Devastating drought in Southern Africa

Mnovak

AH veteran
Joined
Jan 26, 2020
Messages
225
Reaction score
399
Media
28
Hunting reports
Africa
2

Has anyone been following the drought going on in Southern Africa? I have attached a link with a short article about the drought. I have a friend going over as part of the effort to cull elephants to feed the people in Namibia. Sounds like a pretty bad event taking place over there. I wonder how this will affect the wildlife as well as the people in these areas.
 
I was in Namibia in Aug just south of the Waterberg Plateau and witnessed the extent of the drought. It was incredibly dry. Friends there are desperately hoping for a good rainy season.
 
It was oppressively dry here and the summer rains took longer than usual to start, and when they did it wasn't a serious attempt. I'd describe it as thin. And very few rain days.
It doesn't help that it falls here in the city, we need the rain on the lands. I've heard rumours this drought will last into next year. I wonder if we'll even get a hunt in next year.
 

Has anyone been following the drought going on in Southern Africa? I have attached a link with a short article about the drought. I have a friend going over as part of the effort to cull elephants to feed the people in Namibia. Sounds like a pretty bad event taking place over there. I wonder how this will affect the wildlife as well as the people in these areas.
Yes it is very dry....natural cycle.....nature will follow its course....

I cant see foreigners being permitted to take part in culling the following species in Namibia...."The cull of 723 wild animals includes 83 elephants, 300 zebras, 30 hippos, 60 buffaloes, 50 impalas, 100 eland and 100 wildebeest"
Maybe he is a Namibian resident.or they have changed the rules in Namibia....if so lucky man....

I cull various species in RSA and also do PAC control work in RSA.....no foreigners are legally permitted to do this.....currently on standby for(another) elephant issue.....
 
Yes it is very dry....natural cycle.....nature will follow its course....

I cant see foreigners being permitted to take part in culling the following species in Namibia...."The cull of 723 wild animals includes 83 elephants, 300 zebras, 30 hippos, 60 buffaloes, 50 impalas, 100 eland and 100 wildebeest"
Maybe he is a Namibian resident.or they have changed the rules in Namibia....if so lucky man....

I cull various species in RSA and also do PAC control work in RSA.....no foreigners are legally permitted to do this.....currently on standby for(another) elephant issue.....
They are classed and permitted as own use animals and it’s fully legal for foreigners to hunt them in Namibia. It’s been that way as long as I can remember. Call it a cull or an increase in own use quota. The result is the same.
 
Yes it is very dry....natural cycle.....nature will follow its course....

I cant see foreigners being permitted to take part in culling the following species in Namibia...."The cull of 723 wild animals includes 83 elephants, 300 zebras, 30 hippos, 60 buffaloes, 50 impalas, 100 eland and 100 wildebeest"
Maybe he is a Namibian resident.or they have changed the rules in Namibia....if so lucky man....

I cull various species in RSA and also do PAC control work in RSA.....no foreigners are legally permitted to do this.....currently on standby for(another) elephant issue.....
Nature is unpredictable, this drought seems to be worse than normal. My friend who lives there shared that he had to sell off all of his cattle because there was nothing for them to eat. He is also concerned about the hunting and impact to the animal population due to the extensive drought.
Somehow they have found a way to profit from the cull. He’s American and he is going over to shoot elephants through an outfitter. I do not have all of the details surrounding the process or legalities of the cull.
 
Nature is unpredictable, this drought seems to be worse than normal. My friend who lives there shared that he had to sell off all of his cattle because there was nothing for them to eat. He is also concerned about the hunting and impact to the animal population due to the extensive drought.
Somehow they have found a way to profit from the cull. He’s American and he is going over to shoot elephants through an outfitter. I do not have all of the details surrounding the process or legalities of the cull.
It’s not a true cull. It’s an increase in own use quota. Own use quota is issued as a normal part of each years quota and allotted to the concession owner to harvest. It’s fully legal to sell to foreigners and normal practice.
 
Eastern Cape have been extremely wet for the past 3 years. Blessed.
We are generally in a Summer rainfall region.In certain parts that we hunt, by April last year, they had matched their average annual rainfall.
 
Yes it is very dry....natural cycle.....nature will follow its course....

I cant see foreigners being permitted to take part in culling the following species in Namibia...."The cull of 723 wild animals includes 83 elephants, 300 zebras, 30 hippos, 60 buffaloes, 50 impalas, 100 eland and 100 wildebeest"
Maybe he is a Namibian resident.or they have changed the rules in Namibia....if so lucky man....

I cull various species in RSA and also do PAC control work in RSA.....no foreigners are legally permitted to do this.....currently on standby for(another) elephant issue.....

723 animals is hardly a lot or much of an increase
That would be a cull in one park or area of maybe 25-30000ha
 
It's been bad all over for years. There have been some good news here and there. Namibia just had a national day of prayer for rain.
 
I was in Namibia in Aug just south of the Waterberg Plateau and witnessed the extent of the drought. It was incredibly dry. Friends there are desperately hoping for a good rainy season.
Just got back from RSA(limpopo), Namibia, and Zimbabwe. All areas are in real bad shape. Namibia especially so. Praying for a great rainy season.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
62,771
Messages
1,378,715
Members
121,095
Latest member
Alyssa0097
 

 

 

Latest profile posts

Enjoy Sailing and Flying light Aircraft, over 800 hours Singles and twins - bought a Light Sport 2 seat Aircraft to use here in Kenya. I built and raced saloon cars at my local tracks years ago
I have a couple of motorcycles and background in Mech. Eng. and a Gorgeous Kenyan Wife
I am a long standing shooter, from 1980 Pistol Shooting and Target Rifle, Red Deer Stalking Scotland, later Roe Deer and Wild Boar in UK, Germany and Finland, Chamois in Germany and Italy. Living in Kenya 1 hour from the Tanzania border.
jbirdwell wrote on Jager Waffen74's profile.
Sir, I will gladly take that 16 gauge off your hands. I was waiting for your Winchesters but I'm a sucker for a 16 ga.
DaBill wrote on liam375's profile.
This is Bill from Arizona. If you still have the DRT's I would like to have 3 boxes
Let me know about pmt.
Thanks
teklanika_ray wrote on SP3654's profile.
I bought a great deal of the brass he had for sale, plus I already had many hundred rounds.

How much brass are you looking for?

Ray H
 
Top