Doug3006
AH legend
- Joined
- Nov 18, 2015
- Messages
- 2,595
- Reaction score
- 10,333
- Media
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- Member of
- SCI, NRA
- Hunted
- Namibia (X3), Zambia, Zimbabwe, South Africa
I thought those interested in hunting leopard in Namibia might like to understand the trophy import process, cycle time and cost. I hunted Leopard and plains game this past April with Immenhof Safaris located near the town of Omaruru. If you are interested in reading about that hunt, here’s the link.
Kai Eichler, the owner of Namibia Safari Services and Supplies, picked up my leopard on April 23 while I was still in camp. They are a taxidermist and shipping firm. Kanati Taxidermy in Pennsylvania will do a full body mount, so I just needed Kai to handle the logistics.
As always, I used Coppersmith as my importer.
I struggled deciding whether to apply for the CITES permit myself or engage an expert. I decided to have Jerad Dabney at Adventure Permits International handle it for me. I provided him a copy of the Namibia Hunting Permit and he handled the import permit application. He did a great job. This is purely optional. You might be more willing to do it yourself than I am.
Timeline:
Trophy picked up by Namibia Safari Services: April 23, 2025
CITES Import Permit applied for by Adventure Permits: June 9, 2025
Draft export permit issued by Namibia Wildlife Authority: July 9, 2025
CITES Import Permit issued by USF&W: August 25, 2025
Final Namibia export permit issued: September 29,2025
Trophy shipped WDH to JFK via Ethiopian Air: October 3, 2025
Trophy arrived JFK: October 6, 2025
Trophy import approved by USF&W and USDA: October 22, 2025
Trophy shipped to Kanati Taxidermy: October 23, 2025
Costs:
CITES Permit assistance from Adventure Permits: $950
Namibia Safari Services dip/pack and processing: $540
Shipping via Turkish Airways - Namibia to JFK: $755
Coppersmith processing and storage: $1,508
Shipping from JFK to Kanati: $350
Total for logistics: $4,337
The import process hasn’t been a bad experience. All of my partners…namely, Namibia Safari Services, Adventure Permits International and Coppersmith….did a fine job. It just takes a lot more time than it should. The cost is the cost. Hard to put a dollar value on a lifetime dream!
My friends, tomorrow I leave for Africa once again! I’ll be hunting leopard with Immenhof Safaris in Namibia. In the Erongo Region northwest of Omaruru. As always, my partner in crime will be @Jeff505. His mission is to help shoot bait!
We’re flying on Lufthansa. We depart from St. Louis tomorrow afternoon, and land early the next morning in Frankfurt, Germany. Then after a brief 14 hour layover, we’ll fly directly to Windhoek, Namibia. Shawn at Gracy Travel has made all of the arrangements.
I have high hopes for this route. Lufthansa began flying direct from St. Louis to...
We’re flying on Lufthansa. We depart from St. Louis tomorrow afternoon, and land early the next morning in Frankfurt, Germany. Then after a brief 14 hour layover, we’ll fly directly to Windhoek, Namibia. Shawn at Gracy Travel has made all of the arrangements.
I have high hopes for this route. Lufthansa began flying direct from St. Louis to...
- Doug3006
- Replies: 110
- Forum: Hunting reports Africa
Kai Eichler, the owner of Namibia Safari Services and Supplies, picked up my leopard on April 23 while I was still in camp. They are a taxidermist and shipping firm. Kanati Taxidermy in Pennsylvania will do a full body mount, so I just needed Kai to handle the logistics.
As always, I used Coppersmith as my importer.
I struggled deciding whether to apply for the CITES permit myself or engage an expert. I decided to have Jerad Dabney at Adventure Permits International handle it for me. I provided him a copy of the Namibia Hunting Permit and he handled the import permit application. He did a great job. This is purely optional. You might be more willing to do it yourself than I am.
Timeline:
Trophy picked up by Namibia Safari Services: April 23, 2025
CITES Import Permit applied for by Adventure Permits: June 9, 2025
Draft export permit issued by Namibia Wildlife Authority: July 9, 2025
CITES Import Permit issued by USF&W: August 25, 2025
Final Namibia export permit issued: September 29,2025
Trophy shipped WDH to JFK via Ethiopian Air: October 3, 2025
Trophy arrived JFK: October 6, 2025
Trophy import approved by USF&W and USDA: October 22, 2025
Trophy shipped to Kanati Taxidermy: October 23, 2025
Costs:
CITES Permit assistance from Adventure Permits: $950
Namibia Safari Services dip/pack and processing: $540
Shipping via Turkish Airways - Namibia to JFK: $755
Coppersmith processing and storage: $1,508
Shipping from JFK to Kanati: $350
Total for logistics: $4,337
The import process hasn’t been a bad experience. All of my partners…namely, Namibia Safari Services, Adventure Permits International and Coppersmith….did a fine job. It just takes a lot more time than it should. The cost is the cost. Hard to put a dollar value on a lifetime dream!
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