Leadwood
AH member
- Joined
- Jul 30, 2025
- Messages
- 32
- Reaction score
- 85
- Location
- Pretoria, South Africa
- Hunted
- Mozambique, Namibia, Botswana, South Africa
I had a very bad experience with a black mamba on our farm ten years ago.
Went out at midday with my 50 Cal Muzzleloader looking for a kudu bull.
Decided to work my way very slowly up a small dry drainage line, heavily overgrown alongside the banks.
My left leg was suffering from some form of nerve damage after the previous week's mountain hunt.....I could not lift it up or walk properly...had to crab along slowly.
At some point I heard a branch break very close to me in front.....could not see a thing through the thickets...so I decided to slide down the bank into the dry gulley itself from where I would be able to softly sneak up on the kudu.
Due to my gammy leg it was slow going to get down the 10 foot bank.
Halfway down I started hearing a strange noise......very persistant and also very close.
I could not see anything while trying to get down so I kept going and eventually landed on the sand intact.
The next moment an extremely large black mamba reared up with it's open mouth literally almost touching my face.
I am almost two meters tall.
I realised that the rest of the mamba's body was between my legs and that the sound from earlier was the mamba blowing/ hissing due to the soil and pebbles that I dislodged and dropped down on it.
I remember very very clearly that there was not a single thing that I could do at that moment......whether I was going to live or die depended entirely on the mamba.
( my mind already calculated the distance back to the truck with one useless leg, full bite in the face, then another two hours to nearest hospital.......and the conclusion was reached in miliseconds. You will not make it. Walk to the nearest road and try to send a gps pin location so that my family can find and bury me before the hyenas do )
Time stood still for me.
The mamba kept gaping his mouth in my face for what felt like an eternity.
Then suddenly it lowered itself.........and started to climb up the opposite bank about 5 meters away and then draped itself across a large broken knobthorn branch.
There it stayed...all the while watching me.
My decision was easy.
It spared my life.....and I was not going to kill it although it was an easy shot at less than 10 meters.
I very slowly hobbled away and to this day have not hunted that same section again.
It is a strange experience to be in a situation where you are completely at the mercy of another party/ entity .
Went out at midday with my 50 Cal Muzzleloader looking for a kudu bull.
Decided to work my way very slowly up a small dry drainage line, heavily overgrown alongside the banks.
My left leg was suffering from some form of nerve damage after the previous week's mountain hunt.....I could not lift it up or walk properly...had to crab along slowly.
At some point I heard a branch break very close to me in front.....could not see a thing through the thickets...so I decided to slide down the bank into the dry gulley itself from where I would be able to softly sneak up on the kudu.
Due to my gammy leg it was slow going to get down the 10 foot bank.
Halfway down I started hearing a strange noise......very persistant and also very close.
I could not see anything while trying to get down so I kept going and eventually landed on the sand intact.
The next moment an extremely large black mamba reared up with it's open mouth literally almost touching my face.
I am almost two meters tall.
I realised that the rest of the mamba's body was between my legs and that the sound from earlier was the mamba blowing/ hissing due to the soil and pebbles that I dislodged and dropped down on it.
I remember very very clearly that there was not a single thing that I could do at that moment......whether I was going to live or die depended entirely on the mamba.
( my mind already calculated the distance back to the truck with one useless leg, full bite in the face, then another two hours to nearest hospital.......and the conclusion was reached in miliseconds. You will not make it. Walk to the nearest road and try to send a gps pin location so that my family can find and bury me before the hyenas do )
Time stood still for me.
The mamba kept gaping his mouth in my face for what felt like an eternity.
Then suddenly it lowered itself.........and started to climb up the opposite bank about 5 meters away and then draped itself across a large broken knobthorn branch.
There it stayed...all the while watching me.
My decision was easy.
It spared my life.....and I was not going to kill it although it was an easy shot at less than 10 meters.
I very slowly hobbled away and to this day have not hunted that same section again.
It is a strange experience to be in a situation where you are completely at the mercy of another party/ entity .