Sika98k
AH elite
- Joined
- Mar 28, 2014
- Messages
- 1,058
- Reaction score
- 2,073
- Location
- Dublin,Ireland
- Media
- 85
- Member of
- Wild Deer Association of Ireland
- Hunted
- South Africa Eastern Cape, Kenya,Namibia, Croatia, Morocco Ireland,Scotland,Czech, Denmark, Romania, Sweden,Norway,Latvia,Germany,Hungary,
First of all I will say that it took me a long time to settle on somewhere to hunt a buffalo .
i exchanged emails and WhatsApp with various of our sponsors. Sometimes dates didn’t work, terms and conditions didnt sit happily with me or simply it didn’t on reflection appeal enough.
Earlier this year I touched base with Wik Coetzee of @GAME 4 AFRICA SAFARIS. BTW, it’s pronounced Vik but he answers to all versions of it.
Dates and prices were good and agreed on. Basically I had seen his offer of a buffalo ,kudu and an impala on the site. A kudu has always appealed to me and I’ve had a life wish for a buffalo ever since buying a 375 made it become just that little bit more than a dream.
Flights were a problem. A buddy from Toronto was coming along also. We’ve hunted and toured in Namibia the last two years and this was our first venture to South Africa. Usually in Europe I fly with Lufthansa. They are an easy airline with firearms. Other options were Ethiopian and Egypt airlines. To minimise our flying times I eventually plumped on Lufthansa. Unfortunately they now no longer allow a sporting firearm in your case for free. I declined their generous offer of €250 each way to transport my rifle.
C had to fly into Heathrow, layover 4 hours and on to Frankfurt where we met and flew on that evening to Johannesburg. I had a few (6) hours to kill in Frankfurt so took the train into town for a walk about a beer and a cigar. I can only describe the immediate area around the central station as a kip, drunks, junkies and hookers . Oliver Tambo was very easy to transit. I had heard horror stories of long queues at immigration. Frankly it went very smoothly and we checked in for our flight to Port Elizabeth.
on arrival we collected our baggage and met Wik outside. A 2 hour drive had us at the lodge. A cold beer and an excellent meal and we hit the sack pretty smartly.
More later.
i exchanged emails and WhatsApp with various of our sponsors. Sometimes dates didn’t work, terms and conditions didnt sit happily with me or simply it didn’t on reflection appeal enough.
Earlier this year I touched base with Wik Coetzee of @GAME 4 AFRICA SAFARIS. BTW, it’s pronounced Vik but he answers to all versions of it.
Dates and prices were good and agreed on. Basically I had seen his offer of a buffalo ,kudu and an impala on the site. A kudu has always appealed to me and I’ve had a life wish for a buffalo ever since buying a 375 made it become just that little bit more than a dream.
Flights were a problem. A buddy from Toronto was coming along also. We’ve hunted and toured in Namibia the last two years and this was our first venture to South Africa. Usually in Europe I fly with Lufthansa. They are an easy airline with firearms. Other options were Ethiopian and Egypt airlines. To minimise our flying times I eventually plumped on Lufthansa. Unfortunately they now no longer allow a sporting firearm in your case for free. I declined their generous offer of €250 each way to transport my rifle.
C had to fly into Heathrow, layover 4 hours and on to Frankfurt where we met and flew on that evening to Johannesburg. I had a few (6) hours to kill in Frankfurt so took the train into town for a walk about a beer and a cigar. I can only describe the immediate area around the central station as a kip, drunks, junkies and hookers . Oliver Tambo was very easy to transit. I had heard horror stories of long queues at immigration. Frankly it went very smoothly and we checked in for our flight to Port Elizabeth.
on arrival we collected our baggage and met Wik outside. A 2 hour drive had us at the lodge. A cold beer and an excellent meal and we hit the sack pretty smartly.
More later.
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