Thursday 19 July, Day 2 of Safari:
Morning arrives all too quickly and we meet for breakfast at 0600 in the main lodge. By the time we finish breakfast the heavy mist/light rain has begun again, can’t do much about it so we load up the rifles in the Toyota and drive off into the gloomy morning.
For first timers, make sure the shoes you wear on the flight over can also serve as back-up hunting footwear. My boots as well as Wayne’s were still sopping wet from the day before. I wore a pair of low top Merrill hiking shoes and Michelle wore a pair of Columbia hikers until her boots dried out. She became so comfortable walking in the hiking shoes she hardly wore her Vasque GTX hiking boots.
We decided to do a long drive towards the back end of the property this morning to have a look-see. An Eland bull was high on my list of trophies as well as a Buffalo, although Wayne did warn me the buff in this area are few and far between and don’t behave “normally”. The rain and heavy mist continued most of the morning. With it being wet and cold we didn’t see much game although we did get a tail salute from a Zebra during a brief period of sunshine.
We completed a long loop and headed to a different area, I had now climbed into the high seat as the sun was poking through with only a spit of rain every now and again. We headed up a steep narrow track amongst the granite outcroppings and I pulled out the 30-06 in anticipation of seeing a Klipspringer. We round the bend and sure enough, Klipspringer!
Wayne and the scouts all have the binoculars on them and tell me the one on the right is a good one. That’s great, all I can see is a bunch of branches from a tree! Michelle has a great view and snaps a photo from her Olympus EM-5 M2 with the 40-150mm lens (also had a 1.4x multiplier attached).
This pair has been hunted by another client of Wayne’s previously and they didn’t stick around and bounded over the rocks to the right. We move up again and now I have a big limb covering the vitals and the pair heads up into the rocks gaining elevation and disappearing into the boulders. We pull ahead and around the bend a few hundred yards and dismount. Wayne grabs the sticks and we quickly ascend the steep hill from the right side and come out on the rock face where we had last seen the klippies. My heart is pounding from the excitement as well as the vertical sprint up the side of the hill. One of the trackers spots them headed up to the top of the rock pile. We move left and a klipspringer appears, facing away from us and uphill at the top of the highest boulder. I’m on the sticks figuring out a shot angle awaiting word from Wayne if he is the big male.
Yes, that is him I hear. Body facing away, uphill, moves slightly to the left. I squeeze the trigger and a puff of hair blooms and the ram dives to our left, bounces off a rock and disappears. I believe everyone was surprised I shot so quickly and at an odd angle but I was sure the ram was going to jump over the top and be gone down the opposite side. Wayne asks me if I shot him in the xyz (translate into “Texas heart shot”)? He was worried the bullet had gone through and came out the front possibly ruining the cape. I told him no, slightly to the left.
We all scramble up the steep rocks and course hair is everywhere, we find a few signs of a solid hit then one of the trackers has spotted him on a ledge below us to our right. We haul him up to the top of the rock pile and take some pictures. What an awesome specimen and quite unique with curved tips to the horns. The klipspringer is mush smaller in the body than I had envisioned. He would measure out at 4 ¾”, well above the Rowland Ward minimum of 4 1/8”.
My shot placement was good as the bullet entered high in the left hip traversed down through and out just behind the far shoulder, the cape will ok!
View from the rock where we did the photo shoot felt like I was standing on top of the world! Rough and rocky terrain all around.
We slowly pick our way down the steep rocks, why is going down always so much harder? We load everyone up and begin our drive out and to the skinning shed to have ram skinned out as soon as possible due to them being prone for hair slippage. The rain begins again and I climb into the cab with Michelle and Wayne, we are all scratching as we must have come into contact with some hairy thorn bush/plant, you could hardly see the little buggers but sure felt them!
I am on cloud nine and the adrenalin is still flowing, what a great hunt we are having. Kudu, Hyena and an awesome Klipspringer and its not even lunch time on the 2nd day! We are headed out when the trackers tell Wayne they have spotted a bushbuck. I bail out in the spitting rain and climb up into the high seat, we are in a flat area and the grass is very tall and thick. It will be about impossible to see the bushbuck from ground level.
I make sure the rifle has a round in the chamber and illuminate the reticle as we turn around and head back up the road. I asked the guys if he was a good one and they said yes. We get close to the spot and I can see a female about 40 yards off the road and the guys ask me if I can see the ram, there under the tree. The truck is still rolling forward as Wayne hasn’t seen them yet. I spot the ram and he starts moving away from us at a severe angle, I can see horns and put a round into him and he is down. Woohoo! Michelle tells me it’s still standing, I chuckle and tell her it’s the female!
Wayne steps out of the cab and looks up at us, we bail out and quickly find the bushbuck and he’s too young, needed to grow a bit more. My fault for pulling the trigger too quickly without waiting for the PH to give the ok, lesson learned. He does have a beautiful cape and I have a plan for him with a set of bushbuck horns from the Eastern Cape that I was going to euro.
@The Artistry of Wildlife , will need to talk with you about this!
With the rain coming down again, we all load up and head to the skinning shed to drop off the trophies and head back to the lodge for lunch and a nap! We were also able to recover the 165 Peregrine that took out the kudu. It had entered just behind the near shoulder and ended up breaking through the offside shoulder and was lodged under the skin. Fabulous performance so far from the Peregrine bullets, retained 87% of its weight.
The weather had lessened and the animals seemed to be moving, giraffe are abundant and there are some good Blue Wildebeest running around.
Michelle had taken a grand old bull in South Africa last year and didn’t want me to shoot a bigger one so this one didn’t even get a solid look from me. I will need to work on her.
We return to camp for some lunch and a bit of relaxation before heading out again in the late afternoon. Wayne takes us to a natural waterhole looking for fresh sign but it didn’t appear that much was coming into this spot. We saddle up and head into the bush looking for buff or eland. It was a grand day hiking through the bush and scaling the granite outcroppings. A great hike and some wonderful views to be had but the intended game didn’t cooperate, such is hunting!
Rough and beautiful country to hunt.
We finally reached a road and Sam brought the truck to meet us as we headed towards a grand viewing point for a beautiful sunset, breathtaking.