal Rhebok, Serval, Waterbuck, Duiker and Springbok.
We settled our bags into the stone lodge that felt like being inside a freezer with the stone holding the cold! Our room was nice and the savior was a heater in the bathroom which we left on for two straight days. The bed had an electric blanket so it wasn’t unbearable but stepping barefoot onto the floor was like walking on ice! A few pictures of the very nice lodge.
Common area
I grab both rifles and Axel, Adrian and I head out to verify zero. I wouldn’t mention this but it’s important we all check zero, but it turned out to be a chuckle for us over the next couple of days. We put a 4 x 6 shoot-n-see target on a big tree, at least four feet across, and backed out to about 185 yards. The 6.5 x 284 hit just above the bull and was exactly where I expected it to land. I grab the 300 Wby and promptly miss the entire tree! What the heck? It must have landed somewhere but we can’t find a splash anywhere on the tree. Ok, I’m not satisfied yet as I want to shoot longer range, we back off close to 300 yards after placing the target on a large horizontal limb higher off the ground to ensure clear line of sight and take a shot with each rifle, a little left of center on both but good height. The wind had started blowing hard and had pushed both bullets to the left. I was satisfied with the shots and shooting off the back of the truck but what the heck happened on that first shot from the 300?
We head back to the lodge for lunch and a quick “lie down” before heading out to see if we can find the big Fallow deer. I set the alarm before Michelle and I nod off for an hour.
We all gather in the early afternoon and I grab the 300 Wby as we leave the lodge and head off the property to a free-range hunting area 20-25 minutes away. As we open the low fence cattle gate, I realize we are now hunting in Africa again, even though it’s a European species we are after, as it’s been 3 long years since the last two Zimbabwe safaris in 2018!
We bounce deeper into the hunting area down a two track, cattle everywhere in sight and we see a group of Blesbok on the hillside. The area is mainly open grassland with some patches of brush, small groups of trees spread across the hills and valleys. Michelle shoots them with the Olympus E-M1.
The bakkie stops part way up the spine of a ridge and the four of us begin a slow walk across the rocky ground and up the hill. It’s not long before eight or nine fallow does are in front of us running from our right to left, headed towards the neighbors fence which we don’t have permission to hunt.
We continue up and reach the crest as a lone fallow buck moves quickly across the hillside a couple hundred yards away, headed in the same direction as the does. Michelle is able to get a shot with the camera, but long distance, overcast skies and moving makes a tough shot but it's a buck!
We are roughly paralleling the neighbors fence line and the PHs spot a herd of fallow down below us in the bottom of the valley but on the neighbor’s property. I finally figure out where they are looking and can see some small bucks and does but the PHs have spotted the big fallow on the edge of a thicket with some does. It takes me a bit to locate the big guy 330 yards away while Michelle and Adrian use her camera to snap a photo and zoom in on the view screen of her Olympus EM1 Mk 3. They give me a glimpse and I take a deep breath!
We are stuck, the light is failing and the fallow don’t look like they are interested in moving up out of the valley onto “our” side of the fence. Adrian and Axel have a quick discussion and decide to WhatsApp the neighbor, what can we lose except a “no”? Fallow are now out feeding including some young bucks, about 450 yards out.
We settle in waiting for a response, watching and waiting as the light continues to dim as shooting time is quickly coming to an end, especially down on the valley floor. Michelle and I spot another good buck up in the trees pointed in the right direction but still 350 plus yards away as we keep tabs on him while waiting for an answer from the farmer.
Seconds seem like minutes which seem like hours as time goes by as evening is upon us. I’m sitting on my rear just enjoying the evening thinking about possible moves we should make in the morning to try and intercept the big buck if they come across the fence and feed during the night. To give a wider view of the area of the fallow, I circled the area in red.
A reply comes in via WhatsApp, it’s a go! Adrian had sweetened the trophy fee to the landowner, whether that made a difference or not, I’m not sure. I’m sitting with Michelle a few yards up the hill and slide down to them with my tri-pod set up for a sitting position, snap in the rifle to the Spartan Precision adapter/fitting and ask for the range, 330 yards. I dial in 1.2 mils of elevation and try and find the buck. The big fallow disappears into the brushy bottom and disappears. Time is about up, as the thin crosshairs are getting hard to see against the dark background. The does begin to emerge on the other side of the draw and climb up the slope, Adrian does a good job of guiding my sight picture to them. “Just wait, the buck will follow” Adrian whispers. “What’s the range” I ask, now 370 yards, another .3 mils dialed in as the buck emerges. He stops in front of some brush slightly quartering away as I place the crosshairs up the front leg, exhale and send the round.
The red up arrow in the photo is where the buck was standing at the shot, moving up from the green thicket below.
A resounding thump is heard almost half a second later (.44 seconds to be exact) as the buck stumbles up the hill a few yards and tips over. Congratulations all around as both PHs are ecstatic as we got the big guy! We all begin to pick our way down the steep rocky hill, Michelle and I fall behind as we take our time trying not to break a leg or poke out an eye on a branch, now 50 hours without a solid sleep! We break out our lights as Adrian and Axel guide us to them and we first see the old warrior.
I’m shocked at his body size, heavily palmated antlers, worn down top points, and long guard points (G1 and 2’s?) as I place my hand on him in emotion and thank the old monarch. We try and set up a few photos with the last vestiges of a sky but will need to rely on lights for the pictures.
He is old and gray, some of the bottom teeth are loose in his mouth. If this wasn’t such a bountiful year due to the rains, he may not have made it much longer. Perfect animal to take out of the herd before he would die a long death.
Axel hikes back to the bakkie and has to come around through the other farm to get to us. Thirty to 45 minutes later we see lights in the trees behind us and can hear the truck chugging up the hill, breaking through the brush. We load up the fallow after cutting loose excess barbed wire stuck in the truck chassis. We shine for Serval on the way home but come up empty, it’s gotten very cold without the warmth of the sun and few animals of any type are seen, made all the more difficult with the heavy ground cover. We celebrate with dinner, drinks and cluster around the warm fireplace with some nice red wine until much later than we planned all getting to know each other a bit better. What a long but satisfying first day!
I’m always interested in bullet performance, the 200 grain Accubond did a fantastic job with full penetration, breaking the shoulders with just a small exit wound indicating limited expansion but to be expected with the impact velocity of ~2350 fps. I was pleased with the bullet performance and all the time I have spent at the range definitely paid off.
More to come as I put the report together for Day 2!