Africa – Day Eight Friday, August 19, 2016
I wake up very early. I know this is my last full hunting day. I will have a few hours Saturday morning, but today is my LAST CHANCE for the buffalo. I get ready like it is the finals of a major sporting event. In a way, it is. I have progressed through all the other animals to reach the final bracket for the championship. I am facing off against my opponent: Cape Buffalo. He has the home field advantage.
We do not start hunting the buffalo so early in the morning as the wind is not steady. We look for an impala. They were so plentiful the first four days and now it is like they went on vacation. I don’t see a single impala, but I did see a bunch of blue wildebeest. This animal is often referred to as the poor man’s buffalo. Maybe this is the best I will get? I look for the best one in the herd and when I have a good view, I hit him broadside. I know I got him right in the lung and I watch him run off, demolishing a tree stump that is three feet high or at least it was until he obliterated it, leaving a large spray of blood from his wound on the ground nearby.
We leave him alone for about 20 minutes to expire and then start to track him. He is not down, but we can tell he is hurting. He sees us and runs. We don’t have all day to track this animal and so John fires a shot with the rifle and then the wildebeest disappears from sight. I know John is a good shot and don’t question his ability with a gun, but I think he missed because that ‘beest didn’t slow down and I don’t see a lot of blood.
When we get to the tree stump, I can see part of my arrow. It broke off with the broadhead still inside him, but I have seen that movie before and it didn’t have a happy ending for the hunter. From the shaft, I can tell I had about twelve inches of penetration. Had I used my monster safari, I would have blown out the other side and the blood trail would have been thicker and probably a lot shorter too. I mention this to John and during the discussion, I learn he thought my no-cam I am using for plains game was a 70lb bow, not a 60lb bow.
I decide that the next time I come to Africa, I will have a 70lb bow for my plains game animals because I am tired of having to run these creatures down. I want a cleaner and faster kill.
We track the blue wildebeest for maybe two hours. I get separated from John and Johannes and double back to the road. Eventually, I hear two rifle shots. Apparently the poor man’s buffalo also has a temper and he cornered our tracker Johannes, who needed a tree to keep him safe. John shot the wildebeest to protect Johannes. I know some people get frustrated when the PH has to shoot an animal, but safety first and it is my fault for not downing him. I make a promise to myself to not put John in a position where he has to fire again.
Later, as we examine him, we see my wound was fatal, but we didn’t give him enough time to expire. These animals are freaking tough as hell. Lessons learned. I am glad Johannes is safe. Now we pack up and head to the buffalo.
We have one advantage this year and that is the drought. Coming from a farm in California, it is hard to say that is an advantage but for hunting it has its perks. Aside from the animals needing to drink more often because the grass and leaves are so dry, there simply isn’t enough food for them to eat and they are hungry. I bet they can smell some alfalfa. We position ourselves between the herd and a waterhole.
The buffalo will be coming our way soon and I hope to ambush them. We set a trap for them like we tried before, but this time, we are going to make it better. We cut down all the tree branches we can find and make a nice bit of cover. It is not that tall and so I have to attempt to shoot from a sitting position again.
We wait and our patience pays off, as I can see the herd coming into visual range. The buffalo smell us by the time the point bull gets into shooting range. Now it is time for the surprise. We have a second PH upwind of them. We quietly alert him on the radio and Carl steps into view. He throws some alfalfa on the ground and moves away. They watch him intently, but he has his rifle hidden from their view and stands about a hundred yards upwind. At this point, I know they must smell us, but maybe we all smell alike to them. They smell humans and see Carl. At first, just the lead bull eats, but eventually they all come in to feed. Ever alert, there is always at a minimum two bulls watching Carl intently.
John and I are hiding in some cover that will obscure the buffalo being able to see us, but our cover would not stop a paintball, let alone a pissed off buffalo. I am not a boy scout, but I am prepared and already have a tree picked out just in case something goes awry.
Finally, I see my bull and he is now close enough to shoot. I draw back my bow but before he turns to give me a good angle, another bull gets between us. Now I have already drawn my eighty pound bow and I cannot let it down without making enough noise to spook them. I just have to hold it. The younger bull does not move and John softly whispers to ask if I can hold it this long. I tell him for this beast, I will hold it as long as I have to.
It feels like forever, but eventually the bull in the way moves. Unfortunately, now my bull is facing directly towards us - and much closer now. A frontal shot on a buffalo from a bow is not fatal for the buffalo, but can be for the hunter – especially at close range. Before they came in, I had ranged all over the area to be prepared and I know the bull is now just FIFTEEN YARDS AWAY!!That is much closer than I had wanted to be to this animal given his propensity for just being ornery and vindictive. My preference would have been about 30 yards, but you get what you get.
He sniffs at the alfalfa and takes a bit in his mouth and then looks right at me. I cannot tell if he sees me or not. I hold my breath, but maybe he can hear my heart beating. I know I can. I can see his nostrils flare as he exhales. I don’t feel any cold chills running down my spine, but I can feel some burning in my arms. I sit and wait, holding the pain and keeping as motionless as possible, knowing that the slightest movement will draw his attention and alert him to my presence.
Without moving my head, I scan the area as best I can. I count FIVE buffalo that are closer than 20 yards to me. Not a single bull in the herd is more than 30 yards away.
Finally, my bull turns to his right and I get a slightly quartering away shot. The instant his head glances to the right and I am no longer in his peripheral vision, I let go of the string. I see the arrow hit him low in the left side and disappear. I panic, thinking that I shot him too low, forgetting that I am shooting from a lower vantage point as I am not standing and the arrow was actually going parallel to the ground instead of at a downward trajectory. John flashes me the thumbs up.
It runs 65 yards and lays down, surrounded by the herd. The other PH heads over towards the herd and I hear a single gunshot from his rifle. I look at John, obviously not understanding what is going on. John listens to the other PH over the walkie-talkie and then tells me “Carl shot your bull.”
My jaw hits the floor. I stagger a bit from the shock. John looks at me and decides he has had enough satisfaction in my reactions and continues, “No, your bull is dead – he shot in the air to scare off the other buffalo.” If I wasn’t so happy, I would be mad but he got me good.
He was the dominant bull of the group and Carl worried that one of the other bulls might take advantage of the situation and challenge him, damaging his hide or horns in the process. Carl shot into the air to disperse the rest of the herd. Now it is time to go and see my buffalo.
We find my arrow on the ground about 25 yards from where the animal was shot. The back 6 inches or so are missing. All three of us assume the rest of the arrow is still in the bull. We see the bull lying down on his side and before we approach, John wants to make sure he is dead. If we get close and the bull gets up, John or Carl will have to shoot it for real and none of us want that, so John asks me to put another arrow into him to make sure he is dead. I bury one deep into the middle of his back and he doesn’t even twitch. John sneaks up and touches his eyeball but he doesn’t even blink. He is dead. We call in the crew to help turn him over and clear an area to take some pictures.
John and Carl estimate he weighs about 800kg (1,760 lbs) with about 36 or 37 inch horns. This is short of the forty inch target people try to hit, but I am satisfied. There were bulls in the group with longer horns – many of them over 40 inches, but this was the dominant alpha bull and the oldest of the group. I would still rather have him than any of the others in the herd.
John phones his best friend, Dana, to tell him about the kill. I know that the Cape buffalo is a tough animal. In twenty-five years as a professional hunter, sixteen years specializing in bow hunting, John Henry had never seen a pass through on a Cape buffalo. Although Dana is not home, he wants to see this buffalo killed with a pass through shot. He tells us not to leave the ranch – he will be there in 40 minutes. We take numerous photos and then load the beast into the truck. With five men and a winch, it is still a struggle.
On the way back to the skinning room, we drive to Dana’s ranch, which is next door to John Henry’s. We pull in front of his house and turn off the engine and I hear a noise in the distance. I turn to look and see an airplane banking and coming in to land right in front of us, pulling up just short of the truck. It is all very surreal that a big time hunter wants to fly in to see this animal I shot. There are discussions flying back and forth between John Henry and Dana and I hear the word unbelievable many times. We all shake hands and invite Dana and Carl over for a barbeque tonight. What a day!
We get the bull back to the slaughterhouse and I break out my bowie knives to help skin him. Earlier, when I shot him in the back, I was unable to remove the arrowhead and just unscrewed the arrow and left the tip in him. I pull that broadhead out from the inside where it broke through a large rib and then John steps in with a Ziploc bag and cuts out a huge fillet and puts it in the bag. I am getting a great dinner tonight. I laugh and tell him this will be the most expensive steak I have ever had. We get further down inside the bull and I discover the fletches and back part of my arrow are not there. Originally I thought perhaps the arrow broke inside him and both parts still came out, but on later reflection and some watching of the video I shot, the arrow came out and I guess it was trampled by the herd, breaking the end off and I do not recover it. Maybe one day they will find it out in the field, but I will be long gone by then.
Now that we have the buffalo opened up for an informal autopsy, we can do an analysis of the shot. I hit and broke a rib on the way in, went through both lungs, shot right through his heart and broke a rib on the way out. I could not have had a better shot. We head back to the lodge and I go shower up and try to do a little packing in advance of tomorrow so that I might have a little bit more time to hunt. I still don’t have Laci’s impala, but it is hard to not feel like I have already accomplished what I set out to do here. All cleaned up, I head over to the lodge for some dinner.
They bring me the fillet, some salt, pepper and spices. I have not cooked once since I arrive here but I want to do the honors on this fillet. It is absolutely delicious. I love steak, but this thing is so big that I cannot possibly finish it and I share with everybody else.
We talk, we swap stories and tell jokes for hours. It is a wonderful way to cap what has been the best vacation of my life. I do still need some horns for Laci, but hope to get them in the morning.
Later in bed, I am looking over what I have done here and adding up the numbers. It looks like I will have donated five thousand pounds of meat to the poor in Africa on this trip. The poor don’t have refrigerators and freezers for long term storage of perishable food, so it must be made into jerky. The meat is taken to a local church that handles that part of the process and many of the members of the church donate time and energy to make and distribute the food. Unfortunately, I will not be able to get pictures of this. I suspect that if every hunting photo on Facebook also came with photos of all the underfed children in Africa getting free food, there would be a different opinion of trophy hunting back home. This is one side of hunting that the anti-hunters just don’t see or understand and that is really unfortunate. The giraffe alone provided 1,985 pounds of meat. That is nearly twenty thousand McDonald’s hamburgers, if you convert it into McUnits of food.
It is very easy for me to see how much hunting has contributed to South Africa. The revenue, jobs created and food provided for the locals are all substantial. It has also done a remarkable job of preserving these magnificent animals, whose populations have exploded in South Africa as so many more acres have been put into conservation efforts to support the industry. I also feel that it is difficult to truly appreciate some of these animals like the Cape buffalo until you try and hunt it for days on end. Although I have a couple hours left to hunt in the morning, I can sense the finality of this trip and am beginning to miss it before I have even left.