Hey buddy I agree 100% and you are making some of the exact points I was trying to. Now on the 8 k thing I added taxidermy to that as well for the comparison. If you take the taxidermy out that knocks $1100 of of it. The point is he made the statement that, "Heck, for the price of a single Zebra on your TX farm one can go to RSA for a week, shoot multiple species including the Zebra and have the full African experience." That is absolutely not true in any way shape or form, no matter how you play the numbers you cannot have the African experience in Africa for a week with multiple animals cheaper than you can shoot a zebra with me. My reply was in direct response to his comment and he is wrong, it cant be done under any normal circumstances.
Now I'm going to go on a bit of a rant and it's not directed at you but the issue of whether someone would rather do it that way is an entirely different thing and has nothing to do with the comment he made. I personally would not hunt zebra here under normal circumstances because I work hard and save to be able to do it in Africa. No doubt I love the African experience but, not everyone does. The African species on my ranch that are hunted are generally hunted by people who want to hunt a certain animal but have no desire to actually go to Africa to do it. There are a hellava lot of people like that too. It took me forever to grasp that concept when I was younger as my desire was always to be able to go to Africa. As an adult, I still prefer hunting those animals that you can hunt in Africa in Africa. Now many cant be hunted in Africa either, also take the scimitar oryx. There have been some introduced into RSA but they are not native nor are they importable to the US from there and everyone of them are on a game farm. If someone wants to hunt one from the US and enjoy the mount in their home the only option is Texas or somewhere they have been introduced which is basically Texas and thats it. New Mexico introduced Gemsbok but scimitar are pretty much a Texas thing. It is estimated that there are around 20k scimitar in Texas and by far Texas has the largest amount of them on earth. They are considered extinct in the wild, "The scimitar oryx or scimitar-horned oryx (Oryx dammah) is a species of Oryx; once widespread across North Africa; which has been assessed by the IUCN Red List as Extinct in the wild since 2000.", Oct 11, 2019, iucn.org. If it wasnt for the Texas High Fence industry they wasn't be gone, period and that is a fact. How long would the handful of zoo stock exist if it weren't for Texas game ranches. Not very long and they would be gone completely. So I guess let an animal go extinct because some people think they shouldn't be subjected to the "horrors" of high fenced hunting? Give me a break, I can name a ton of other game animals that are in the same boat as Scimitar. I'm sick of people saying places like Texas Game Farms and RSA/Namibia game farms have no place in conservation, BS!
Additionally, I personally know land owners that commonly stock their "free range" jillion acre ranches in Southern Africa. So the statement that It doesn't happen in free range places is false, I've seen it personally. It may not be the government but the land owners in a lot of places sure as hell do and relatively frequently. Government concessions are different I get that. On that note if there is a gov concession next to a private land and neither of them are high fenced and the land owner brings in animals for release which in turn stocks the private ranch and supplements the gov't land how the hell is that any different, or even visa versa. This is fairly common but you want to know what the difference is? You as a client don't know about it and the outfitter doesn't tell you. What is the difference between a sable on a game farm being hunted and a free range 400k hectacre property cutting loose 100 sable that were bought at auction? This notion that those original animals are allowed to frolic and dance on rainbows with tutus is BS. There are animals bought in that initial load that will be hunted to supplement or pay for the cost of the original stocking from day 1. I can name several ranches that have done that exact thing that I know of. I'm not naming them because I will not get those people who operate there into a shit slinging match on someone's post on the internet. Its common and it happens all the damn time both here and in Africa. Like it or love it but that is reality. I'm in the industry and work directly with animals here and a crap load of outfitters over there. Now before someone puffs up and try's to say that gov concessions are stocked regularly, yada yada yada, that is not what I am saying but as a whole I know of several "free range" places in RSA, Namibia, and Zambia but are private property and stock animals as needed. So then with that logic the areas of countries with government concession/ state wildlife area type areas would then be the only true "free range areas to hunt" and anything outside of that would be unethical. Additionally, only those areas that are so vast and so far away from anything else that no animal that was bred to be stocked for hunting purposes could count.