Greater Kruger Region – My Hunt with @DERIAN KOEKEMOER SAFARIS
I booked a combination hunt for a 25 lb bull elephant (non-exportable) and an exportable management 36” Cape buffalo in the Greater Kruger region for October 14–22, 2025. The hunt was arranged with Derian Koekemoer Safaris. It was a short-notice booking, finalized only about four months earlier. Derian also works with a videographer, Kristen, who charges very reasonable rates—so why not have the hunt filmed? I hired her for the videography.
I had previously hunted with Derian the year before for buffalo cow, kudu, impala, and warthog. Not only do I trust him, but I’ve also become friends with him and his wonderful wife, Johlene, who manages the business side of the operation.
Equipment
For this hunt, I used my custom Brno ZKK-602 .458 Lott mounted with a Nikon Monarch African 1-4 African scope and Warne QD rings. I brought 35 rounds of Federal 500-grain Woodleigh Hydro Solids for elephant, and 20 rounds of Pendleton Custom 500-grain North Fork soft points for buffalo. Both loads hit nearly the same POI, with about a 1 inch variation sighted in dead on at 50 yards. The 55 rounds total, with the Pelican ammo case, were well under the 11 lb restriction. I transported the rifle in a bright orange, old two-gun Pelican 1750 case marked “Browning” that I’ve had since the mid-’90s—still as rugged as ever.
I used a Simply Rugged African leather cartridge belt with elastic loops holding 10 rounds, plus a six-round cotton ammo slide holder from Trader Keith’s. That gave me 22 rounds total, including five in the rifle magazine plus 1 in the chamber. A custom knife rounded out the belt.
I carried a small, quiet cloth backpack I’ve had for years with extra water, a medical kit, power bars, and electrolyte powder. After a bad reaction to a wasp sting a few months back, the VA confirmed I’m allergic to bees and wasps, so I carried prescribed EpiPens as well.
Travel
I used Shawn Kennedy with Gracy Travel for all arrangements, which went perfectly, including their $300 VIP gun permit service handled by Bruce in Johannesburg—worth every penny. I flew Delta Comfort Plus from Atlanta via Oklahoma City. Other than a two-hour delay in Atlanta, everything went smoothly, and I slept most of the way. I had placed Apple AirTags in my gun and ammo cases for peace of mind.
Upon arrival in Johannesburg, I met with a Gracy Travel representative waiting with a sign, cleared customs and while waiting for my checked luggage Bruce called me and told me his assistant Michael would take care of me who was filling in for him and proved just as friendly and capable and he had my signed SAPS 520. All told, collecting my rifle, luggage, clearing customs and firearms—all done in about an hour. I stayed overnight at the City Lodge.
The next morning, after a great breakfast buffet at the City Lodge which opens at 4am for breakfast, Michael met me again to check in for my Airlink flight to Hoedspruit. I left at 10 a.m. and arrived at 11 a.m. I collected my gear and met Derian. From there, we drove to the lodge.
The Hunt
This hunt represented a lifelong dream—to hunt elephant. Adding a Cape buffalo made it even better. The elephants are currently non-exportable, but the ivory is registered in your name for potential future exportation. Even if that never happens, the experience itself was more than enough.
The reserve covered roughly 100,000 acres of unfenced, free-range territory along the park border. Several reserves also have plains game on quota in addition to elephant and buffalo.
We stayed at the Derian Koekemoer Safaris main lodge on the BuffaloLand Safari concession, just 20 minutes from Eastgate Airport and 30 min to the Greater Kruger camp. The lodge was comfortable and well-appointed. We could hear lions roaring every night from the lodge during the evening. In addition to the BuffaloLand concession, Derian conducts hunts on several other nearby concessions in addition to the Greater Kruger area, including a Big Five Game Reserve. He plans to open a dedicated camp directly inside the open area in the future.
Upon arrival at our hunting destination in the Greater Kruger, we met the warden who would accompany us during the hunt. There’s now a government requirement that all elephant hunters must shoot a test target to verify accuracy for a brain shot. My shot at 40 yards off shooting sticks landed about 1 inch left of center—good enough. The target is kept with the warden’s official paperwork.
The warden functions much like a ranger, responsible for ensuring proper selection of animals and coordination with tourist areas to insure we have the area to hunt by ourselves without any interference from tourist game drives, etc. The warden knew the area and animal patterns intimately—this is his backyard.
I would be hunting a 25–30-year-old bull elephant with 25 lb tusks and a 36-inch Cape buffalo (only males may be hunted within the APNR). There’s about a 10% plus or minus margin for error allowed regarding size or weight estimation. If an animal exceeds size, ivory weight and age restriction the warden and PH are fined, not the hunter. Fortunately, they’re excellent judges of age and size and/or ivory weight.
A broken horn buffalo bull can be taken but interestingly enough, you cannot shoot a scrum cap bull which I specifically asked about. Anyhow, the hunter needn’t worry about judging the appropriate age and size of the elephant and buffalo —that’s what the PH and warden are paid to do.
The region suffers from extensive habitat damage due to an elephant population of around 35,000—far above carrying capacity. All meat from the hunt goes to local communities and the Predator Rehab Facility.
You’re required to shoot a test target before the hunt. Brain shots only on elephant.
TBC
I booked a combination hunt for a 25 lb bull elephant (non-exportable) and an exportable management 36” Cape buffalo in the Greater Kruger region for October 14–22, 2025. The hunt was arranged with Derian Koekemoer Safaris. It was a short-notice booking, finalized only about four months earlier. Derian also works with a videographer, Kristen, who charges very reasonable rates—so why not have the hunt filmed? I hired her for the videography.
I had previously hunted with Derian the year before for buffalo cow, kudu, impala, and warthog. Not only do I trust him, but I’ve also become friends with him and his wonderful wife, Johlene, who manages the business side of the operation.
Equipment
For this hunt, I used my custom Brno ZKK-602 .458 Lott mounted with a Nikon Monarch African 1-4 African scope and Warne QD rings. I brought 35 rounds of Federal 500-grain Woodleigh Hydro Solids for elephant, and 20 rounds of Pendleton Custom 500-grain North Fork soft points for buffalo. Both loads hit nearly the same POI, with about a 1 inch variation sighted in dead on at 50 yards. The 55 rounds total, with the Pelican ammo case, were well under the 11 lb restriction. I transported the rifle in a bright orange, old two-gun Pelican 1750 case marked “Browning” that I’ve had since the mid-’90s—still as rugged as ever.
I used a Simply Rugged African leather cartridge belt with elastic loops holding 10 rounds, plus a six-round cotton ammo slide holder from Trader Keith’s. That gave me 22 rounds total, including five in the rifle magazine plus 1 in the chamber. A custom knife rounded out the belt.
I carried a small, quiet cloth backpack I’ve had for years with extra water, a medical kit, power bars, and electrolyte powder. After a bad reaction to a wasp sting a few months back, the VA confirmed I’m allergic to bees and wasps, so I carried prescribed EpiPens as well.
Travel
I used Shawn Kennedy with Gracy Travel for all arrangements, which went perfectly, including their $300 VIP gun permit service handled by Bruce in Johannesburg—worth every penny. I flew Delta Comfort Plus from Atlanta via Oklahoma City. Other than a two-hour delay in Atlanta, everything went smoothly, and I slept most of the way. I had placed Apple AirTags in my gun and ammo cases for peace of mind.
Upon arrival in Johannesburg, I met with a Gracy Travel representative waiting with a sign, cleared customs and while waiting for my checked luggage Bruce called me and told me his assistant Michael would take care of me who was filling in for him and proved just as friendly and capable and he had my signed SAPS 520. All told, collecting my rifle, luggage, clearing customs and firearms—all done in about an hour. I stayed overnight at the City Lodge.
The next morning, after a great breakfast buffet at the City Lodge which opens at 4am for breakfast, Michael met me again to check in for my Airlink flight to Hoedspruit. I left at 10 a.m. and arrived at 11 a.m. I collected my gear and met Derian. From there, we drove to the lodge.
The Hunt
This hunt represented a lifelong dream—to hunt elephant. Adding a Cape buffalo made it even better. The elephants are currently non-exportable, but the ivory is registered in your name for potential future exportation. Even if that never happens, the experience itself was more than enough.
The reserve covered roughly 100,000 acres of unfenced, free-range territory along the park border. Several reserves also have plains game on quota in addition to elephant and buffalo.
We stayed at the Derian Koekemoer Safaris main lodge on the BuffaloLand Safari concession, just 20 minutes from Eastgate Airport and 30 min to the Greater Kruger camp. The lodge was comfortable and well-appointed. We could hear lions roaring every night from the lodge during the evening. In addition to the BuffaloLand concession, Derian conducts hunts on several other nearby concessions in addition to the Greater Kruger area, including a Big Five Game Reserve. He plans to open a dedicated camp directly inside the open area in the future.
Upon arrival at our hunting destination in the Greater Kruger, we met the warden who would accompany us during the hunt. There’s now a government requirement that all elephant hunters must shoot a test target to verify accuracy for a brain shot. My shot at 40 yards off shooting sticks landed about 1 inch left of center—good enough. The target is kept with the warden’s official paperwork.
The warden functions much like a ranger, responsible for ensuring proper selection of animals and coordination with tourist areas to insure we have the area to hunt by ourselves without any interference from tourist game drives, etc. The warden knew the area and animal patterns intimately—this is his backyard.
I would be hunting a 25–30-year-old bull elephant with 25 lb tusks and a 36-inch Cape buffalo (only males may be hunted within the APNR). There’s about a 10% plus or minus margin for error allowed regarding size or weight estimation. If an animal exceeds size, ivory weight and age restriction the warden and PH are fined, not the hunter. Fortunately, they’re excellent judges of age and size and/or ivory weight.
A broken horn buffalo bull can be taken but interestingly enough, you cannot shoot a scrum cap bull which I specifically asked about. Anyhow, the hunter needn’t worry about judging the appropriate age and size of the elephant and buffalo —that’s what the PH and warden are paid to do.
The region suffers from extensive habitat damage due to an elephant population of around 35,000—far above carrying capacity. All meat from the hunt goes to local communities and the Predator Rehab Facility.
You’re required to shoot a test target before the hunt. Brain shots only on elephant.
TBC
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