Any experiences with the forest duiker sub-species?

Green Chile

AH legend
Joined
Feb 12, 2022
Messages
4,125
Reaction score
15,486
Location
DFW
Website
www.mattanjahuntingsafaris.com
Media
140
Hunting reports
Africa
5
USA/Canada
6
Mex/S.Amer
1
Member of
NRA, GSCO
Hunted
Argentina, Saskatchewan, South Africa, Zimbabwe, 30 US states and counting
Does anyone here have experiences with the forest duiker sub-species like the zebra duiker, yellow-backed duiker, etc? I know of one outfitter offering hunts in Liberia. What else is available for hunting and with which outfitters?

IMG_2515.jpeg


IMG_2516.jpeg
 
Congo Forest safaris offers several duikers. Yellow backed, Pieters, Blue, Bay and just a few Vlack fronted duikers. The yellow backed are considered one the rarest and most difficult to hunt of the duikers. They literally bait them with rotten meat (monkey) and they eat the maggots out of them! Very Very shy. Lots of Blue duikers if you spotlighted.
Bruce
 
There are yellow back duikers on quota in Zambia. Not sure the success rates, but much more easily accessible than some other countries.
 
It's on my radar. I would likely go with The Hunting Consortium for this type of hunt.
 
Where I hunted in Bissau, we shot Maxwells Duiker, saw a Red Flanked & were in the same jungle as Yellow Backed but I didn't see any !

I believe there are other species there but the Jungle & Cashew Forests aren't the place for a species survey .
 
I would rather hunt some of those little guys, like Royal or yellow backed than a bongo or a leopard. Very high on my list!
 
It's on my radar. I would likely go with The Hunting Consortium for this type of hunt.
I thought of them as well. Perhaps we could take a look at a joint venture in the future.
 
I know there are few outfitters (@TSALA HUNTING SAFARIS) offering duiker hunts in Gabon. I plan to do at least one jungle hunt in my life, and it might be for duikers.

Or a Bongo, depending on how @gillettehunter trip goes.
Bongo has been on my radar and I would go for one before I would go for a Lord Derby eland. As an alternate thought, you could get a large collection of forest duikers for the cost of 1 bongo. All of them are interesting and beautiful. I definitely want to have some forest hunts in my future. I'm also interested in seeing parts of Africa that are off the common path.
 
I found hunting the forest duikers by calling them in very difficult in the equatorial jungles of Cameroon last year.

After we finished hunting bongo and forest sitatunga, I missed a blue duiker with the camp shotgun at 20 yards and I also couldn’t get shots at a couple of other duikers that ran in. They are harder to see than one would think and they run in and depart quickly.

We also saw a yellow-backed duiker which is not on license where we hunted in Cameroon. I want to return to the jungle again for a dwarf forest buffalo.

Just go. Tough hunt but extremely rewarding and fulfilling adventure. Happy hunting to all, TheGrayRider a/k/a Tom.
 
If I have to choose between Bongo and forest duikers I will go with the latter.
Following this topic
 
I found hunting the forest duikers by calling them in very difficult in the equatorial jungles of Cameroon last year.

After we finished hunting bongo and forest sitatunga, I missed a blue duiker with the camp shotgun at 20 yards and I also couldn’t get shots at a couple of other duikers that ran in. They are harder to see than one would think and they run in and depart quickly.

We also saw a yellow-backed duiker which is not on license where we hunted in Cameroon. I want to return to the jungle again for a dwarf forest buffalo.

Just go. Tough hunt but extremely rewarding and fulfilling adventure. Happy hunting to all, TheGrayRider a/k/a Tom.
It's hard to describe just how dark the rain forest is when you are in it. At 12 noon you'd swear the sun was setting. I did not find jungle hunting in Cameroon physically demanding, but it damn sure is a mental mission. Hard to tell people that when you drive down those logging roads you will see NO open fields, just a tall wall of green jungle that you have to hack your way through.
 
It's hard to describe just how dark the rain forest is when you are in it. At 12 noon you'd swear the sun was setting. I did not find jungle hunting in Cameroon physically demanding, but it damn sure is a mental mission. Hard to tell people that when you drive down those logging roads you will see NO open fields, just a tall wall of green jungle that you have to hack your way through.

IMG_3164.jpeg

IMG_3190.jpeg


Exactly. Many adventurers can’t comprehend visibility of 6 inches at times while hunting in the equatorial African jungle.

Nothing is easy in the jungle. I loved every minute of it! Happy hunting to all, TheGrayRider a/k/a Tom.
 
I know my dream trip would be a dwarf buffalo, all the duiker and to catch one of those Goliath Tigers! I’m plotting, but think I’m a good 5-6 years out:/

Love reading /seeing all the posts on these jungle hunts
 

Forum statistics

Threads
61,569
Messages
1,348,481
Members
116,107
Latest member
Lonadter
 

 

 

Latest profile posts

Salahuddin wrote on STEAR's profile.
Thank you.
ghay wrote on DobeGrant45c's profile.
Hi Ethan,
Just checking to see if you know when you will be shipping yet?
Thanks,
Gary
2RECON wrote on Riflecrank's profile.
Hallo Ron, do you remember me? I´m Michael from Germany. We did some Wildcats on the .338 Lapua Case.
.375 i did, and a .500 and .510 you did.
Can you please contact me again (eMail please)

Best
Michael
 
Top