Correct, I stumbled upon it so thought it wouldn’t hurt to share it on the siteMay 8th 2019
Thankfully yes. I’m not sure why but the elephants in Northern Botswana and the Caprivi strip grow some seriously impressive ivory. Sure, they may not have the length of the East African elephants but they’re much heavier on average.Recently?
Eastern Caprivi NamibiaMay I ask where this bull was taken..? Bushmanland..? Xaudum..??
Ah yes, this is the one that caused global outrage if my memory serves me correctly. The animal rights NGO's and media got so much money from the Cecil the Lion controversy that they thought it wouldn't hurt to slander a hunter that was involved in a perfectly legal activity.Look at the size of this hausView attachment 385224
It's pathetic this guy payed $60,000 to kill this thing, which is more then any anti hunter would ever donate to charityAh yes, this is the one that caused global outrage if my memory serves me correctly. The animal rights NGO's and media got so much money from the Cecil the Lion controversy that they thought it wouldn't hurt to slander a hunter that was involved in a perfectly legal activity.
Thankfully yes. I’m not sure why but the elephants in Northern Botswana and the Caprivi strip grow some seriously impressive ivory. Sure, they may not have the length of the East African elephants but they’re much heavier on average.
This is true, however, Tanzania, as we all know, went under heavy poaching pressure for their elephants so the average has gone down significantly. Hopefully, the outfitters operating in Tanzania will focus more heavily on the elephant population and genetics. It worked with the lions so I don't see how it wouldn't work for the elephants.It is interesting that Botswana is known for such heavy ivory. The bulls there certainly seem to have a heavy average weight, due primarily to girth. However, Botswana is not a place that traditionally produces 100# ivory (if using record books as a proxy for that). Zimbabwe, Kenya, Tanzania, Kruger etc all heavier historical genetics, perhaps.
It is interesting that Botswana is known for such heavy ivory. The bulls there certainly seem to have a heavy average weight, due primarily to girth. However, Botswana is not a place that traditionally produces 100# ivory (if using record books as a proxy for that). Zimbabwe, Kenya, Tanzania, Kruger etc all heavier historical genetics, perhaps.
Agreed on all fronts.Yes, I think East Africa was best known for producing heavy ivory. However, I think the Botswana bulls are the biggest bodied elephant bulls in Africa today, not sure if that was the case historically or not... But in today's Africa a 100 pound aside tusker is truly a magnificent and rare trophy much more so than it was 100 years ago