Hyena Inspired Victory Dances

By Kendal-Ray Kaschula

 

 

If there’s a cattle rancher reading this book, then you’re about to understand this next story better than anyone.

 

I lived on a cattle ranch from fourteen, and for as far back as my memories went, we were plagued by hyenas.

 

And no, they were not just any old hyenas. They were professors…..they were graduates in avoiding a bullet. They were the holders of PHD’s in how to avoid a hunter. They were the kind of hyenas that could put a sane person in a mental institute, and in a place as tough as Zimbabwe’s Lowveld, the last thing anyone needed was another reason to go insane, but who said the weary get to rest?

 

Hunting hyenas, was, and still is-in fact I’m about to go out and try shoot some the very evening that I’m writing this-a regular activity of mine. Baits, blinds, sitting on roads where they frequently walk, hanging around in trees like a bat, calling them-insert gag noise here-whatever could ever be done to kill a hyena, I did it.

 

And believe me when I tell you that such commitment gave me about a hundred adventures. Everything from jimmying electric fences so that I could slide under them like a fugitive, to calling in leopards and lions because they responded to the caller more than a hyena, to seeing and getting to witness an entire pack of wild dogs sing their night cry of howls, and, the list could go on.

 

I don’t regret those experiences, because they were beautiful, but I still would have liked to win against a four-legged spotted scavenger though.

 

Unfortunately, they won far more often than I did.

 

There was one occasion, when I was seventeen, fresh out of school and having passed my Learner Hunter’s License, I was left with an expanse of time that I decided-for the sake of hunting which I still adored, even if it was hyenas-and for the sake of the money doing PAC hyenas got me, that I would tackle the ranch’s hyenas with a vengeance.

 

And when I say vengeance, I mean vengeance.

 

Picture those medieval Vikings with six-foot beards, skins across their shoulders, and battle axes raised as they charged screaming like banshees into battle and then multiply their crazy by ten. That was my version of vengeance.

 

The only problem was that despite my dedication to the cause, they still whipped us every time. That year I spent more nights in a blind than my own bed, and on one occasion I nearly gave up.

 

We’d been hunting the same cattle killing hyenas-a pair of them-every night back-to-back for three weeks and Tracker and I were starting to resemble drugged zombies. Not to mention our patience was wearing thin to the point of being as brittle as spider silk-spider silk not produced by Golden Orbs(those things weave webs of steel)-and all around we were pretty run down.

 

I decided, after so many nights of sitting on kills that the culprits just wouldn’t come back to, that we should have a break. Just a week or so to recollect ourselves-maybe sleep-but, on the very day we were meant to start this, we were told of another cow that had been killed, and despite our resolve, we were clearly suckers for punishment, so back we went.

Pop-up-blind in place, sticks set, chairs up, lane cleared and in we go. I won’t lie, my expectations were at zero. I was fully expecting to spend another night trying to keep myself awake for hyenas that just wouldn’t come in, but that was not to be.

 

It was some time past nine when we heard the first whoops. An hour later, they called again, closer. Part of me was hopeful, but part of me was quite content to doze off on the impression that we would once again have no action.

 

I know, I had slipped into despondency, but seriously…..I had not slept in weeks. I was basically a husk of existence.

 

And then, the light sound of crunching bone. I barely registered it in my dozed off state, but Prosper gave me a firm tap, waking me, and so I leaned forward to the sound of more crunching, flicking on my thermal, and there. They. Were.

 

Those two hyenas, glowing black in the thermal attachment on my .243’s scope-because .243 was my hyena weapon of death-were some of the most beautiful things I’ve ever seen.

There was one on either side of the cow, and when the one feeding on the opposite side raised its head, I planted a bullet in its chest, dropping it where it stood.

 

Its friend bolted, and I reloaded, searching for what I hoped would be a chance to shoot its pal, and thinking I saw it, let loose another round. Was that a hyena or just an unfortunate shaped tree? I’ll never know, but, either way, my second bullet roused the one remaining hyena from wherever it was and I saw it loping away, and planted, by God’s grace alone considering its pace, a bullet in its ribs.

 

And then, a second of silence except for the heavy breathing in the blind. In later years Prosper would get a flir to use as a second spotter, but back then it was just me and the thermal with eyes, meaning he had no choice but to sit beside me in darkness with no clue as to what was going on around us.

 

‘And?’ he whispered, breathless.

 

‘One down,’ I whispered back, hoarse. ‘Let’s go see.’

 

We all but flew from the blind, torching around as we made our way up to the carcass. I had seen the hyena fall, it wasn’t a surprise to find it there, but when you’ve finally gotten the one thing you’ve been searching for, for months, you believe it’s real when you’re right there and it’s glowing in your spotlight.

 

‘We did it,’ I was breathless. Could barely breath. ‘We did it!’ I said again, though it came out more of a squeal.

 

‘Very good!’ Prosper put in, shaking in his boots, and dancing around the hyena chanting, ‘you thought you could get away, but not today. You are done. You are finished.’

 

‘Finished!’ I joined in, yelling, as we egged each other on, and then we were both dancing and prancing around the dead hyena in what could only be called a primal dance of celebration. All that was missing was the leopard skins around our waists.

Vikings gone rogue.

 

Now, I know that some would say we disrespected the animal, but I know that whoever that is won’t be a cattle rancher. After the damage they do, that I’ve seen and experienced firsthand, and after months of dedicated hunting, well, lets’ just say my respect for hyenas when it comes to whether or not I can prance around them is nonexistent.

DEATH TO HYENAS! I say, DEATH BY ALL MEANS POSSIBLE!

 

What makes you think I hate them huh?

 

After we’d drifted down from our adrenalin and joy induced high, we searched for the second hyena, but failed, and ended up getting him the next morning, already dead atop an anthill.

 

And so, there finishes the story of the three-week hyena hunt. Cattle killer status: destroyed.

 

Until a new clan moved in a few weeks later, but hey, I’ve already declared no rest for the weary and I reckon I’ve got sanity to spare.

 

Maybe.

 

Probably not.

 

Hell, why am I even writing this down….I should be loading up my rifle.

Family Safari

By Matt Blymire

 

I am a 40-year-old from Pennsylvania who grew up hunting whitetail deer with my dad.  I started hunting with him at the age of 12 which was the legal minimum age in Pennsylvania, and then continued hunting deer on my own.  Now married, with nine-year-old twin boys, I get to hunt whitetail deer with my wife and sons who can now hunt on a Mentored Youth program in Pennsylvania.  I have taken many trips to Ohio to spend a few days hunting whitetails with my father, reminiscing about the years I hunted with him growing up, and all that he’s taught me.

 

Over the past years my dad has taken many trips to Africa hunting with Dubula Safaris in the Eastern Cape.  He has shared hunts there with his friends, past co-workers and made many friends on his safaris.  Dad asked my every trip to go along but with hectic family life, finding the time was difficult.  I remember saying “Maybe next time” or “When the boys get older” or “Hopefully in a few years.”

 

In the fall of 2022, my dad’s mom passed away unexpectedly, but I just got to her in time. Fast forward to March of 2023.  I learned I was unsuccessful in drawing my Montana Deer Tag yet again, and I called my dad telling him as I was looking to plan a different hunting trip in the States.  He suggested I came with him and my wife to Africa in September.  This time the words felt different.  Life at home was still hectic, nothing had changed, but what did change was learning in such a hard way just six months before how valuable life is with your family, and how quickly it can change and be taken away.  I submitted my time off request at work that same day, and once approved booked our flight for my first African safari with my wife and parents.

 

I flew to Newark Airport to meet them, and we arrived in Johannesburg the next evening and were greeted by staff from the Afton Lodge, for a one-night stay before our flight into Port Elizabeth the next morning.  The Afton was an extraordinary way to kick off the African safari experience.  The lodge was beautiful, the food and drinks were amazing, and the staff was superb.  Looking at all the taxidermy in the lodge and listening to the stories of hunters who were on their way home had me excited for my hunt to begin.  I could barely sleep that night from excitement.

In Port Elizabeth we were picked up by Ryan from Dubula Safaris. On the way we stopped at Hunters & Collectors Taxidermy shop to look at some of the taxidermy work in progress from my dad’s previous safari.  Seeing the extensive number of mounted animals in the shop had me even more excited. On the way to the lodge, we stopped at the Nanaga Farm Stall where I was introduced to some South African culture seeing the local foods, produce and drinks.

 

The evening that we arrived at the lodge I was amazed at the beauty of the landscape and the mountainous terrain. Even after seeing pictures and videos from my dad’s previous trips, it was beyond my expectation. I was greeted warmly by everyone at Dubula Safaris and met my PH Ricky. We discussed the animals on my list with kudu being my top animal, and a zebra because my wife and I wanted a zebra rug. 

The first night in the lodge I was too excited to sleep.  Morning came quickly and my dad and I went outside onto the porch and there were animals everywhere.  The amount of game I could see with my binoculars was nothing I could have imagined.  After breakfast we went to the rifle range and confirmed my dad’s .30-06 was shooting accurately and we planned the morning hunt.  We soon spotted a group of zebras in an open area but stalked unsuccessfully.  We came out of a dry creek and a beautiful blue wildebeest stood in front of us.  Ricky said it was great male and if I wanted a blue, I should shoot this one. Only the night before Ricky had said they were tough animals and will rarely go straight down with one shot.  We waited for the blue to turn and Ricky said, “On the shoulder halfway up.”  I steadied on the sticks and squeezed the trigger. He went straight down!  What a way to start the hunt.  A few hours into the trip, one shot and one animal down.

 

As we hunted the next few days, we saw so many species of animals it was almost hard to comprehend.  It brought a lot of clarity to the discussion Ricky and I had on my flexibility of huntable animals.  I was successful on the second evening with the targeted zebra close to where we had seen them the first day. That evening the sunset and nightfall was gorgeous, like something you would see in a book or in a painting.  The third day had us hunting around the lodge for plains game.  I had seen in the first few days a white blesbok. I thought they were neat-looking animals.  As the hunt continued, we saw a few white blesboks in a large herd, but they were winning the stalking game.  Then a common blesbok stepped into an opening in the bush, and Ricky said it was a very good common, so I steadied on the sticks and took the shot.

 

While enjoying our midday break, I discussed with my dad a black springbok we had seen the first morning, but had not seen again, and I said that a black wildebeest was only a bit more pricewise.  He agreed that it would be great to get a blue and a black on my first trip.  When we met Ricky prior to the evening hunt, we said we would like a black wildebeest and he planned to target them in an area we might also see kudu.   We spotted a small group of blacks and Ricky identified a shooter in that group.  We made a long stalk and got into position.  We had to wait for the shooter male among the other animals in the herd to give us a clean shot.  As the sun began to fade behind the mountains he presented a shot, at which the small group turned out to be a thundering herd of over 30 animals.

Wednesday morning came and we made the trip to Kamala and began our hunt there.  A few hours into the hunt we found a tsessebe, and my dad made a successful stalk and took his target animal. We saw so many animals on this property and I got to see animals I hadn’t yet seen including gemsbok, ostriches, golden gemsbok and more.  We again saw a large black springbok but could not get the opportunity for a shot at it.  On the way back for our lunch break we found a great impala ram and I was lucky to take it.  After lunch we went to a cliff overlooking a dry creek as they had seen warthogs there.  A warthog was on my list, but I said I only wanted to shoot one for a nice European mount.  We saw warthogs but they were female and cull males.  My mom, who hadn’t hunted before decided she would take a shot at the cull male.  Ricky worked extraordinarily well with her and got her set up, and she made a perfect shot for her first ever animal.  What a great experience for us all to share this.

 

As the afternoon went on Ricky spotted a big fallow deer, and I realized from his tone that it was a trophy and that if we saw it again, I’d like to hunt it.  Later, we glassed a large eland but it wasn’t something I wanted, so we hunted on and as luck would have it spotted the fallow deer again.  After a very short stalk we bumped the deer but were able to get on the sticks, and when he stopped and presented me with a shot, I took it.  We followed the blood and found the deer. As we grabbed his antlers the ground shook under our feet as four warthogs bolted out from a wallow.  While it was a cool experience, I was a bit startled as they ran out from underneath us.

As we had a few days left we continued to target kudu but couldn’t find a quality trophy and when we did the cards were stacked against us because of the wind, the number of animals between us, or the amount of daylight left. As we looked for kudu we spotted two warthogs and as they took off I could see their white tusks.  We made a quick move and got set up on them and Ricky said to shoot the one on the left. I squeezed, and it went straight down.  I was amazed at the size of this animal, and they said it was the largest warthog taken on the property both in body weight and tusk length.

That afternoon we came across some golden wildebeest, such beautiful animals.  I told Ricky that if we saw a trophy golden, I would target that versus a kudu as we had two days left on the safari.

 

Rain was forecast the last day and half of the hunt, so we went early the last morning looking for kudu or a golden wildebeest.  We again spotted many kudu but not of the trophy caliber wanted.  We went to the area we had seen kudu before where goldens also could be. We walked a road along a clifftop and glassed below.  Again, we saw kudu but not trophy class.  The next glassing point showed a group of golden wildebeest and 

Ricky quickly spotted a shooter male.  I got set up on the sticks and made a successful shot.  What a great way to end this hunting safari, getting all three wildebeests on the same hunt.

 

This trip exceeded any expectations I had. The staff at the lodge were superb, the food was amazing, with sights and memories I would never have imagined.  As the sun set on my first African safari, I cannot wait to begin booking my next with Dubula Safaris. I am so grateful to my parents for making this trip possible and for sharing it with me. 

Classic and Contemporary African Hunting Literature

Dangerous Game Quest

Kim Stuart, (Fjermendal Press, 2021, 236 pages)
Reviewed by Ken Bailey

  

Kim Stuart’s Dangerous Game Quest – A Personal Journey is a compilation of stories describing his odyssey to become the first hunter to take each of the Magnificent Seven African game animals (elephant, rhino, Cape buffalo, lion, leopard, hippopotamus, and crocodile) with each of rifle, handgun, and muzzleloader. That’s 21 dangerous game animals in total, and it took Jim 20 years (1997 to 2016) to accomplish this. The book is written in chronological order, with a chapter describing each hunt along the way.

 

Of interest to me was that Stuart wasn’t focused on “trophy” animals, which is to say that he wasn’t hunting horn length, tusk length, or any of the other size standards that drive most African safaris. He saw a tuskless cow elephant or a lioness as being every bit the challenge, equally dangerous, and just as rewarding as hunting for what most consider trophy animals. His primary objective was to take these animals by fair chase using his weapon of choice. He goes to some length in describing the development of each of the weapons used and how they came into his possession. This is particularly true for the muzzleloaders he used, which were designed and built for this quest by his friend, Jim Gefroh. In fact, as we learn, Gefroh accompanied Stuart on most of the hunts.

 

As might be expected when you engage in this number of big game hunts, Stuart experiences many highs and lows along the way, from aggressive animals to missed shots to unscrupulous PHs. It’s refreshing that he isn’t shy about describing the bad along with the good, even when the bad is of his own making.

 

The easy-to-read text is accompanied by 22 full-color photos showing many of the animals Stuart collected through the years.

 

Stuart’s quest was an unusual one by almost any standard, particularly given the costs of hunting dangerous game in this day and age. Dangerous Game Quest will appeal to any hunter wanting to read contemporary tales of hunting Africa’s most dangerous game, and in particular to those with an interest in hunting them with a muzzleloader or handgun.

Campfire Thoughts & Reminiscences Part 22

Written by Neil Harmse

 

 

 

Chapter 23. The Ultimate Big Bore

 

For those big-bore shooters who always claim they are addicted to back pull, I have come across the ultimate rifle which should satisfy their every craving for brain rattling, shoulder-thumping RECOIL!

 

The rifle I have found is in a private collection, carefully and jealously guarded by the owner, so it is unlikely anyone will actually get the chance to experience a shot with this behemoth.

 

The gun referred to is a double rifle in four-bore calibre made by Rodda & Co almost 150 years ago. Rodda breech-loading double rifles in the monstrous four-bore calibre are extremely rare. It is rumoured that Rodda only made five of these four-bores and that these were made for an Indian maharajah’s private collection. Only four of these can be traced today, giving one an idea of how rare these guns are. Truly a collector’s dream.

 

The Rodda rifle in this chapter was manufactured circa the 1870s, having Birmingham

 

Proof House marks for view and proof dating to about 1868. Given the vintage, it is in very good condition, but then, because of the calibre and massive weight, these guns saw very limited use, especially in Africa. At a weight of about 25lb (approximately 11,4kg), these guns were not really meant to be carried by the hunter, but lugged along by a team of gun bearers until needed in an extreme case of last-hope survival. Any bearer on a safari used to carrying a 70-80lb (32-36kg) tusk or similar load would not have a problem carrying a 25lb rifle, but handing this heavy, unwieldy gun over to a hunter in an emergency would be awkward, as it would not be easy bringing these two weighty barrels to bear onto a fast approaching target. This could well compromise the hunter’s safety. Most ivory-hunters during this period preferred either a single-barrel four-bore or a lighter double rifle in eight-bore calibre.

The Rodda four-bore double rifle.

The majority of these four-bore doubles saw use in India for hunting tigers and elephant from a howdah mounted on the back of a trained elephant, but even this use was rather limited. This is also the reason that any of these guns found today are in remarkably good condition.

 

The gun in this collection is a back-action hammer gun with a Jones large grip underlever and the trigger guard extending along the pistol grip to the ebony grip-cap. Between the hammers along the top of the action, the long tang extends to the top of the pistol grip. The action still retains about 80-85% of original case-hardened finish. The browned Damascus barrels are attractive and show very little sign of wear and use. Having an extended doll’s head lock-up, the action is still as tight as the day it left the factory. The action detail has fine English scroll engraving, with gold inlay reading “RB Rodda & Co” in English script on the side plates. Along the barrels, also in gold inlaid English script, are the words: “RB Rodda & Co. Makers by appointment to HE the Viceroy & HRH the Duke of Edinburgh. London & Calcutta”. In front of each hammer is a safety lock which engages when the hammer is brought to the half-cock position. The broad rib is finely filed and has a standing express sight for 50 yards (46m), with two fold-down leaves marked ‘100’ and ‘150’ (yards?), while the front sight has a fine bead dovetailed into the rib.

 

The fore-end is a typical ‘splinter’ type and is fixed onto the barrels with a wedge key or locking pin and lug. The four-bore was the ultimate ‘stopping rifle’ which fired a ¼lb (1,750 grain) lead bullet in front of a 14- to 16-dram load of black powder. A conical moulded bullet of about 1 880-2 000 grain was normally loaded with 380-430 grains of black powder to give about 1 500fps and a muzzle energy approaching 6,000 foot-pounds!

 

Later, Kynoch four-bore loads for Nitro-proofed rifles were loaded with 70 grain cordite, but these should not be fired in Damascus barrelled guns made for black powder. Holland & Holland’s last four-bore was made for the Maharajah of Rewa in 1922. This was a Nitrofor-black load of 70 grain cordite firing a conical 2 000 grain bullet generating in excess of 8,000 foot-pounds of energy!

The Rodda double rifle, showing a four-bore cartridge compared witha .458 Lott.

To order Campfire Thoughts & Reminiscences – the complete book with illustrations (US $15 excluding S&H), contact Andrew Meyer at andrewisikhova@icloud.com

Hunting in Benin’s Western Savannah

By Enrich Hugo

 

West Africa has a special appeal not only for hunters. The mix of geographically diverse zones offers savannahs, marsh and rainforest lovers plenty of opportunities to explore fauna and flora. This time is Benin our hunting destination. This elongated, small West African country is considered the cradle of the voodoo religion. In Abomey you can visit the old royal palaces as well as the voodoo temples. The capital is Porto Novo. The international airport where our journey start is in Cotonou. A typical West African city. Stinky, hectic and a lot of traffic. Surprisingly fast, by African standards, are the immigration formalities, and weapons import documents are done by customs and police.

 

After that, the luggage will be stowed in the waiting Land Cruiser. Our host and outfitter from Pendjari Safaris wants to start as soon as possible. It is still early in the morning and he wants to reach the end of the city of Cotonou before morning traffic starts. Ahead of us is a nine-hour drive. Cotonou is located on the southern border of Benin, directly on the Gulf of Guinea.

 

Our destination and camp is located in the north of the country, on the edge of the National Park Pendjari.

 

The 700-kilometer drive gives us another insight into this, for West African conditions, very stable and peaceful country. No religious or racial tensions make Benin a special oasis in West Africa and is gently governed by a democratically elected government. The influence of the former French colonial era can not be denied and is reflected not only in the French official language. The main income of Benin, one of the poorest countries in the world, comes from agriculture. In addition to corn, sweet potatoes, cashew and pineapple, it is mainly the large cotton plantations that catch the eye. It is exactly this cotton that we can see again and again on completely overloaded trucks on our way to Batia.

After about eight hours driving we leave the paved road and after another hour on a sandy road we reach our camp. In addition to the typical round huts stands a completely newly built building with four rooms. Each bedroom with its own bathroom and toilet and of course with air conditioning. Anyone who has ever hunted in West Africa will be extremely pleasantly surprised here. After a long shower, we meet again at dinner. There we will also be introduced to the two professional hunters and our trackers, who will guide us in the next few days. One of the two professional hunters is a Portuguese, who works in Benin from December to May, during the hunting season in Benin, and earns his living as a professional hunter from June to November in Mozambique. The second professional hunter comes from neighboring Burkina Faso and has been working here for over 15 years as a professional hunter with Pendjari Safaris. How valuable the experience of our two professional hunters is will already evident on the following first hunting day.

Camp

We take the first day of our hunt calmly and after a good breakfast we go out for the first terrain exploration. The camp is located on the edge of a small village. The people wave friendly to us and children run after our car. Here, too, the ethical and serious hunt has written its success story. Conservation programs, a rigorous anti- poaching, and appreciation for wildlife has contributed to the development of not only a high stock of wildlife but also a small but considerable wealth in their village. Not only the meat of the hunted game support to the local villages with protaine, also a large part of the revenue of the trophy fees is used to expand the infrastructure. After twenty minutes we are already in our hunting zone. Here my two hunting clients check their weapons and after a threefold series, it’s ready to go. Khalid has opted for a double rifle 9.3×74 and my second hunting guest Rodrigo leads a 375 H&H. Our hunting area is especially known for its abundance of Western savannah buffalo and Western roan antelope. But also Western Hartebeest, Nagor Reedbock, Harnest Bushbuck, Defassa Waterbuck, Oribi, Warthog and two different Duiker are huntable here. We chose the month of January for our hunt and therefore the high grass is not dry enough to burn it down. Despite the sometimes high grass level, we can still recognize the typical savannah character. Small to medium sized bushes and trees dominate the landscape in addition to the extensive grassy areas. The first game drive should serve primarily to get a small overview of our hunting area, but after one of our professional hunters has discovered fresh tracks of buffalo is instantly aroused our hunting fever.

 

Khalid gets the preference and we start our first stalking in the Savannah of Benin. As usual, the stalking is led by one of the trackers. Then Burkina, as our professional hunter from Burkina Faso is affectionately called and then Khalid the Hunter. Because of the tracks we estimate that it has to be a smaller group of five to eight buffaloes. The tracks are relatively fresh and since they are not particularly deep, it also tells us that they are moving slowly ahead of us. The direction of the wind is also perfect and after about an hour of stalking we see the small buffalo herd in front of us. As already suspected, there are six Savannah buffalos. Four cows and two bulls. This little group already shows us the special of the Western savanna buffalo here in Benin. It is the variegation of these buffaloes. From almost black to dark brown but also reddish, the buffalos are colored here and very often these different colors are found in one and the same herd. That is also the case here. The Western savanna buffalo is the third largest buffalo species in Africa alongside the Cape and Nile buffalo. Despite the successful stalking we do not come to a conclusion. The two bulls are too young and should be given the opportunity to pass on their very good genetic before they get hunted. But no reason to be disappointed. On the contrary, the first stalk was already excellent and we had a successful overview. Our trackers and professional hunters have been able to prove their skills and experience at the first stalk, and my two hunters already have the feeling that they are in good hands. After a short time we are back on the road where our car is waiting. After a little refreshment we continued our game drive. We pass two larger waterholes that are full of tracks but due to the time of day no game can be seen. Since there are some larger trees next to the last waterhole and the sun is directly above us at the highest point, we set our lunch break here. A shady place with a great view.

Lunch break.

Hunter heart, what do you want more. Lunch tastes particularly good here and we enjoy the boundless freedom in the middle of West African nature. But after a long rest, things continue. It is already an hour before sunset when Burkina gives the driver the sign to stop. He points to the east and still the sun is in our backs, I can see nothing without my binoculars. Burkina instructs me and with the help of the binoculars I can then also recognize what he has already identified only with his eye. A dark, almost black dyed Dagga Boy, as here also the single living buffalo bulls are called. You can already clearly see Khalid’s excitement. The buffalo is 300 meters away and our professional hunter decides at short notice that he will only stalk with Khalid and 

a tracker. The terrain between us and the bull is too open and too many people would make it much easier for the buffalo to discover us. Me, Rodrigo, and the rest of the team follow the stalk out of good hidden place. The buffalo is still grazing and shows no suspicion even though Khalid and Burkina are only 50 meters away from him. I can see that Khalid have his gun on the shooting stick and is already aiming the bull. The shot does not wait. The buffalo immediately draws and breaks to the right. 

 

After ten meters he stops and the second shot breaks. Although the first shot was excellent for me and in my opinion a deadly hit, the second hit finally drops the Bull to the ground. When Burkina and Khalid are by the buffalo and both give us signs to come, we are on the way to go to the harvest buffalo. Of course, a heartfelt congratulation the shooter and congratulation to the professional hunter to this successful conclusion of the first hunting day. A really old fighter lies here in knee-high grass. Numerous traces show of old turf wars and one or the other scar suggests that he was also the target of attacks of lions. An excellent launch. Khalid is overjoyed and describes in detail the course of the stalking and the killing of the buffalo. The loading of the bull is routine for our experienced team and then it’s back to the camp.

Just at sunset we arrive at the camp and there we are greeted. Despite the enjoyable beginning of our safari, we are in bed shortly after supper to rest and be fit for the next day. The second day is similar to the previous day. Game drive through the vast savannah and a part of our team is looking for fresh tracks and the other half explores the environment for movements that could close on antelopes or buffalo. And again, Khalid is challenged when we discover a three-headed group of roan antelopes. All three are old and strong trophy bulls. This time I accompany Khalid with his stalking. Very slowly and over again we observe this second largest antelope of Africa. Up to a distance of 90 meters we stalk closer and Khalid sights the extreme left roan of this group of three. Optimal shot distance for his 9.3 caliber and the Roan antelope breaks down after firing. Already on the second day of our safari Khalid killed both main game species from Benin. Of course, always a big dose of luck with it but also the experience of our professional hunters and trackers and over years game management here are fruits of success. In the afternoon we still see the first Hartebeest and waterbuck but all female or young animals. Nevertheless, a successful hunting day comes to an end and we let it end comfortably. The next three days of hunting also show us that we are not here in a fenced hunting farm in South Africa or Namibia and really hunting in the wild. Three days of stalking for hours, with backsliding by a sudden change of wind direction, attentive game or carelessness on our part. It’s nothing out of the ordinary for me, and I know that from my many previous savanna hunts

Loading the buffalo.

Stalking

However, it is important for my hunting clients to prepare for such a hunt so far that they can handle even those thirsty streaks that a savannah hunt entails and that they do not lose the desire for the further safari. For Khalid and Rodrigo, however, the last three unsuccessful days leave no trace. On the contrary, I have the impression that they absorb everything in and this hunting trip will keep a special positive memory. The sixth day of hunting is again at its best. On this day we return very successfully to the camp. A West African Hartebeest, a Harnest Bushbuck and a Nagor Reedbock could be killed after successful stalking. We were able to detect and shoot the latter two at two different waterholes. Now only the buffalo of Rodrigo falls to complete a completely successful safari. Two days are still available and we look forward to these days. The penultimate day is already starting promising. Fresh traces of a larger herd. We try to stalk these herds. We succeed and I count more than twenty Savannah buffaloes. It is a mixed herd with cows, calves and also some bulls. I even see two of the reddish colored bulls what Rodrigo wants to hunt. But we do not want to shoot a buffalo out of a herd. Our goal is to find a single Dagga Boy. We just enjoy the big herd we were able to stalk so successfully and then continued our hunt. Although we can no see a red-colored loner on this day we still have plenty of material for our cameras. Herd of young roan antelopes, some hartebeest, oribis and a young waterbuck can be photographed and filmed.

 

The last day of our safari is approaching and this time it starts earlier. Today we want to look for the Dagga Boy in the northeastern corner of our hunting zone. The idea does not come from somewhere. Some of the rangers employed by our outfitter, who implemented the anti-poaching program and are busy patrolling the hunting grounds, have just seen a reddish bull at this northeast corner. And just where these rangers last saw the bull, we also find him. An old, mature bull. The red is almost reminiscent of a forest buffalo occurring in the rainforest, but which is much smaller than the Western savannah buffalo. An absolute dream buffalo. This time, Jorge, the professional hunter from Portugal, introduces us. The buffalo stands in the shade of some trees and the wind is excellent for us. I estimate between 250 to 300 meters separate us from the bull. Jorge, Rodrigo a tracker and myself start the stalking. Each step is checked twice. Just no hasty movement or a careless kick now. Suddenly Jorge stops petrified. He makes us understand that we should not move and shows something in the left direction of our stalk. An elephant bull watches our approach. A fantastic experience to experience the elephant so close but still we are glad when he makes off and pulls back into the dense undergrowth. Finally we can continue our stalking. Our buffalo seems to have heard and seen nothing of all this. The rangefinder in my binoculars shows 80 meters. After another 15 meters and a tree with perfect rifle rest Rodrigo is ready to go. The weapon is already unlocked and he just waits until the buffalo shows him his broadside. I can understand that this moment has to fill up like hours for him. Finally the time has come. Uncovered with the full side of the bull shows up and the finger writhes on the trigger. The red draws immediately and breaks in place in the fire. Jorge keeps track and asks Rodrigo to reload immediately. After another minute, Jorge gives the ok and all-clear and lets Rodrigo secure the weapon. It needs no further shot. A red colored buffalo with an extremely strong trophy lies in front of us. We give Rodrigo alone for a few minutes with his harvest bull. A sensitive moment that probably every hunter can understand too well.

 

With this last buffalo we killed on this hunt we can say that we had a hundred percent success. The passing of Benin ends with a promise from the two hunters. We are infected with the Savannah virus and we promise to see each other again when it says: Savannah hunting in Benin!

 

Father of Them All

This Enfield-made Martini carbine in .303 British compares favorably with the much later Lee-Enfield No. 5 Mk. 1 – the famous Jungle Carbine.

Even after the Martini-Henry rifle had been retired as the British service weapon, various manufacturers (including the royal arsenal at Enfield) continued to build rifles on the actions in .303 British.

The original .577/.450 Martini-Henry (left) with the .450 Express No. 1, the later .450 Nitro Express, and the .303 British.  All .45-caliber English cartridges are descended, one way or another, from the .577/.450.

By Terri Wieland

 

Thanks to Zulu, the classic 1964 movie starring Michael Caine, the Martini-Henry rifle enjoys a celebrity among citizens at large that is rare among military weapons. Tens of millions of people have seen that movie and, if nothing else, learned about rifle drill in the British Army in 1879.

 

For anyone who might have missed it, Zulu depicts, with quite admirable accuracy, the battle of Rorke’s Drift, in Natal in 1879. The army awarded 11 Victoria Crosses; in my opinion, there could have been a twelfth, for the Martini-Henry certainly played a heroic role.

 

The old Martini is one of the lesser-sung military rifles in history.  It was not used for long – about 15 years – and was really a transitional weapon between the muzzleloader and the repeating cartridge rifle.  Still, it had an enormous impact in several different ways. After it was officially retired in favor of the bolt-action Lee-Metford in 1888, stocks of Martini-Henrys were distributed to colonial troops, militia battalions, hunters, and target shooters throughout the Empire – and that meant, literally, throughout the world. For a century afterwards, you could walk into a farmhouse in Kenya, Rhodesia, Natal, Saskatchewan, New Zealand, or New South Wales and find a Martini-Henry behind the door, ready for action.

 

Over the long term, its cartridge, the .577/.450, was even more influential than the rifle itself. For one thing, its 480-grain bullet set the standard for .45-caliber dangerous-game cartridges that lasts to this day. Subsequent nitro-express cartridges, starting with the .450 NE in 1898, used 480-grain bullets. When .450s were banned in India and the Sudan around 1905, to keep ammunition out of the hands of insurgents, it was because there were so many old Martini-Henrys in the hands of the would-be rebels.  Substitutes for the .450 NE included the .470 Nitro Express, .475 No. 2 NE, and Holland & Holland’s .500/.465. More often than not, the standard bullet weight was 480 grains.

 

The Martini-Henry proved to be so durable, reliable, and adaptable that many were rebarreled to .303 British after 1888, and thousands of new Martinis were also made in .303. Many of these continue in service to this day. With .303 British ammunition one of the most common calibers to be found from Cairo to the Cape, it was natural to arm everything from game scouts and park rangers to camp guards and farm workers with them.

The flip side of that coin is that untold numbers of African animals have been either poached, or wounded, by a Martini-Henry, whether chambered in .577/.450 or .303 British, but that is hardly the rifle’s fault.

 

A lesser known negative of the old Martini is its horrid recoil. Viewers of Zulu might contest that statement, since every shot fired in the movie appeared to have no recoil at all, nor was there much in the way of black-powder smoke. Of course not – they were using blanks.  The real-life Martini was noted for brutal recoil, mainly because of the shape of the stock. For its time, however, it was extremely fast to operate – tests showed trained infantrymen capable of maintaining a rate of fire of 20 rounds per minute. The roughly 140 defenders of Rorke’s Drift fired more than 20,000 rounds during the battle.  Considering there were 4,000 Zulu attackers, the Martini’s rate of fire evened the odds somewhat.

 

The rifle is also enormously strong. Tests at the Providence Tool Company in Rhode Island, at the time they were fulfilling a contract to supply 600,000 Martini-Henrys to the Ottoman Empire, proved the action to be a beast. At one point, they put five (5) 480-grain bullets in the barrel ahead of a double charge of gunpowder. The rifle took it without a whimper.

 

It’s no wonder, then, that the Martini-Henry is still relatively common to find in use, 140 years after it was retired from the British service as obsolete. A 480-grain, hard-cast bullet, in the right place, will still stop virtually anything, and there is little in the way of plains game that can’t be taken with the .303.

 

To the best of my knowledge, Kynamco in England is the only company that now manufactures .577/.450 Martini-Henry ammunition. Finding some would be the difficulty. If you want to shoot one, handloading is about the only real option.  Fortunately, with a little work, brass can be fashioned from .577 cases, which will take Boxer primers; the Martini can handle smokeless-powder pressures with no problem, and cast bullets are common as dirt.

 

In fact, loading some ammunition and trying to match the 20 rounds a minute record of a Victorian infantrymen would be an interesting challenge. Let me know how you make out.

10 Days with a Rigby

By Buzz Nady 

 

 

This whole thing started in September 2021. I was at Afton, Richard Lendrum’s lodge in Joburg. Richard was promoting a raffle in The African Hunting Gazette magazine, and the grand prize was a SSB Rigby Rifle in .416 Rigby! A proper buffalo rifle! I took a ticket and headed back to the States to start harvesting with my two sons on our farms, not giving a thought to the raffle. I never win.

 

The first week of November I got a call from Richard.

 

“I suppose you called to say I didn’t win the rifle,” I laughed.

 

“Just the opposite,” said Richard, “you did win the rifle!” I was ecstatic, to say the least. After paperwork and emails back and forth with Maria Gil of Rigby in London, my rifle was shipped to their importer in Texas and then to my gun dealer in my hometown of Nevada, Iowa. 

 

What a rifle! I immediately started planning a buffalo hunt with Pete Barnard, owner of Pete Barnard Safaris in Harare, Zimbabwe. Pete and I have been friends for over a quarter century, and he was the guy I wanted to hunt with. Plans were made for September 2023, and practicing with my Rigby started immediately at the range on my farm. Eighteen months and 150 rounds later I felt ready and was on my way to Zimbabwe. 

 

I spent a couple days with Pete and his family just to relax, and then with Pete, Manager and Manuel we headed about 390 km to a beautiful camp in the Gache Gache area in the Zambezi valley and met the camp owner Corris Ferreria. We had a couple of beers as we watched a herd of elephant across the river, drinking. The whole camp is run on solar power converted to 12V with great staff of cooks, house cleaners and skinners to take care of us. Had a great meal that first night, took my Malaron, and was off to bed.

 

 

DAY 1

Day one began with Pete, me, and the team – Manager, Manu and Cry the trackers, Koda and Ragoon the game scouts. We sighted in the rifles and went looking for buffalo. Leaving camp we saw lion, some impala and elephant, and after finding a good set of Dagga Boy tracks, we set out on foot to track him. Ran into some elephant and decided to go around them and pick up the buffalo tracks on the other side! En route, we found a beautiful old bushbuck. Without hesitation, I got on the sticks with my .416 Rigby and got him.

 

Suddenly the bush erupted. Some elephants close by did not like the shot, and they did not like us there. Game on! Pete was hollering, “Run, run,” as he stood his ground between my trackers and me to make sure everyone was safe, and out of harm’s way. After the dust settled, we went and collected my bushbuck. Picked up the buffalo tracks again and looking down I saw a bunch of elephant hair, and I handed it to Manager. He is talented in using it to make bracelets. On our way back to camp, we saw more impala and a nice herd of about 35 eland, all females with little ones. On the banks of the Gache Gache River that flows into Lake Kariba, quite close to the lake, we saw a few small pods of hippo and decided to take a walkabout and get a closer look. Got to within 50 meters of one group but decided not to take the shot. We did need a hippo for bait for crocodile but wanted to take care of the bushbuck first.

DAY 2

We were up at 5 a.m. had some breakfast and coffee and took off looking for buffalo tracks. Found a nice set to follow, but after being busted twice we finally got up to the buffalo only to have the wind start playing games with us, so decided to give up the tracks and look for hippo for crocodile bait. Mid-morning the hippo started coming out of the Gache Gache River to sun themselves. Finally, a big bull clambered onto an island and after careful examination with the binoculars, Pete said it was the one we wanted. I put a good heart-lung shot on the hippo and got a second shot into him as he went into the water. He came up and we worked our way around and I finished him with a side brain shot in the water. The massive hippo sank, came up, and I could see I had hit his brain. When he went back under the water and stayed there, we decided to go have lunch and wait for him to bloat and float to the surface.

 

We went back out after lunch looking for the hippo and did not find it and spent the rest of the afternoon searching. Gave up, and on the way back to camp that evening we saw a herd of approximately 350 to 400 buffalo on the plains down by Lake Kariba. Topped off the day with an excellent dinner and beverages. 

 

DAY 3…

started out with everyone looking for the hippo. Thoughts of not sure of what happened to bullet performance raced through my mind. After lunch, we set out looking for buffalo. We found a herd of about 100 buffalo but just couldn’t get in position. Too many eyes and ears watching us. We did get within about 100 yards a few times but then the wind would change or swirl around. We decided to run back and look one more time for the hippo on the way back to camp. No hippo!

DAY 4…

started earlyWe went back to find a couple of Dagga Boys we’d seen earlier, and we found them. They don’t get old by being stupid. They winded us as the wind would change often. Busted! Off they’d go. After stalking buffalo all morning, we saw lots of nice crocodiles and after lunch we collected Corris’s Bruno .30-06 for crocodile.

 

We went to shoot the Bruno, but it just didn’t fit me. It just didn’t feel right, but Pete’s .375 was perfect, and we headed to Croc Central on the Gache Gache. Some local native fishermen had moved in to where we wanted to look for crocs. Plenty of crocs there, but they had all gone into the water because of the natives fishing, so we went instead to find our two Dagga Boys.

 

Manu and Cry cut the tracks of the two nyati, and it was game on. Because of the brush, Pete wanted me to load a solid .400-gr Woodleigh. After several attempts, we decided to give the bulls a half-hour break and let them calm down, which paid off. The day was getting late, and this would be our last chance. The third time we found them, they spotted us again as they have sharp eyes and a keen sense of smell. I got on the sticks as they were walking away.

 

My bull presented a shot at a hundred meters, broadside. I let the Woodleigh fly, hitting its mark on his shoulder. The bull jumped and took off. Pete could tell by the sound that the bull was hit well. We ran, catching up to the bull, and I let a 400-gr Barnes TSX fly, hitting the bull just behind the shoulder again. We ran after him. He stopped again and I put a second TSX Into his shoulder. Bull down! We got up to him and I put one more soft into him just for insurance and good measure. I had my bull! It was close to sundown. Picture time with Pete and my team!

 

We loaded the bull and headed to camp.

DAY 5

We left camp around 7 a.m. and headed to Croc Central to look for my hippo and a nice crocodile. Didn’t see my hippo floating anywhere in the river and the crocs were out sunning themselves! We went back to camp, had lunch, and then headed out again. No hippo floating! I was getting concerned about what was going on with the hippo.

 

I knew I put a great shot right on the shoulder, and then the head shot as well. We spent the afternoon looking at different crocodiles and sizing them up. Nothing that really tripped our trigger, so we drove around trying to shoot a couple guinea fowl for supper. Only got one. Had supper and called it a day. 

 

DAY 6

 

Pete, the trackers, game scouts and I headed out again looking for my hippo! With lots of native fishermen about, we were starting to wonder if maybe they had found it and cut it up and taken it. After searching many bays on the river, we felt it quite odd that the three pods of hippo had kind of disappeared. We hadn’t seen them since day two after I shot my hippo. 

 

Back to the camp for lunch and a little nap afterwards, then loaded up and went looking for crocodile as they would be up on the banks sunning themselves at this time of the day. Pete found one he really liked, and we tried to put the sneak on him. Got to about 50 meters, and were just getting the sticks up, when he slithered into the water. He must’ve seen movement from one of us.

 

Pete decided it was time we put a blind up and use some buffalo remains from my buffalo for bait. Blind and bait were set for us to come back in the morning. Back to looking for guinea fowl on the way back to camp for supper. Got one guinea fowl with the .22 and gave it to the boys for their supper. 

DAY 7

Had breakfast then went to check the crocodile bait. To our surprise, we saw a hippo out floating in the bay! Could this be my hippo? Corris’s staff showed up with the tractor, trailer and boat and got the hippo to the shore. Sure enough, the side-brain shot told the story – it was, in fact, my hippo!

 

I was excited and relieved all at the same time. One, I had my trophy and two, we had more crocodile bait. The guys built another blind 50 meters from the hippo and Pete and I went back to the blind we had built the day before, freshened it up with some hippo meat, and we got into the blind at about 11 a.m., each of us with a book to read. 

 

We heard the splash in the water 30 minutes later and focused on the bait with our binoculars, as the crocs started coming in. By noon the crocodiles were stacked in there like cordwood. I couldn’t believe it. The feeding frenzy that was going on! Twelve-foot crocodiles, biting on the hippo, doing the death roll to tear a piece off and then gobble it down. After nearly three hours in the blind, Pete saw the croc we wanted, on the bait and eating. Through my little portal, I could see at least 20-25 crocodile around the bait. And I have no idea how many more were around outside my field of view. 

 

Finally, our crocodile got into a position we liked, slightly quartering away from me. I was using Pete’s .375 H&H with a scope. I put the crosshairs just below the horn and a little bit to the left and squeezed. The crocodile dropped immediately. I quickly loaded another round and put one right behind his shoulder for insurance. I had my crocodile! Congratulations, handshakes and pictures followed. Back to camp to get the crocodile to the skinners. Coris put the tape on him and measured 13‘8”. What a crocodile and what a day in the blind watching them feed, death rolling, ripping meat off the hippo. Time for lunch. It was three in the afternoon. 

 

We would go out in the evening just to look at the baits and see what kind of activity there was and try to find a couple of guinea fowl for supper. There’s nothing like a great bowl of guinea fowl soup! But I think the guinea fowl were on to us. They like to run and then fly at the sound of the Land Cruiser. But we did shoot two francolins – we’d see what the chef could do with those for tomorrow night’s dinner. 

 

At dinner that night Corris mentioned he had a fellow PH who needed some bait for leopard, and asked if we would shoot four impala for him the next morning. Of course, I obliged and said I would be happy to help out.

DAY 8

Coffee and toast to start the day, then off to try to collect a few impala. Found a herd, and I shot one male from the group. Drove around for another couple hours, but nothing presented itself, so we headed back to camp. A cup of coffee, and we started getting things ready for fishing that afternoon. After lunch, we took a little nap as it was the hot time of the day. About 3 o’clock we loaded up the boat and headed down to the Gache Gache.

 

It was a slow afternoon on the river – we caught a few catfish and saw a few elephant on the bank. Very cool! Around the campfire and supper that night, Pete and I talked about looking for Sharpe’s Grysbok in the morning.

 

DAY 9

Got up early, had coffee and breakfast. It had cooled down nicely last evening and night, so it was good sleeping. Didn’t need my solar-powered fan. We loaded up the Cruiser and were headed to the bush by 5.30 looking for Sharpe’s Grysbok. Saw a female with a little one. They are nicknamed ‘greased lightning’ here because when you see him they’re gone immediately. On the way back to camp we saw a herd of probably 300 buffalo and 250 impala. 

 

Pete got a call from his wife, Laura with a new mission for the kids: Picking up different kinds of dung or spoor for show and tell at school. 

 

A short lunch nap and we were heading back to the river to fish. Barbels and squeakers were what we were catching. Back at the river, we encountered some fish poachers that Corris took care of. The lake and river were low as we made our way up the river. We encountered two pods of about 30 to 40 hippos each. What excitement that was! One young bull decided to show off his stuff to scare us away. Quite impressive when you have a two-and-a-half-ton of hippo coming at you.

 

Another beautiful sunset over the river and we headed back to camp for supper.

DAY 10

Breakfast was early. Corris asked if we would shoot two more impala, one for camp meat, and one for the game scouts. Of course! Pete and I and the trackers headed out to look for Sharpe’s grysbok. Didn’t see any, so back to camp for lunch. 

 

I will have to look for grysbok the next time, as this was the last day of hunting, and we wanted to go fishing again in the afternoon… Looking for that elusive tigerfish!

 

If you want to know more about this African Dawn Outfitter – Click here Pete Barnard Safaris

Rigby’s Rising Bite Shotgun

Diggory Hadoke examines the re-emergence of Rigby’s classic shotgun in modern guise.

 

When you buy a new British gun, you actually buy an old British gun, made recently. Every major maker still in business is selling products developed from patents dating back to the reign of Queen Victoria. Fortunately, the reason for this is because the designs of the Victorian inventors were extremely good. Match the inventive genius of the originators with the exquisite skills of time-served, apprenticed gunmakers and the result is sporting gun perfection.

 

The best British designs have never been bettered, only manufacturing cost and time-saving developments have been influential in the success of later types of shotgun. To date, the typical choice for the buyer of a best English shotgun has been Holland & Holland’s ‘Royal’ (the current model is the self-opener produced from 1922 but the basic ‘Royal’ has been in production since 1893), a Purdey (built on Frederick Beesley’s 1880 design) or a Westley Richards hand-detachable lock (another Victorian original, patented by Leslie Taylor in 1897).

 

Enter Rigby. Re-located to London six years ago after an ambitious investment and purchase by the German L&O Group, the same company that owns Blaser, Mauser and Sauer, Rigby has grown from a small team, under managing director Marc Newton, to a serious player. In fact, Rigby now makes more sporting rifles than any other London gunmaker. Let that sink in for a moment. Rigby has sold close to 1,000 rifles in six years.

 

The Rigby policy has focused very much on re-imagining classic models from the firm’s back catalogue. The Big Game and Highland Stalker models re-visited the hugely successful Rigby-Mauser rifles of the first quarter of the 20th century for inspiration and became the gentleman’s rifle of the modern era: classic, functional, aspirational, yet affordable, at around £7,000 (by comparison with best bolt rifles made by any of the top gunmakers today, including Rigby, which run between £25,000-£35,000).

 

Building on the success of their bolt-action rifles, the Rigby team then embarked on a more ambitious project; resurrecting the double rifle for dangerous game with the iconic vertical-bolt side-lock action patented by John Rigby and Thomas Bissell in 1879.

 

To give that some historical perspective, 1879 was the year in which British forces under Lord Chelmsford were decimated at Isandlwana by Cetshwayo’s Zulu impis. Around the same time, Henry Morton Stanley was fighting his way through the Congo to rescue Emin Pasha, and Thomas Edison was preparing to demonstrate the first workable light bulb. The world was a very different place. That gun patents dating back this far are still being launched as new models in London is a mark of their cleverness and utility.

Given the success of their rifle projects, it was only a matter of time before the shooting public expected to see a new Rigby shotgun emerge from Pensbury Place, Rigby’s workshop on the south side of the River Thames. That day has come, and the new shotgun mirrors their double rifle in being built around the Rigby & Bissell action.

 

Thomas Bissell was a gunmaker with whom John Rigby had a close relationship. Some Rigby guns made in the late 1800s bear his stylised ‘TB’ initials on the face of the action denoting their origins. Patent 1140 of 1879 remains his best-known work. Rigby made it as a signature action from September 1879 until 1932 as a shotgun, a black powder express double rifle and as a nitro express double rifle. Its demise was due to the high cost of manufacture, rather than mechanical obsolescence.

 

The action is inherently very strong, with a traditional Purdey patent double under-bolt holding the barrels on the face from below, by way of bites in the two lumps. Additionally, the vertical bolt rises from the top of the action and locks into a bite in a top rib extension, providing a third anchor point.

 

Aesthetically, Rigby has stuck to the original bar action lock-plate with dipped edges. It is so distinctive that anyone with a modicum of knowledge will recognise it immediately as a Rigby. Marc Newton told me once that his customers want traditional-looking rifles and shotguns. Part of buying into the family of Rigby ownership is the distinction it provides.

 

Rigbys are not like other guns. It would have been so much safer to build a copy of a Holland & Holland ‘Royal’. A London-pattern stocked to the fences side-lock of conventional appearance would be the sensible choice, but it would not reflect Rigby’s ethos of being true to their history. Not everybody will understand. Rigby customers will. And the word will get around.

Marc Newton told me recently: “The gun looks old-fashioned”. It really has the look of the era in which it emerged. The early 1880s was a period of variance. Every maker was building a style of gun they hoped would catch the public’s imagination and be blessed with general approval. In the two decades that followed the introduction of the Rising Bite action, a number of things happened that streamlined the look and mechanics of what became known as the London Pattern side-lock. First, most makers dispensed with third grips for best shotguns. Rib extensions and machined recesses in the action are expensive to fit properly and it became apparent that for normal usage, a Purdey bolt alone was sufficient. Some argued that third grips were unsightly and the protruding rib extension was an impediment to rapid loading. For many, the crucial factor was cost.

 

The other stylistic feature which became the norm as the 19th century waned, was the stocked to the fences look of the Purdey and the second pattern Holland & Holland ‘Royal’. This means the wood from the horns extends right up to the fences, without the shoulders that actions like the earlier Boss, Grant and Rigby guns feature. When Marc Newton says his gun looks old fashioned, it is the differences here to which he primarily refers. There is also the matter of the dipped-edge lock plate. It is a distinctive feature that dates back to early models like the Gibbs & Pitt, and the first model Holland & Holland ‘Royal’. The dipped-edge plates of the Rigby serve no particular purpose, but they are a recognisable house style which Rigby decided to resurrect for the new gun.

 

Available in early 2019, the new Rigby Rising Bite shotgun is priced from £79,000 (excl. VAT) and is built in London at the Pensbury Place factory, where Rigby’s craftsmen and management operate side-by-side.

 

With dipped-edge lock plates, Rigby scroll engraving and the vertical-bolt action, it is immediately identifiable as a Rigby. The new Rigby offers a distinctive alternative to the discerning game shot at a price significantly lower than its main competition.

The confidence the Rigby team has in itself and its product is evident in the decision not to build a copy of a Holland & Holland ‘Royal’, which has become the generic style for most British makers over the last 50 years, but to make a very distinctive, very different shotgun.

The reasoning goes right to the heart of Rigby’s 21st century success. Marc Newton told me that his experience with the buyers of Rigby rifles was that they wanted classic designs, as close to the originals as possible in feel, look and style. Modern innovations were not seen as desirable, unless incorporated almost invisibly into the design. If you want a high-tech modern rifle in a cardboard box, you can buy one; but not from Rigby. Rigby provide tradition, quality and classic rifle-building. For their shotguns, the same strategy is evident. If you buy Rigby, you want different, you want distinctive.

 

Of course, the stylistic quirks only succeed if the product is flawless. Hand-built in London to the finest traditions of the London gun trade, with chopper-lump steel barrels, the best Turkish walnut stocks and engraved with the house style of Rigby scrolls, the standard gun is a bespoke product, with everything made expressly for the customer.

 

Modern production methods have been employed to produce the machined components. This is the way all shotgun production is going. Spark erosion and CNC machinery improves every year, and we have now reached a level of 

sophistication that means, for practical purposes, a working gun can be made entirely by machine. The best guns are made to fine tolerances and then hand-finished at the final stage of fitting to achieve the traditional levels of perfection in every moving part and chain of mechanical interaction. Engraving, stocking and barrel-making are unchanged, being carried out entirely at the bench in the traditional manner. Finishing is to the best London standards.

 

Even with the use of modern machinery, the creation of a best-quality shotgun is a time-consuming process and, therefore, expensive. Rigby’s new gun is not cheap, but it is competitive and sits at a price point significantly lower than its London rivals. Rigby has proved already that it is a reliable producer of quality rifles, and many who doubted the ability of a young team to take on the trade’s top names and compete successfully in a small and difficult market, are now ‘eating crow’, as my American friends like to say.

 

It is typically brave and impressive that the first shotgun to emerge from Pensbury Place is such a classic form and so clearly a Rigby. Rigby’s management broke the rules before with their rifle-building strategy, and succeeded. They have done it again, and I wouldn’t bet against them being a winner this time either.

 

For more information on Rigby’s new Rising Bite shotgun, visit: www.johnrigbyandco.com.

A View on Hunting by a Traditional Leader in Namibia

By Dr Margaret Jacobsohn

 

Chief T J Mayuni, traditional leader of the Mafwe people in the Mashi district of Namibia and patron of Mayuni Conservancy, is an ardent conservationist and an animal lover. He can describe and recall the name of every dog he has owned since childhood. He is also fiercely pro-trophy hunting.

Chief T J Mayuni

“If the hunting ends and the income it brings to conservancies in Namibia stops, the conservation will stop,“ he told me.

 

Speaking at his tribal khuta (court) at Choi in north-eastern Namibia, the chief expressed outrage that people who live in the west think they have the right to dictate to Africans how they should manage their wildlife. He was responding to news of the new British laws against the import of hunting trophies.

 

“These people are pretending to do conservation in nice air-conditioned offices, sitting at computers. They don’t understand the realities of living here with wild animals. These animals share our land where we farm and live. Our national parks are too small to contain our wildlife – they have to leave the parks and move across our lands.”

Chief Mayuni had a question for those contemplating laws that could cause the decline of hunting in Africa: “You once had wildlife in your countries. Where is it today? Where are your bears and wolves? You killed them all because you could not live with wild animals – as we do. Now you have the audacity to tell us what to do, we who still have wildlife and who have helped it to increase in the past decades.”

 

The chief raised a laugh among his indunas (headmen) with a typical Mafwe metaphor: “You don’t have a wife, yet you presume to advise us who are married how to behave.”

 

Chief Mayuni is well qualified to lecture the West about confusing individual animal rights with conservation which works, as it must to be effective, at the population, species and ecosystem levels. He was the first traditional leader in Zambezi Region in the early 1990s to support community-based conservation in an area that was hostile to nature conservation because of the protectionist approach being taken by the colonial authorities.

 

He personally pioneered various initiatives aimed at stopping rampant poaching which, by Namibian independence in 1990, had reduced most species to remnant numbers. Giraffe and rhino in what was then called Caprivi, now Zambezi province, had already been poached to extinction.

Today, with abundant wildlife in Zambezi, many people have forgotten how close Namibia came to losing its wild animals in this area which, sandwiched between Angola, Botswana, Zambia and Zimbabwe, is the key to essential connectivity for wildlife. 

 

Without the Zambezi Region, and its community-conservation successes, the world’s largest multi-country conservation area – the 520 000 square km Kavango-Zambezi transfrontier conservation area, KAZA, would be a non-starter. 

 

The Mafwe Khuta was the first in Zambezi to agree to appoint community game guards, answerable to the khuta, not to the then-Directorate of Nature Conservation, which was seen as unsympathetic to local people and their conflicts with wildlife in their fields and with predators killing livestock – and people. The protectionist approach pre-independence aimed at catching poachers whereas the community-based approach has a longer-term perspective aimed at stopping poaching.

 

In the early 1990s, Chief Mayuni led the way in not only fining poachers but also his indunas in the villages where poachers lived. As he said at the time, these headmen should have known that game meat was being brought into homesteads under their noses. In 1996/97, he also pioneered a compensation scheme for farmers who suffered economic losses to wild animals.

 

“What I did,” he recalled, “was invite tourism operators to donate to this pilot scheme, initially for livestock losses to lions. We paid N$500 per cow. Then IRDNC – Integrated Rural Development and Nature Conservation, (the NGO that pioneered community conservation in Namibia) – added N$300 so we could pay N$800 per cow.”

 

The Ministry of Environment and Tourism, now the Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism (MEFT), later took over these pilot schemes but applied them to all conservancies in Namibia, including those that do not have lions and other large predators. The amounts paid are limited and never enough to cover all farming losses so the issue remains a major ongoing problem for conservation.

 

Chief Mayuni reminded us how serious problem-animal incidents were often handled in the 1980s up until the time community-based conservation was embraced in the 1990s.

 

“People used to poison the remains of a cow taken by lions so that when the pride came back to feed, they died, as did hyena, jackal, and many vultures and birds that also fed on the poisoned carcass. Even crocodiles died this way.”

 

But he pointed out that in the very early days, his forefathers knew how to look after wild animals which was why wildlife was so abundant when the colonists arrived.

“In the old days, the chief used to send his own hunters to shoot a limited number of elephant for a celebration, for example. No one but the chief’s hunters were allowed to hunt. The old people knew how to harvest a few animals without damaging the population.

 

“Today, however, people have increased and wildlife has increased so we have more conflicts. This does not mean wildlife has to decline just because we stay together. Trophy hunting is a conservation method, carefully controlled with quotas set after annual game counts.”

 

Earlier in the morning, Mrs Beatrice Muyafwe, the Ngambela, (speaker of the house who is in charge of the khuta) had followed protocol by inviting indunas to speak before the chief. He is required to listen to his indunas, and then his Ngambela, and always be the last to speak.

Senior Induna Bernhard Munembo: “If hunting should stop, it will touch the lives of all our people. Conservation and hunting are together and have brought jobs and income, plus meat.”

 

Senior Induna Christopher Mawaya: “This anti-hunting story will kill Namibia. We hope our government is talking hard to Britain.”

Induna Patrick Natamoya said that human-wildlife conflict was effectively tackled by the hunters who targeted problem animals.

 

Other indunas spoke in the same vein, also airing some of their concerns about the challenges currently facing conservancies.

The Ngambela talked about the immense gap between people in the West and the rural people of Zambezi.

 

The chief then took the floor and said he shared the concerns some of his indunas had expressed about the jobs and incomes lost because of the collapse of tourism during the pandemic lockdowns. This poverty meant poaching, which had become almost non-existent up until 2020, was on the rise. Attempts to stop trophy hunting income could therefore not be coming at a worse time when conservancies were struggling to keep their members supportive.

 

Conservancies were valuable as employers but not everyone in the community had a son or daughter who worked for a conservancy, he pointed out, referring to the ongoing challenges of getting sufficient benefits from wildlife into homesteads, especially now that tourism, which stopped completely for nearly two years during the lockdowns, was only slowly starting again.

 

Much had been achieved by conservancies, Chief Mayuni said, with solar and electrical infrastructure going into villages, boreholes, and piped water, conservancies having offices and vehicles, being able to provide jobs, bursaries for post-school tuition, funeral assistance, game meat distributions from trophy hunting, and much else. However, more was needed.

“But, let us not air our problems now. We need to focus on the people who are trying to stop trophy hunting.”

 

“How can we explain to them that if our people do not benefit from the wild animals that share their land, they will farm the core wildlife areas and chase wildlife away. More wildlife will be killed. The wildlife corridors in all conservancies will close without hunting income.

 

“Community conservation is in crisis because of the economic situation after the pandemic, and losing our hunting income would be the nail in the coffin,” was the chief’s final, sobering comment.

The Ministry of Environment and Tourism, now the Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism (MEFT), later took over these pilot schemes but applied them to all conservancies in Namibia, including those that do not have lions and other large predators. The amounts paid are limited and never enough to cover all farming losses so the issue remains a major ongoing problem for conservation.

 

Chief Mayuni reminded us how serious problem-animal incidents were often handled in the 1980s up until the time community-based conservation was embraced in the 1990s.

 

“People used to poison the remains of a cow taken by lions so that when the pride came back to feed, they died, as did hyena, jackal, and many vultures and birds that also fed on the poisoned carcass. Even crocodiles died this way.”

 

But he pointed out that in the very early days, his forefathers knew how to look after wild animals which was why wildlife was so abundant when the colonists arrived.

 

“In the old days, the chief used to send his own hunters to shoot a limited number of elephant for a celebration, for example. No one but the chief’s hunters were allowed to hunt. The old people knew how to harvest a few animals without damaging the population.

 

“People used to poison the remains of a cow taken by lions so that when the pride came back to feed, they died, as did hyena, jackal, and many vultures and birds that also fed on the poisoned carcass. Even crocodiles died this way.”

 

But he pointed out that in the very early days, his forefathers knew how to look after wild animals which was why wildlife was so abundant when the colonists arrived.

 

“In the old days, the chief used to send his own hunters to shoot a limited number of elephant for a celebration, for example. No one but the chief’s hunters were allowed to hunt. The old people knew how to harvest a few animals without damaging the population.

 

“Today, however, people have increased and wildlife has increased so we have more conflicts. This does not mean wildlife has to decline just because we stay together. Trophy hunting is a conservation method, carefully controlled with quotas set after annual game counts.”

 

Earlier in the morning, Mrs Beatrice Muyafwe, the Ngambela, (speaker of the house who is in charge of the khuta) had followed protocol by inviting indunas to speak before the chief. He is required to listen to his indunas, and then his Ngambela, and always be the last to speak. 

 

Senior Induna Bernhard Munembo: “If hunting should stop, it will touch the lives of all our people. Conservation and hunting are together and have brought jobs and income, plus meat.”

 

Senior Induna Christopher Mawaya: “This anti-hunting story will kill Namibia. We hope our government is talking hard to Britain.”

 

Induna Patrick Natamoya said that human-wildlife conflict was effectively tackled by the hunters who targeted problem animals.

 

Other indunas spoke in the same vein, also airing some of their concerns about the challenges currently facing conservancies.

 

The Ngambela talked about the immense gap between people in the West and the rural people of Zambezi. 

The chief then took the floor and said he shared the concerns some of his indunas had expressed about the jobs and incomes lost because of the collapse of tourism during the pandemic lockdowns. This poverty meant poaching, which had become almost non-existent up until 2020, was on the rise. Attempts to stop trophy hunting income could therefore not be coming at a worse time when conservancies were struggling to keep their members supportive.

 

Conservancies were valuable as employers but not everyone in the community had a son or daughter who worked for a conservancy, he pointed out, referring to the ongoing challenges of getting sufficient benefits from wildlife into homesteads, especially now that tourism, which stopped completely for nearly two years during the lockdowns, was only slowly starting again.

 

Much had been achieved by conservancies, Chief Mayuni said, with solar and electrical infrastructure going into villages, boreholes, and piped water, conservancies having offices and vehicles, being able to provide jobs, 

bursaries for post-school tuition, funeral assistance, game meat distributions from trophy hunting and much else. However, more was needed. 

 

“But, let us not air our problems now. We need to focus on the people who are trying to stop trophy hunting.”

 

“How can we explain to them that if our people do not benefit from the wild animals that share their land, they will farm the core wildlife areas and chase wildlife away. More wildlife will be killed. The wildlife corridors in all conservancies will close without hunting income. 

 

“Community conservation is in crisis because of the economic situation after the pandemic and losing our hunting income would be the nail in the coffin,” was the chief’s final, sobering comment.

 

Later, in his office, having left the indunas in the khuta to continue with their work, effectively governing the Mafwe people in the Mashi district, hearing and resolving issues and conflicts, the Chief and I discussed how to close the gap between people in the West and Africa.

 

Few conservation projects in Africa are better monitored, documented, reviewed, researched and criticized, both internally and externally, than Namibia’s community conservation program, with annual results published online and hardcopy in its State of Community Conservation booklet. Here the achievements and shortcomings of the 68 communal conservancies, 43 community forests and 10 communal fish reserves, plus two community associations within two national parks, managed like a conservancy, are annually reviewed. The various websites are open to all, and data from game counts across the country, income, benefit distribution, facts and figures, are unflinchingly laid out. So it is not for a lack of information that the gap between Africa and some Westerners remains so wide. 

 

Chief Mayuni observed that travelling to other areas, experiencing and seeing with his own eyes, had been a major driver in educating and informing him. In France and at CITES meetings, he had heard animal rights talk – where the rights of an individual animal, such as an elephant, was put before the lives and welfare of African people.

 

Many African countries have visited Namibia to learn about its community conservation which has resulted in a major increase in wildlife and benefits for people. 

 

“So, we should do the same: invite those animal rights people to come here where we can show them examples of how our people suffer because they live with wild animals. And how much they sacrifice for conserving those animals. Let them come here and see the hard efforts we put into conservation. Those ‘pretend conservationists’ need to see some real conservation.” 

Dr Margaret Jacobsohn is a renowned, award-winning anthropologist, conservationist and author based in Namibia. With her partner, the late Garth Owen-Smith, she was co-founder of the IRDNC (Integrated Rural Development and Nature Conservation), an NGO pioneering community conservation in Kunene Province. She is Chair of the GOSCARs grassroots conservation awards Panel and a Trustee of Conservancy Safaris Namibia Dr M Jacobsohn: mjacobsohn@iway.na


By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: AHG. You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the SafeUnsubscribe® link, found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Constant Contact

This will close in 2 seconds

0
    0
    Your Cart
    Your cart is emptyReturn to Shop
    Privacy Overview

    This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.