Major Khan
AH legend
I may be very mistaken . However , l heard that shot guns were allowed to be owned in Vietnam.
Thank you so much for helping me understand , Kurpfalzjager . Japanese Miroku shot guns are among some of the best imported over under shot guns in Bangladesh.Shot guns can be bought in some countries in southeast asia , and also in Japan where hunters have little opportunity to buy an bolt action rifle.
That limits the hunting opportunities very much , as far as this exists. Often it's just about drive-hunting on wild boars.
I also have Douglas Burden's book - great mix of hunting in Asia in the 1920s - from Argali to Water Buffalo to Komodo Dragons... I think Burden was one of the first to hunt these lizards - for a Diorama in the Natural History Museum in NY. I found a few photos.I worked with a guy who was in Vietnam, and encountered a female tiger that had been killed by a booby trap. Her kittens were near death, and he shot them to put them out of their misery. Forty years later the story brought tears to his eyes.
I have an unusual book in my library that has a chapter on tiger hunting in Vietnam with a hunter named F.J. DeFosse during the 1940's. "Look to the Wilderness" by W. Douglas Burden. The book was gifted to me by my Uncle, who got it as part of a "get free books if you subscribe to Outdoor Life" promotion during the 1960's. Burden hunted all over the world under the guise of collecting specimens, but what little I can learn about his life he seems more like a rich playboy who had a lot of money and time on his hands. But, if his hunts are described accurately he was a tough dude and the writing is a very good description of the habitats and animals. And he was an unusual writer in that he admitted his inexperience and frequent mistakes. You can find a few used copies on Amazon and it has long been out of print.
Jeff
Dear Jeff!I worked with a guy who was in Vietnam, and encountered a female tiger that had been killed by a booby trap. Her kittens were near death, and he shot them to put them out of their misery. Forty years later the story brought tears to his eyes.
I have an unusual book in my library that has a chapter on tiger hunting in Vietnam with a hunter named F.J. DeFosse during the 1940's. "Look to the Wilderness" by W. Douglas Burden. The book was gifted to me by my Uncle, who got it as part of a "get free books if you subscribe to Outdoor Life" promotion during the 1960's. Burden hunted all over the world under the guise of collecting specimens, but what little I can learn about his life he seems more like a rich playboy who had a lot of money and time on his hands. But, if his hunts are described accurately he was a tough dude and the writing is a very good description of the habitats and animals. And he was an unusual writer in that he admitted his inexperience and frequent mistakes. You can find a few used copies on Amazon and it has long been out of print.
Jeff
Hi Mark!What is the animal, antelope or bovine, bewteen tigers in post number 48?
This should interest you , Kouprey. It is from Uttar Pradesh , India in 1968. If you would like to see my whole copy of our professional shikaree's book of regulations in Uttar Pradesh some day , do not hesitate to let me know.Mark, you are absolutely right - it WAS a game paradise.
The game fields of old Indochina (today Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Thailand) and other places in Southern Asia were only rivaled by the East African plains. There were great jungles and open, park-like forests with a huge amount of wild game.
Game animals were elephant, tiger, leopard, gaur, banteng, water buffalo, kouprey, serau, wild boar, tapir, clouded leopard, wild dogs (dhole), two species of bear (himalayan bear and malayan bear), two species of rhinos (java rhino and sumatran rhino), crocodiles, deer-species like sambar, eld‘s deer, schomburgk‘s deer, muntjac.
Bird hunting and fishing was also very good. Many hunters shot peacock for food, a delicacy.
One example: on a „Big Game Licence“ (40 piastres for french, 80 piastres for foreigners) in the year 1937 one hunter was permitted to shoot 2 male elephants, 1 rhinoceros, 5 gaurs, 6 Banteng, 4 water buffaloes - all the other game was unlimited. Imagine that!!
Then came one war after another.
But surprisingly, in the 1990s several completely new species were found in Vietnam, the saola (a goatlike antelope with oryx horns), the giant muntjac, mouses, monkeys and horns of a highly mysterious creature called "Linh Duong" or pseudonovibos spiralis. Nobody has seen it yet, only the horns sometimes appear on markets.
I wonder how much game is left today...
Mark, you are absolutely right - it WAS a game paradise.
The game fields of old Indochina (today Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Thailand) and other places in Southern Asia were only rivaled by the East African plains. There were great jungles and open, park-like forests with a huge amount of wild game.
Game animals were elephant, tiger, leopard, gaur, banteng, water buffalo, kouprey, serau, wild boar, tapir, clouded leopard, wild dogs (dhole), two species of bear (himalayan bear and malayan bear), two species of rhinos (java rhino and sumatran rhino), crocodiles, deer-species like sambar, eld‘s deer, schomburgk‘s deer, muntjac.
Bird hunting and fishing was also very good. Many hunters shot peacock for food, a delicacy.
One example: on a „Big Game Licence“ (40 piastres for french, 80 piastres for foreigners) in the year 1937 one hunter was permitted to shoot 2 male elephants, 1 rhinoceros, 5 gaurs, 6 Banteng, 4 water buffaloes - all the other game was unlimited. Imagine that!!
Then came one war after another.
But surprisingly, in the 1990s several completely new species were found in Vietnam, the saola (a goatlike antelope with oryx horns), the giant muntjac, mouses, monkeys and horns of a highly mysterious creature called "Linh Duong" or pseudonovibos spiralis. Nobody has seen it yet, only the horns sometimes appear on markets.
I wonder how much game is left today...