Big Game Hunters, Show Your Stuff

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
 

smoke and coke

Well-Known Member
I have a tree in my back yard that bucks rub their antlers on every year. In the first pic you can see the new rub and the battle scars from last year. Not a ton of damage but I’m sure he will work the tree again. When the tree was smaller I had to straighten it because a buck was pushing it over. I planted the tree many years ago and I’m not mad at the buck, it kind of excites me to it.

IMG_0310.jpegIMG_0309.jpeg
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
"As I had so often experienced in years past, mine was a solo camp, in the High Lonesome, 11 miles from cell phone service and three times that from the nearest semblance of civilization."

 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
"But if your first shot fails to drop him, as mine just had, then some damnable internal lever knocks the keg over and gives the buff ability to absorb ordnance like the range berm at the Aberdeen Proving Ground...The numerous, solid hits from major caliber African rifles have had the impact of tsetse bites. And it comes. As it does, you have fired the last round in the magazine of the .458. So you now have a charging, wounded, Cape buff at close range with an empty rifle in hand."

 

GreatwhiteNorth

Global Moderator
Staff member
"But if your first shot fails to drop him, as mine just had, then some damnable internal lever knocks the keg over and gives the buff ability to absorb ordnance like the range berm at the Aberdeen Proving Ground...The numerous, solid hits from major caliber African rifles have had the impact of tsetse bites. And it comes. As it does, you have fired the last round in the magazine of the .458. So you now have a charging, wounded, Cape buff at close range with an empty rifle in hand."

Great read BB, thanks!
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BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
Great read BB, thanks! +
Peter Hathaway Capstick wrote some great African safari articles and books that you can probably find at the library.
Also available fairly inexpensive at used book sellers.

a quote about one of his books...
"For sheer excitement and terror, 'Death in the Long Grass' has few equals."

an interesting forum here...

and a massive compilation of books re: Africa and Professional Hunters, old and new.
 
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Bullmark

Well-Known Member
IMG_0317.jpegI didn’t know this thread was here….what a great surprise. Now I can address my 2 favorite hobbies at the same place. Anyway, I live and farm (mj only and the occasional food plot) in Va but hunt all over, when the budget will allow it. I bought a rockin farm in S Iowa and got a taste of how the other half lives.
As time went on, I could only draw a tag every 3yrs, even though I owned the land. So I was buying Governors tags for the years I didn’t draw.
When that got too expensive, I sold to a buddy.
Now I hunt it every third year and it’s a freak show. It makes hunting back home in Va seem like a different activity altogether.
The pic is my personal best……taken w/ a bow on Oct 28…….the year was 2011 or 2012, I forget. Big 5.5 yr old, grossed 181” w/ 28” and 29” beams.
 

GreatwhiteNorth

Global Moderator
Staff member
View attachment 5355762I didn’t know this thread was here….what a great surprise. Now I can address my 2 favorite hobbies at the same place. Anyway, I live and farm (mj only and the occasional food plot) in Va but hunt all over, when the budget will allow it. I bought a rockin farm in S Iowa and got a taste of how the other half lives.
As time went on, I could only draw a tag every 3yrs, even though I owned the land. So I was buying Governors tags for the years I didn’t draw.
When that got too expensive, I sold to a buddy.
Now I hunt it every third year and it’s a freak show. It makes hunting back home in Va seem like a different activity altogether.
The pic is my personal best……taken w/ a bow on Oct 28…….the year was 2011 or 2012, I forget. Big 5.5 yr old, grossed 181” w/ 28” and 29” beams.
Beautiful buck for sure!
You didn't really need to mention the bow part, the target in the background and the wound in the fore says everything.
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BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
"As the ground between them quickly disappeared, Capt. Slatter moved to TR’s side and fired at the fast-approaching monster. His bullet entered the bull’s neck, but it failed to stop the onrushing beast. Intent on reaching the men, the rhino continued its charge until finally its head dropped and he plowed into the earth, its momentum bringing it to within several feet of the men."

 
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