Night Crocodile Hunting in Malawi — Precision in the Dark

Croc25

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Night Crocodile Hunting in Malawi — Precision in the Dark
For over ten years, I worked in Malawi on professional crocodile problem-animal control, removing more than 300 confirmed problem animals from rivers and lakes where communities live, fish, and cross daily.
This was not recreational hunting.
It was a necessary intervention when a Nile Crocodile had become a direct and repeated threat.
Most of that work happened at night.

The Light Problem No One Mentions
Spotlight work is more technical than most realise.
When first locating a crocodile, the beam is steady on the eyes. The red reflection gives you your reference. But during the final approach inside close range, the light must be lifted slightly off the animal.
Keep the beam fixed on the head at a very close distance, and the crocodile will often spook and dive instantly.
So the last few metres are done with reduced illumination.
By the time you are inside five metres, the spotlight is raised just enough to avoid triggering a dive. That means the shot is taken in partial darkness — using ambient spill rather than a fully lit target.
You are shooting at a dark silhouette on black water.

Under Five Metres — On Moving Water
Many shots were taken inside five metres.
From a boat on the current.
One hand is maintaining control of the steering wheel.
The other is managing the rifle.
At that range, distance is irrelevant.
Angle is everything.

The Brain Shot — Technical Reality
The common advice to aim “between the eyes” is incorrect.
The crocodile’s brain sits low and rearward within a heavily armoured, sloped skull. From a slightly elevated boat position, you are often looking down at bone designed to deflect impact.

At close range:
• Slightly high = deflection
• Slightly forward = sinus cavity
• Slightly lateral = heavy jaw muscle

The viable neurological window is small—about coin-sized.
And in partial darkness, that window becomes even harder to define.
Immediate shutdown of the central nervous system is the objective. Nothing less is acceptable in professional control work.

Three Independent Movements
Night river work involves constant motion:

1. The boat shifts and vibrates.
2. The current rotates and nudges the hull.
3. The crocodile makes subtle head adjustments.

At five metres, minimal muzzle deviation meaningfully alters the impact point.
There is no solid ground.
No fixed brace.
Only balance, breath discipline, and timing.

Optics at Close Quarters
At extreme close range, magnification becomes a liability.
A properly zeroed red dot allows:

• Both-eyes-open awareness
• Rapid acquisition
• Reduced visual distortion from movement
• Immediate correction

But optics cannot compensate for poor anatomical understanding.
You are aligning a trajectory through dense cranial bone into a small brain mass — from a moving platform — in reduced light.

Consequence of Error
A poor hit at under five metres can result in:

• Violent thrashing beside the hull
• Immediate dive beneath the boat
• Disappearance into reeds or current

A wounded crocodile in close quarters is far more dangerous than one at a distance.
In problem animal control, “almost” is failure.
Night crocodile hunting in Malawi was never about spectacle or bravado.

For all of my removals across a decade, the constants were clear:

• Respect the anatomy.
• Respect the platform.
• Respect the river.
• Take the shot only when it is right.

When the spotlight lifts and the final metres are made in near-darkness, you are left with skill, discipline, and judgment.
On moving water.
At close range.
With millimetres determining the outcome.

That is the unseen side of professional crocodile control.


www.therealcrocodilehunter.com
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Count me in on Croc hunting. It’s tough sledding in the Mangrove Swamps with Jurassic Park size insects. Spent two weeks looking for this Bull. Took several days of glassing before I began to tell male from female and judge trophy size. Have not hunted crocodile at night however. Judging trophies during the day was hard enough.
 

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You have my profound respect for a decade well spent. Few of us who enjoy hunting and/or shooting have the opportunity to make such a meaningful lifesaving contribution to any community.

It would be interesting to understand what differences there are, other than the obvious temperament issue, between a Nile crocodile skull and an American alligator. The latter are normally subdued at the side of a boat with a .22lr to the brain. Prior to modern legalized harvest, a .22 and spotlight would also have been a poacher's chosen gear in the coastal South. I hasten to add that I am in no way advocating that for croc control shooting, but it would be anatomically interesting to discover if a croc brain is harder to reach than gator.
 
You have my profound respect for a decade well spent. Few of us who enjoy hunting and/or shooting have the opportunity to make such a meaningful lifesaving contribution to any community.

It would be interesting to understand what differences there are, other than the obvious temperament issue, between a Nile crocodile skull and an American alligator. The latter are normally subdued at the side of a boat with a .22lr to the brain. Prior to modern legalized harvest, a .22 and spotlight would also have been a poacher's chosen gear in the coastal South. I hasten to add that I am in no way advocating that for croc control shooting, but it would be anatomically interesting to discover if a croc brain is harder to reach than gator.
Crocodile skulls; particularly in large species like the Nile and Asiatic/Australian saltwater species, are generally more robust and thicker than alligator skulls to support a higher bite force, often exceeding 3,500–5,000 PSI compared to the alligator's 2,000–2,900 PSI. While alligators have broader snouts for crushing, crocodiles possess denser bone structures.

For Nile crocodile, I would not recommend the brain shot be attempted with any calibre lighter than .264 Winchester Magnum. Bullets should also be reasonably sturdily constructed. I've seen a 220Gr Winchester Silver Tip fired from a .300 Holland & Holland Magnum... which broke apart on the skull of a Nile crocodile in 1978.
 

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