Frederik
AH legend
- Joined
- Apr 23, 2009
- Messages
- 2,361
- Reaction score
- 5,549
- Location
- South Africa, Gauteng
- Media
- 202
- Articles
- 1
- Member of
- BASA - Big Bore Association of South Africa
- Hunted
- South Africa, Namibia, Mozambique and Sweden
Firstly a buffalo cow cannot be called a dagga boy!!
Sure it can get dangerous and also not easy to identify an old dry cow and get a chance with so many eyes, noses and ears around but it's not a DAGGABOY!
Secondly them bitches sure is more tasty than them bulls!
My fridge is filled with more female animals if I have the opportunity than male animals.
Sure it can get dangerous and also not easy to identify an old dry cow and get a chance with so many eyes, noses and ears around but it's not a DAGGABOY!
Secondly them bitches sure is more tasty than them bulls!
My fridge is filled with more female animals if I have the opportunity than male animals.
), not but its a trophy to me and I am getting a skull mount because its the achievement of a multi-decade dream.
My first gemsbuck was a very old cow (almost two inches compression rings) that had escaped the breeding herd. No hope of getting her back so I took her. A very fine trophy and exciting hunt (had to shoot or be run over). But I would have taken her even if she'd had a broken horn (but not for trophy price of course). She was wasting valuable range during a drought. Where I hunt deer it never takes me more than two days to harvest a good buck (public land too). Doe tags are available but not to non-residents like me (either sex for salvage tags and they are available for everyone ... who wants to wreck their car). During the drought two years ago one property owner begged us to shoot the does. "They'll just die this winter anyway." Would have obliged but no doe tags for me.