SOUTH AFRICA: Nocturnal Hunt With Wintershoek & Safari Afrika

Looks great Hank. Congratulations.

Your fortunate and need to treasure the bottom photo. You have caught the rare photo of Tinkerbell!:D (Just to the right of the rifle)
I don't know what that is, but I'll accept your explanation. Probably had something to do with actually getting a serval while 'shooting in the dark'!
 
........... You have caught the rare photo of Tinkerbell!:D (Just to the right of the rifle)


You choose, but with luck like that I am going for Tinkerbell.

tinkerbell-clip-art-aceXdeoc4.png



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You sort of knew that after the serval, things would go back to normal, that is to say, difficult . . .

Day 3 (April 11)

Usual drill in the morning, but maybe with a bit more spring in my step this morning. We check the baits, and all seem to have been hit. Looking at the video, it’s clear that we have more than one leopard on these baits. Not thrilled with that, but it opens up an interesting conversation. Richard usually sells leopard hunts, which makes both him and the landowners happy. None are available this year because South Africa has decided not to issue permits in 2016. But there are clearly lots of leopard around, and the land owners aren’t happy about that. We see large groups of animals, but often, very few young ones. I can't say that leopards are the cause - it could easily be jackal, or caracal, but leopards do have to eat, and they will take what they can get, which can include the young of any animal as well as, in some cases, cattle. I asked whether compensation was available for losses due to predation, and got laughter as a response. So it's difficult to be too critical of farmers who need to protect their livelihoods. The sad part is that with a controlled leopard hunt, the predation is minimized, and farmers are willing to tolerate some losses because of the income from the hunting. So leopards and farmers can co-exist, provided hunting is permitted. In years when Richard has permits, he makes payments to landowners who he works with, even if they don’t have a leopard taken on their property. Without the income which leopard hunting brings, he can’t make those payments this year. Richard is concerned that these leopards may end up dying – likely through poison – and no one will benefit. Seems like a waste. Ignore that. It is a waste.

Apart from the leopards, we also see that pigs and a pair of honey badgers have now been to the baits, and hyenas continue to come in, but don’t seem to stay for any length of time. We decide to sit on the bait hit by the honey badgers, which was also visited by a hyena. It occurs to me that lots of these animals seem to come to the baits a couple of hours or so after we leave – could it be that they’re aware that we’re there, and wait for us to leave? Time will tell.

The blind we’re in this evening is on the side of a steep, rocky hill, looking down on the bait below. It’s tight, and because of the rocks, my chair can only be in one position. This is not a comfortable blind, but I am hopeful that something will happen here so I resolve to be patient (not a trait I am known for).

Again, to keep this short(er), I will just say that nothing came to the bait while we were there, and we were there for 6 hours. Six cold, miserable, hours. Followed by two hours of cold, uneventful spotlighting.

Back home by 1 am. I think it was cream of mushroom soup this evening (morning?), but it could have been butternut squash. Whichever it was, with a slice of homemade bread, it was delicious, and something to look forward to when you're cold.
 
Sounds a lot like hunting to me. It's not always nice or easy, but the more you need to work for your success, the better it will taste.
 
Well done @Hank2211 , you have got some awesome trophies! Glad you had a good safari. That is what you can expect from a top class outfitter and team.
Then you also had John Tinley guiding you!
 
Well done @Hank2211 , you have got some awesome trophies! Glad you had a good safari. That is what you can expect from a top class outfitter and team.
Then you also had John Tinley guiding you!

Tinley said lots of nice things about you, too, Beans. Is this a mutual admiration society?!

Lots of conversation in the truck, and lots about your particular issue. You have strong allies!
 
Day 4 (April 12)

This morning we were up early – 4.30. John decided we should be sitting in a blind during the morning, since a hyena was coming to the hillside blind at erratic times. So we were in the "hillside" blind at about 5.50 am, and sat until about 11 am. No activity, unless you count a vulture feeding on the bait.

While we were sitting, the other baits and trail cams were being checked. This time the trail cams showed that a hyena came to the bait we had been sitting at last night a couple of hours after we left, and interestingly, at about 10 am the morning of the 11th, so not long after we’d checked the camera and left. No honey badgers had come to that bait, but they (or others) had visited the “open field” bait, which also got a visit from a hyena. Bush pig had been to almost all of our baits, but at odd times. And still leopard. We must be feeding a significant number of leopards.

Based on the trail cams, we decide to sit again at the open field bait, so 5 pm sees us in the blind. I have all my warm clothing, although temperatures seem to be rising with the phase of the moon (we are about 10 days from the full moon), and after a night (and day) in the hill blind, I’m happy to be in the comfortable blind again.

At exactly 6.10 pm, Richard taps my knee, and I look at him, surprised. It’s still very light, and I can see him clearly. He stands slowly and looks towards the bait. He sits back down and tells me there’s a honey badger on the meat. I’m to get up, slowly, and get ready. We’ve already discussed the shot placement for the various body positions – Richard tells me this one will be tough unless he moves – he’s sideways to us, so the shot should go on the line where the colour changes on the skin.

I stand up slowly, and sure enough, there he is, ripping pieces of meat off the bait. The blind is in a small treed area, so there’s a good chance he can’t see us because of the shadows. I put my gun in position – the .375 again – and decide I have time, so I experiment with the scope, illuminating the reticle and then looking without. I zoom in a bit, and then zoom back out. I’m glad I’m so calm! I decide not to illuminate the reticle for the shot, and place the crosshairs. I take the shot, and he does a summersault, and drops, stone dead!

I’m thrilled, but that now poses another problem. Do we go get him and take pictures, or leave him there and wait to see if anything else comes in? Richard is worried that if a hyena comes in, it might just grab the honey badger, which isn’t tied down, in lieu of the bait, which is. So that decides it; we get out to take some pictures and put our badger in a safe place.

I was really tickled to get this honey badger – I’d only seen one once before in Zimbabwe, and I know they aren’t always easy to find. But I found out something else. These things stink! He stunk as if he’d been sprayed by a skunk – a very musty smell that gets you in the back of the throat. I decided it was only right to let my PH handle him . . .

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We returned to the blind quietly after a few minutes. At about 8 pm Richard tapped my knee again, and whispered that he thought a hyena was at the bait. He got up slowly and looked through a night vision monocular, but there was nothing to see. And nothing else came to the bait that evening.

We decided to drive back to the house instead of spotlighting. Once we arrived at Richard’s front gate, John thought we should get on the back of the truck and spotlight until we got to the house – about a quarter mile or so. Not one minute later John says it again: “Get ready” and again, I see nothing. Then suddenly, there they are, eyes. I quickly put the crosshairs on the eyes and I lower them a bit, and pull the trigger. The eyes disappear. I can see John because of the spotlight he’s holding, and he’s smiling at me, and holds out his hand. “Congratulations, you have a fine civet!”

I ask him to hold the light on the animal, and I jump out, rifle in hand, and run over to the spot. There is in fact a civet, heaving a few last breaths. I let him die, and break out into a huge grin. Honey badger and civet in the same night. Things are improving!

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Of course, I have the same concerns as I had with the serval – I didn’t know what I was shooting at, and I really didn’t know where I was putting the crosshairs. I am starting to reconcile myself to that, but tell myself that once this hunt is over, we are back to the old rules.

So we head back to the house just a little happier than we were when we left it.
 
Going to have to nick name you Quick draw.

You certainly earned the grin.
 
Hank how are you going to mount the cats?
 
Now that honey badger deserves a full body mount! IMO
 
Awesome....

Last year I beat you to the Oribi, so I can only hope that this year you beat me to the honey badger.
 
Going to have to nick name you Quick draw.

You certainly earned the grin.
More like a look of surprise . . .

Hank how are you going to mount the cats?

Unfortunately, most of them will end up as rug mounts. I have to balance the number of things that around floating around with keeping my wife minimal unhappy . . . but I have time to change my mind!

Awesome....

Last year I beat you to the Oribi, so I can only hope that this year you beat me to the honey badger.

I actually thought it was quite unfair to beat me to the Oribi . . . call this one payback.
 
actually thought it was quite unfair to beat me to the Oribi . . . call this one payback.

Fair enough. :)

If I only get one night critter badger would be it. Oddly enough genet is next. And although Hyena will be shot in a heartbeat I'm not going crazy for one. Will have to ship to your house anyway if I get a brown.
 
Awesome read, thank you. My hunt last fall in S.A. was very similar when spotlighting. I didn't shoot at the first set of eyes cause I couldn't see what it was, then it was gone. Next set of eyes that glowed in the light got dispatched very quickly. My PH was pretty happy as was I when I walked up to my porcupine! Thanks for sharing you hunt story, I've been smiling the whole time reliving my hunt. Good job not shooting the leopard, I would have had a hard time Holding off.
 
If I only get one night critter badger would be it. Oddly enough genet is next. And although Hyena will be shot in a heartbeat I'm not going crazy for one. Will have to ship to your house anyway if I get a brown.

I did want to thank all of you Yanks for leaving us Canucks some of the better animals in Africa. I will be chasing a leopard around Ethiopia later this year, and paying less for it, because you guys can't! So, here it is: Thank you!
 
officially jealous !!
 
Serval is one of the few I need yet. Great trophy, I hope I can get one in the coming years.

Funny thing, two years ago I had a big brown hyena model at the bait while my PH slept (he worked hard and I was fine with it) and I just put the gun up and said "bang", your dead. I saw plenty of civet, but didn't have a permit.
 
I did want to thank all of you Yanks for leaving us Canucks some of the better animals in Africa. I will be chasing a leopard around Ethiopia later this year, and paying less for it, because you guys can't! So, here it is: Thank you!

Get that Nyala done before that Leopard. Best of luck on getting them both.
 
Day 5 (April 13)

The usual drill, checking baits and trail cams. There was one amusing episode that came out of this. When we dropped off the honey badger for skinning last night, one of the skinners was Johannes. The animal stunk as much, or more, if that was possible, than it did when shot. This morning we drove to the hunting areas in the usual way – white guys in the truck and skinners on the back. When we got to the land, we switched places, in case a bushbuck showed up. After I got on the back, Johannes went to sit in the passenger seat. We drove away, and after a hundred yards or so the truck stopped, and Johannes came to the back. We asked what the problem was and his response was simple: “I stink.” Flippie had taken a hundred yards to decide there was no way Johannes was going to stay in the cab with him!

Based on the trail cams, we decided to go back to the wooded blind, where we’d sat the first night. I have to say, I was sort of getting the feeling that we were always deciding to sit where the hyena had been, and not where they were going to be. However, you have nothing else to go on, so you do the best you can.

We were in the blind by 4.45 pm, sitting patiently, or at least I was, when I wasn’t nodding off. Again it happened. John touched my knee a few hours after dark, waking me from what had been a fine dream. I sure hope this isn’t a false alarm. And a few minutes later he tells me that he can see three bush pigs at the bait, munching on the corn. Apparently his night vision is better than mine because there while there was some moonlight, I could only vaguely see the odd shape, but certainly nothing I’d shoot at. After trying to get me to see the pigs through the scope, I told him there was no way I could take a shot without some light, and he resigned himself to having to use the light. But he said he would try the red light, but at full power right away, so I’d have to be ready to shoot quickly.

At this point it became sort of Keystone Kops. I told him to give me a three count and then turn on the light. He agreed, and started . . . “3 . . .” but no light. I said what are you doing? He replied, “Counting down from three.” I whispered – “who starts at 3? I said give me a three count – one, two, three.” He said OK, and then did it again, “3 . . . 2 . . . 1.” fortunately, he couldn't see the look I gave him, probably because I was glued to my scope. At 0, not 1, but 0, the light light went on. At that moment, I saw three bush pigs standing more or less side by side, looking a bit surprised, or momentarily stunned. I decided to overlook the clear flaw in the counting process, and took a quick shot on the one in the middle. Whether because of luck or skill, he dropped where he stood. The other two ran fast and furiously.

When John and I approached the dead bush pig, we saw that I’d shot the boar. In the head, out the head and in the body, and then out of the body. Of course, I told him that had been my intention to shoot the boar (which was true – it was my intention. But I had no way of carrying it out because they all looked the same!). A beautiful bush pig – an animal we’d spent a lot of time trying for over the last two hunts. Both of us were really very pleased to have finally been able to put this animal behind us.

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We then called Flippie to bring the truck. We decided that after all of the noise, it was unlikely we’d see activity here for some time, so we thought we’d try calling in an open field nearby. We tried a number of different calls over a period of a couple of hours, all without success.

Over soup (tomato garlic, I think), John tells me that a hyena has been coming to the uncomfortable hillside blind during the day, at odd hours, and he thinks it might be a good idea to sit there again tomorrow (now this) morning. I say, sure, whatever you think is best. So again, a short night with very little sleep.
 

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