Day 7
Almost half way point of the hunt and we have experienced so much its hard to grasp. Travel is long enough and expensive enough that in my opinion if this were a 10 day hunt I would already be dreading the end in several days.
Every night we hear Hippo, Hyena, Elephant, leopard, lion, Bushbuck and many others calling while laying in our tent. This is what drove us to seek out one of the more wild areas in Zim.
Today we are driving into the distant hills on the horizon to check baits and look for elephant or Buffalo for my wife. The game scout sees buffalo ahead and to our right. We stop arm ourselves and take the track we follow them and there is one particular bull that gets our attention. We drop the track, gain the wind and circle ahead. We peak out looking for the bulls. None seen, We drop back, cut back in where they may be and we now see that they are moving across a dry river into the Dande.
We are now back in the truck covering ground and see elephant to our left in the trees. We dismount and take the trail. they are aware we are on their trail. and are covering ground, we follow them down hill and eventually catch them as they too cross into the Dande.
We really appreciate that Dalton has a full time driver. So when we end up far from the truck. Dalton confers with the map app on his phone and tells Trumill our driver where to meet us. We walk towards the nearest road and would be picked up. A nice luxury.
We come across Kudu cows, make a quick stalk for bait with no success.
none of the other 7 baits have been hit. the female has not returned to that bait since the initial feeding. I shot 3 more impala today for bait.
I had been communicating with ".458 Michael" on advice on the CEB bullets for several rifles. Just before leaving for this trip ".458 Michael" asked if I would like to try some 100 grain CEB raptors for the leopard. I had my wife's .308 all dialed in with several different brand bullets . So he sent 50 loaded rounds and bullets for me to try. they flew and grouped great as all CEB's do. So I took 20 rounds to test on bait animals and would then decide if they will be used on leopard. On the first few impala. I did not have great shot setups and so still did not have solid proof of the bullets performance on live animals. even though I fully trusted Michaels knowledge and experience. Today gave me the 100% confidence in the bullets devastating performance level. We made a quick stalk and the sticks went up. they were out a ways and I struggled to get steady with my wifes very short LOP and very lightweight rifle. I tell Dalton there is a Ram directly behind the target Ram. He says need the bait and to shoot. I do and the Ram drops. He is hit square on the shoulder and is DRT immediately. We walk up and the second ram has also been hit very hard but I shoot him again anyway. The little 100 grain Raptor hit the ram with devastating results. Then on another ram that day, He was quartering too me heavily. I aimed for the point of the shoulder and was off a little. the bullet hit behind the left shoulder and exited the right rear leg. And exploded the rear ham. Not good if your concerned about damaging hide. but if you want an extremely quick kill the 100 grain Raptor is your pill
We return to the Dinosaur spoor location and Dalton says this cat is listening to us while we are in the area. so his plan is to change bait trees and build a different blind. while the truck idles nearby we will build the blind. the new blind is selected to allow us to us a deep draw to sneak down and into the blind unseen or heard.
We see a once in a lifetime bushbuck while returning to camp. a quick stalk but no cigar.
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