Robin Hurt - An Old Time, Famous PH From The East Africa Days

James.Grage

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I was deeply upset to hear about the demise of a lion named Cecil. A study lion equipped with a GPS collar around his neck, at the hands of an overseas client on safari with a Zimbabwe professional hunter.

I can't give an opinion on Zimbabwe game laws as I had never operated there and as such, unfamiliar with that country's regulations. However, if on investigation, the law is found to have been broken, then the Zimbabwe Wildlife department should prosecute the perpetrators to the full extent of the law.

Some consideration at this time needs to be given to the benefits to wildlife conservation from proper ethical licensed use of wildlife. AND not tar all hunters and wildlife mangers with the same brush as those who willingly break wildlife laws.

All too often well meaning people, who don't understand the issues involved, try to dictate to Africans on wildlife matters.

Without any consideration to African requirements from this resource.
Or considering the heavy financial cost of wildlife conservation to Africans.
Or the conservation and management benefits that the role of safari hunting plays.
Or the heavy cost of setting aside land for wildlife, at the expense of other forms of land use such as agriculture.

Wildlife and wild places need to be self supporting financially whether through photographic or hunting safaris. It is not possible to make all wilderness areas into fully protected National Parks, so viable sources of income for non protected areas need to be found to encourage its stewardship. Legitimate safari hunting is one such source. Buffer zones surrounding protected core areas, such as hunting blocks or concessions or private land are essential to survival of the core; to allow wild animals room to migrate.

This is all of utmost importance to human communities living on a day to day basis with wild animals in the wilderness - they must benefit from sustainable wildlife use if they are to be encouraged to look after this resource outside of national parks and protected areas.

Simply put, legal hunting is a management tool,strictly controlled by quota take offs, set by respective wildlife departments. (And in some cases by CITES, the International regulatory body responsible for International permits). Wildlife, just like domestic animals, must be managed, when populations warrant this. The key is sustainability. All too often legal use of wildlife through safari hunting and illegal theft of wild animals through unchecked poaching, are lumped together through misunderstanding under one umbrella as wildlife destruction.

Nothing could be further from the truth. A bank manager is not lumped together with a bank thief as one entity. Similarly, legal licensed management and illicit poaching are at opposite extremes, one being legal the other pure theft.

There is an enormous difference between legal hunting on the one hand (sustainable licensed management) and illegal poaching on the other (uncaring, unethical, unchecked, criminal theft of the wildlife resource). Costly anti poaching is undertaken by most Safari Companies. The motivation for the wildlife manager to look after and conserve wildlife is greater than anyone's, because their very livelihood depends on healthy game populations. If the bush is vacated by legal hunters for whatever reason, they are replaced by illegal poachers. Hunting bans in some African countries have been tried. The results have been catastrophic, with plummeting wildlife numbers. When people don't benefit from wildlife, they tend not to keep it.

An additional part of the problem is the end user, in Asian countries, of lion bones, elephant ivory and rhino horn creating demand for these illicit wildlife products. It is these end users who need to be targeted. No market results in no poaching.

Let us not forget that an avid hunter, President Theodore Roosevelt, was the founder of what today is the world wide National Park system. A true conservationist.

In fact the biggest danger to wildlife today in Africa is through an ever increasing human population, encroaching into the wilderness, displacing wild animals.

Yes, I am a legal hunter and wildlife manager, but I am also a staunch conservationist in the true sense of the word. (Conservation means wise sustainable use, not just protection). I abhor the illegal use of wildlife, but condone its careful use as a sound management tool. Most of us have a common interest in the well being of wild animals, whether we are licensed hunters, or non hunters. It is time for realism in conservation, and not feelings of emotion that cloud management issues. It's time for all parties to work together for the benefit of wild life and wild places we love.
Robin Hurt
 
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Robin's words are 100% correct, I just don't understand why "anti hunting people" just can get it into their heads!! Emotions will kill more than protect.
 
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What an Eland bull.Congrats.Livingston or Cape?
 
Cape then, very nice no matter what tribe!
 
Odd thread.....
 

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