Mallard14, I hunted hard on foot for a nice bushbuck this July-Aug along the Limpopo River for better than 8 days and although I saw many and had a number of opportunities, I did not connect on shooting one with my bow. I did discover one thing though, we found that a slow push by a tracker some distance away worked well to move them past me for possible opportunities. They were very keen on spotting anything out of the ordinary even in the dense riparian thickets where they hang out. I started wearing a lightweight leafy suit top to be more concealed and it worked well! I had ewes and young ones come right into me, one even running over my foot. If I had more time I'm sure I would have taken one. They are extremely wary within their brushy haunts so be prepared. The number of bushbuck we saw along that 3 mile stretch of Limpopo with several Pivet fields adjacent to the river thickets was amazing. I would estimate that one existed for every 150 yds of river. They will stay secluded most of the day being very active feeding at night and heading to feeding areas late afternoon 4-5 PM and back again early in the AM (out until maybe 8AM). Occasionally, you can find one coming to a water source away from the river and sit a blind...(how most guys arrow one). Pushing them very gently is IMO a good option, but do not position yourself too close to where you expect them to be holed up or when they do bust out they be coming by you at Mach II. Positioning yourself at least 200-300 yds from their liar is a better plan, in order to give them a chance to slow down to a walk or to pause when in range. I am obsessed now and hopefully will get another chance to connect. By the way, with a rifle instead of bow, I would have had my Bushbuck ram within 5 minutes on every one of those 8 days. Nyala like the same habitat, and can be just as difficult on foot, but they are a bigger target!