Hank2211
AH legend
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I too had wanted to hunt for a hyena for soome time. I had only seen them from a distance during the day, and then only rarely. I had tried baiting a tree and then arriving just before first light, but while hyena had eaten at the bait, they had always left before we got there.
On a leopard hunt this summer in Zimbabwe I had gotten my leopard, but we had a second leopard hitting another bait as well. We decided to be a bit greedy and see if it was bigger than the one I had taken. While sitting in the blind one afternoon we saw a hyena come in and stand under the tree looking at the bait. From where I sat (55 yards away), he looked enormous. I wanted to shoot, but my PH was worried I'd scare away a leopard that might be about. So regretfully I let it go.
Shortly after the hyena left we heard a number of lion roaring not far away, and were starting to conclude that if there was a leopard in the area, he wouldn't be coming to the bait that evening. But we waited nonetheless. At about 6.15, with 15 minutes of legal shooting light left, the hyena came back. This time, I made enough hand signals to let my PH know I really wanted to take the shot. He agreed (or seemed to . . . ) and I took aim on the shoulder, and fired (.300 Win. Mag.). The hyena took off and from the blind I couldn't see where he went, but we immediately ran out. We found the blood, and tracked for about 10 yards, and then saw him piled up against a bush.
As I said, I had only seen these guys from a distance before, so I was surprised when we tried to pick him up and get him away from the blind area - he was enormous or, in the words of my PH, "an effin monsta".
Moral of the story, opportunity sometimes strikes twice!
On a leopard hunt this summer in Zimbabwe I had gotten my leopard, but we had a second leopard hitting another bait as well. We decided to be a bit greedy and see if it was bigger than the one I had taken. While sitting in the blind one afternoon we saw a hyena come in and stand under the tree looking at the bait. From where I sat (55 yards away), he looked enormous. I wanted to shoot, but my PH was worried I'd scare away a leopard that might be about. So regretfully I let it go.
Shortly after the hyena left we heard a number of lion roaring not far away, and were starting to conclude that if there was a leopard in the area, he wouldn't be coming to the bait that evening. But we waited nonetheless. At about 6.15, with 15 minutes of legal shooting light left, the hyena came back. This time, I made enough hand signals to let my PH know I really wanted to take the shot. He agreed (or seemed to . . . ) and I took aim on the shoulder, and fired (.300 Win. Mag.). The hyena took off and from the blind I couldn't see where he went, but we immediately ran out. We found the blood, and tracked for about 10 yards, and then saw him piled up against a bush.
As I said, I had only seen these guys from a distance before, so I was surprised when we tried to pick him up and get him away from the blind area - he was enormous or, in the words of my PH, "an effin monsta".
Moral of the story, opportunity sometimes strikes twice!
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