The Set Up
The Kalahari in Botswana. I had the only permit to hunt an area of somewhere between 750,000 and 1,000,000 acres made up of huge farms (cattle ranches) and communal lands. Low fence perimeter on the farms (I’m going to call them ranches from now on as that’s what we’d call them in the U.S.).
Base Camp
A 100,000 acre ranch with a farm house style lodge, a couple of farm house style chalets, and a couple of canvas tents (not luxury).
The Team
Five hunting Land Cruisers. Three Professional Hunters (one a lady), each in a separate Land Cruiser with their trackers. One driver with trackers. The young owner of the ranch with his trackers. The lady PH also had the dogs.
The Hounds
Fourteen of them from a much larger pack of over 50. If I remember correctly fourteen is the maximum allowed on a hunt. About a third of them were scent hounds, the remainder chasers of which the biggest were also fighters. Interesting thing about the hounds, they are all coon hounds yet some will be scent hounds and some chase hounds. As an example I was told that with two sisters one was a scenter and the other a chaser, a choice the hounds make.
The Terrain
Flat to hilly Kalahari scrub lands. Mostly Black Thorn bushes with an occasional Camel Thorn three. Normally between these would be sand. But with very rainy conditions since December grasses had grown thick and two to three feet high. There was one area where a leopard had just killed a calf in a cattle pen but we couldn’t track it because the cattle obliterated the tracks and the entire area was surrounded by dense daisy like plants/flowers.
The Weather
Beautiful sunny, dry days. Hot during the day, cold at night. We did get rain at the end which proved crucial to the success of the hunt.
The Moon
New moon so dark at night other then the stars.
My Firearm
1910 WJ Jeffery Double in 475 No 2 Jeffery.
My Ammo
Hand loaded, Woodleigh 500 grain Soft Point bullets.
The Warning (from the houndsmen PHs)
This is an incredibly boring type of hunting. Hours and hours and days and days of driving the dirt roads looking for tracks.
For us that meant driving from 6am to 6pm with a couple of days where we started at 3am.
I day time Swordfish so I thought I knew what boring looked like, watching the rod tip every second for hours and days on end for a subtle tap of the rod tip. But when the days roll by without seeing a fresh leopard tracks, well that’s what boring really looks like.