Sports A Field

Africa is for the Birds

Hunters focused on big game often overlook the great bird shooting opportunities on the continent.

We were just outside of Etosha National Park, in rolling country with the sun just starting to drop over low hills to the west. Namibia’s normally perfect July sky was, well, overcast, carrying a hint of rain so unseasonal as to be almost impossible, but as the sun dipped through scattered clouds the sunset was fantastic.

In position with a small waterhole in front of us, Brian Roodt and I watched the sun dip lower and we waited and looked at each other. A few of the big African doves with black neck-flashes zoomed past, but there was no whistling of the sand grouse we awaited. More ominous, we saw none staging on the horizon. Brian is a good young outfitter in a business that needs good young outfitters, and this was a favorite spot for sand grouse. We’d driven like mad over dusty roads and opened umpteen gates, timing our arrival so we’d catch the sunset flight. But the sand grouse were a no-show. We shot a few doves, but as the falling sun touched the horizon they were roost-bound and finished for the day. Visibly deflated, shoulders slumped, Brian and I got ready to head back to the truck. It was a bust.

Twelve minutes past sundown, we heard the high-pitched whistling as the first flight came in, catching us totally unready. They came screaming in, twos and threes and sixes and a dozen. Dusk caught us too soon, but by then our barrels were hot and it was time to use the remaining light to collect our birds.

A few helmeted guinea fowl for the pot. Most guinea fowl are taken in quick chance encounters. With planning and plenty of help it’s possible to drive them, especially in agricultural areas, and that can be fantastic shooting.

The sand grouse is not a grouse at all—it looks more like a shorebird with grouse-like barred feathering and a plump and tasty breast. A semi-desert bird, the sand grouse is widespread in Africa. In Namibia the double-banded or Burchell’s sand grouse tend to come to water just at sunset, while the Namaqua sand grouse fly at mid-morning. Normally you can set your watch by them; we could only speculate that the cloudy skies put them off their schedule. The flights don’t last long; in the evening it’s fast and furious for just a half-hour; in the morning the flights might last an hour.

Robert Ruark was a shotgunner long before he touched a rifle; from Horn of the Hunter onward, his accounts of big game are always spiced with bird shooting. I think sand grouse offer Africa’s most classic bird shooting, at least in part because I know of no feathered game as difficult to hit. They’re faster than doves and more acrobatic, twisting and diving as they approach the waterhole, whistling bravely through shot and shell. The sand grouse, however, is just a small part of Africa’s rich shotgunning.

Doves and pigeons can be plentiful, and in well-watered areas there can be excellent waterfowl hunting. The staples are the partridge-like francolin and pheasant-size guinea fowl, both occurring in multiple species. Tastiest of all is probably the francolin, but both francolin and guinea fowl are a welcome addition to camp fare. The problem with both is they are running birds. A mad dash through the thorn might yield a fast flushing shot, but for serious wingshooting the best way to hunt both francolin and guinea fowl is to organize a drive, which requires planning and help. The few outfitters who offer wingshooting safaris often do driven hunts in agricultural areas. Both flushing and pointing breeds are also used, but most francolin and guinea fowl are taken in fast chance encounters.

It depends on where you are and hatches vary from year to year. However, in the midst of her big game, most of Africa has good bird shooting, but few visiting hunters take advantage of the opportunity. I’m as guilty as most, but over the years I’ve done a fair amount of African wingshooting and it’s always wonderful.

I think most hunters do at least some bird shooting at home, and some serious shotgunners hunt feathered game almost exclusively. Either way, as you plan your African safari(s) I think this is something you should ask prospective outfitters about. Game birds of some type will almost always be present, sometimes in profusion. In order to take advantage of it, there are two considerations: Shotguns and shells. Whether you should take your own shotgun depends on how avid you are. We all shoot better with our own shotguns, but most professional hunters keep a shotgun around. It may a short-barreled gun for snakes, wildly unsuitable for birds, or it may be a more versatile setup used for pygmy antelopes in thick cover. A few years ago Johan Calitz uncased a pair of Westley Richards 20-bores for an impromptu driven francolin shoot. Shotguns of that quality are unusual in any hunting camp, and in Africa anything other than 12-gauge is uncommon. But you never know until you ask.

I’ve taken shotguns before; this year, planning some serious bird shooting, I took a Caesar Guerini sporting clays gun to Namibia. However, I also had a .270 for plains game and a double .450 for buffalo. When picking and packing guns for Africa, “two’s company and three’s a crowd.” Three guns, though possible, makes the gun case too heavy, plus three is a lot to look after.

Boddington and Hanns-Louis Lamprecht and a good shorthair after a quick morning’s flight of Namaqua sand grouse. The morning flight isn’t as hectic as evening, normally starting about 9 a.m. and lasting perhaps an hour.

If you take a shotgun, think about mating it with just one rifle. On plains game hunts, two rifles aren’t essential; just pick one very versatile rifle based on the largest game you intend to hunt. If a buffalo is on the menu, a good old .375 will handle everything just fine (as always). Obviously I didn’t do that this year, and I hated myself every time I had to lug the gun case. In my defense, I bummed around Namibia for nearly a month but, predictably, the only time I used the .450 was for buffalo. The shotgun, however, saw quite a bit of use. I had several excellent sand grouse and dove shoots, and chased guinea fowl and francolin here and there. Taking your own shotgun is a personal decision, as is choosing your rifle(s).

What about shells? Standard baggage allocation remains five kilograms or eleven pounds. Last year we took Donna’s Krieghoff 20-gauge to Mozambique and fit in three ten-packs of No. 5 turkey loads, plenty for suni and blue duiker and a few guinea fowl for the pot. You might manage a couple boxes of 12-gauge loads along with your rifle ammo, but you cannot carry enough for serious bird shooting. So, along with available shotguns, you need to discuss shotgun shells with your outfitter. Supplies vary widely across Africa, from scarce and precious to readily sourced, but if you want to do serious wingshooting, especially high-volume shooting like doves and sand grouse, your outfitter must lay in a supply. South Africa is not a problem, and now Namibia isn’t, either. After investing nearly five years in getting all the permits, my old friend Hanns-Louis Lamprecht is now manufacturing shotshells, the first commercial ammunition ever loaded in the country of Namibia.

Adequate supplies of shotshells are a problem in much of Africa. In Namibia, Hanns-Louis Lamprecht is now loading hunting ammo under his Lamprecht brand, and Fiocchi target loads under license. This is the first factory ammunition of any type ever manufactured in Namibia.

Initial offerings include game loads under his Lamprecht brand, and he’s also making Fiocchi target loads under license. A major reason I lugged a shotgun was to try out his ammo, and I was impressed. His shells are clean-burning and hard hitting, and when I did my part birds fell. However, with sand grouse, nobody bats a thousand!
On another evening with Brian Roodt there was a band of dark bush just beyond the waterhole. Just as the birds dipped down, that dark bush was behind them, so every time I thought I had the lead just right they vanished utterly. It was embarrassing, but that’s part of sand grouse shooting. Morning shoots usually aren’t as furious, and good light helps. One morning Hanns-Louis and I had about three-quarters of an hour of steady shooting. We picked up eighteen birds for forty shells, almost filling our ten-bird limits. I’m not sure I can do much better than that!

 

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Traveling with Firearms

Advice for trouble-free travel with firearms, and what to do when things go wrong.

Traveling with firearms complicates everything. Honestly, it’s becoming a pain in the posterior…I breathe a sigh of relief when I travel withouta gun case! However, with some exceptions, we still can travel with firearms. It’s pointless to try to list the exceptions, because they’re subject to change. Some airlines do not carry firearms. Some airports are best avoided, including London and New York! And here are some destinations where hunting is legal…but where it is impossible to bring in a firearm.

For me in recent years these have included Ghana, Liberia, and the Philippines…and even our own state of Hawaii (not impossible, but difficult). If you can’t bring a firearm, then the outfitter must provide one. More common, for simplicity and ease of travel, you choose to borrow or rent a firearm. This works all sorts of different ways. It is difficult for non-U.S. citizens to bring firearms into the United States We’ve had several Canadians join us for our Kansas whitetail hunts. We keep a couple of scoped right-handed rifles there as loaners…and a spare left-handed rifle for my southpaw buddy from Alberta, Derek Barnes.

Although it’s always more trouble, Donna and I both prefer to travel with our own firearms. In part this is because we’re both left-handed. Mostly it’s because, after all, I’m a gunwriter, and if I can’t bring my firearm then I’m going to lose out on potential “gun stories.” Also, I’m a gun guy, and any hunt is more satisfying if I can bring my concept of the “perfect tool.”

Don’t forget U.S. Customs From 4457, which serves as a U.S. “gun permit” in most countries, and is essential for returning with your firearm. Boddington has a huge stack for most firearms he’s ever owned, but these days they have an expiration date; you may need a new one.

So, despite extra trouble and more paperwork, I’m not afraid to travel with firearms. Let me give you the good and bad news. Good: I have some nice guns. None are extremely valuable, but some I consider irreplaceable. I travel with them and I don’t worry about it too much. Insurance is always a good idea, but I haven’t heard about a gun case being irretrievably lost in a long time. Anything is possible, but today it’s less likely because firearms almost universally receive special handling. Again, insurance is sensible, especially for valuable guns, but once the agent puts a bag tag on your gun case the airline accepts responsibility. In fifty years of traveling with firearms I have never have a gun case lost.

Which brings us to the bad news: Dozens of times I’ve had properly checked firearms delayed or “misplaced.” At least in my case they have always surfaced…but you never know exactly how long they might be delayed. Sometimes the airline can track missing bags and give you a pretty good idea that they’ll be in on the next flight or the next day. You wait and hope for the best. In remote destinations accurate tracking is unlikely, so you fill out the paperwork, pester the airlines, call your travel agent, and hope…but sooner or later, as your hunting days trickle past, you have little choice but to continue the hunt and implement Plan B, which is to borrow or rent whatever firearms are locally available.

This happens often enough that a very standard and routine question when booking any hunt should be: “Suppose my gun case is delayed, what (if anything) will be available?”

Even with the best planning, baggage can go astray. This can happen on short domestic flights, but the likelihood isn’t so much a matter of distance as number of connections. The more connections, the more likely Murphy’s Law will rule. Short connections are playing with fire, and risks are increased when you must switch from one airline to another (often unavoidable).

Of course, it doesn’t have to be the gun case! Any bag can be delayed or mis-routed. I’ve never been to Tahiti, but I’ve had checked bags sent there! You can usually borrow or buy suitable clothes, so the real key to continuing with the mission is to pack your carry-on as if your life and your trip depend on it: Medications, spare eyeglasses, comfortable shoes, camera, binocular.

Skip back t to my phrase “properly checked firearms.” These days, the horror stories are legion! All too often it’s a case of not knowing the rules. Just like a traffic stop, lack of knowledge of the law is no excuse. Occasionally the problem is a recalcitrant ticket agent who doesn’t know the rules. This is a tough one because, these days, we can’t argue with these people. Start with Step One: Make sure you know the rules. Step Two: Have all of yourpaperwork in order. Step Three: Be polite, ask for a supervisor, and get your travel agent on the phone!

Oh, you booked your own travel? Honest, when traveling with firearms this is often a major error. For domestic travel you can get information from the airline website, but you should always call the airline and tell them you are traveling with a gun case. For international travel with firearms you are best-served by going through a travel agent who specializes in or at least is knowledgeable about travel with firearms. There are quite a few, but agencies we have used in recent years include: Miriam Clingensmith at Frosch, [email protected]; Debbie Gracy at www.gracytravel.com; Steve Turner at www.travelwithguns.com; and Barbara Wollbrink at International Journeys, [email protected].

The thing is, different airlines, especially international carriers, may have different rules. So do most international destinations…and some key airports. Amsterdam and Dubai are excellent hubs for onward travel to hunting destinations in both Africa and Asia, but both require local police clearance for travel with firearms, even in transit. A hunting-and-gun-savvy travel agent will help you through the paperwork…and provide an after-hours contact if you run into issues.

Here’s a (mostly self-inflicted) nightmare:  A buddy of mine just went on an ibex hunt in Turkey. He booked his own travel through Amsterdam, but didn’t do the police clearance. I have no idea how he got on the plane in the first place, but of course his gun case didn’t get past Amsterdam. They sent it back to his originating airport. Meantime, he went on to Turkey, but of course no gun. He called Miriam Clingensmith of Frosch in Houston, and somehow she got the airline to forward his gun case to Turkey, perhaps under the logic that they had tagged it. Anyway, he got his rifle…but by the time all this happened he had lost more than half his hunt and went home without an ibex (but with his gun case).

Here’s where our fast-changing world can throw a monkey wrench. Turkish hunters and outfitters have good firearms available. However, a new wrinkle in Turkish law renders it illegal to “loan” a firearm. So, instead of being able to borrow a firearm, my buddy had to sit on his hands waiting for his gun case to arrive while his hunt circled the drain. Istanbul is one of the easiest big airports in the world to transit with firearms, rivaling Frankfurt and Paris, and Turkey is not difficult for temporary permits. This “no loaning of firearms” is a new hurdle.

Most hunting destinations have a temporary firearms permit requirement. In three of the most popular—Canada, Namibia, and South Africa—you can apply upon arrival, and you can obtain the forms in advance (on-line, or from your outfitter, booking agent, and/or travel agent) and have them already filled out. Nice to have, because upon initial check-in, the ticket agent is supposed to ascertain that you can legally enter your country of destination (and pass through transit airports) with your firearm.

It’s just a matter of hitting all the wickets which, depending on the destination, may be simple or complex. Trust me, I don’t do this myself. Again, your outfitter, booking agent, and/or gun-savvy travel agent can and will help. Just make sure they transmit a copy of your destination temporary gun permit so you can show it to the ticket agent when you check in. The legend is that gun permits are horribly Draconian in the British Isles. Not really…you just have to follow the rules. We’ve taken firearms into England with no problems at all, but both Ireland and Scotland are simpler. In 2018 we hunted in both countries. In Edinburgh and Dublin the airport police were friendly and helpful, interested in where we were going and what we were hunting. Our outfitters, Michael Grosse in Scotland and James Nolan in Ireland, had done their groundwork and we’d done our homework. We had our permits, and we had no trouble. So, the most important tenets of international travel with firearms are to know the rules, and make certain you have followed them! And then, try to have some kind of backup plan, just in case.

 

 

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Highland Tradition

Photos by Tweed Media International

Steep green hills and sturdy garron ponies are the backdrop to a magnificent red stag hunt in the Scottish Highlands.

The two ponies, tied nose-to-tail, were small and sturdy, with shaggy manes and placid demeanors. Our tweed-clad ponyman, recognizing my interest in all things equine, let me hold the halter rope and pet the lead pony’s nose beneath the long forelock. I noticed its packsaddle, a different type from any I had ever seen.

“Aye, some of these saddles are more than a hundred years old. They dinna make many of them anymore,” Alistair, head stalker at Drummond Estates in Perthshire, Scotland, had told me earlier.

A hunt for red stags in the Scottish Highlands is steeped in tradition, most of which has changed very little in more than a century. Your guides—called stalkers—still wear tweed from head to toe, although they’ll pull on a high-tech rain jacket when necessary. Each guide has his own “beat,” or section of the estate, which he knows like the back of his hand. You’ll cover ground—lots of it—on foot. And you’ll limit your shot to 200 yards, belly-crawling through the long grass and using dips and folds in the terrain for cover on the windy, treeless hillsides as you try to get within range of a mature stag.

One of the few things that haschanged in the Highlands in the last century is the method of game recovery. Traditionally, game was taken off the hill on the back of a sturdy Highland pony, also called a garron. These days, most of the places you’ll hunt in Scotland use more expedient—and lower-maintenance–Argos to transport game (the slopes of the Highlands are far too close to vertical to allow the use of ATVs or other wheeled vehicles). But a few estates, Drummond among them, still take stags off the hill the old-fashioned way—lashed to a hundred-year-old saddle on the back of a pony originally bred for this specialized task. The ponyman, typically leading a pair of garrons (one to carry the stag and one to keep the other pony company), follows the stalkers all day, at some distance, with his charges.

“What a cool job you have,” I said to Jack, our ponyman.

“Aye,” he grinned. “I canna believe someone pays me to do this!”

A moment of bonding with a Highland pony.

So far on this hunt, I hadn’t given the ponies much work to do, other than haul our lunches and a Thermos of hot tea to the rugged summit of a ridge. I wasn’t sure if this height was high enough to be classified a “munro”—a peak over 3,200 feet—but our two-hour hike up that morning sure had felt long and steep enough to classify. Now we were taking a break at the top, huddled behind a jumble of rocks in an attempt to escape the incessant, gusting wind. It had been spitting rain on the way up, and we were socked in with fog here at the top. It was exactly as I had imagined Scottish weather would be.

This gray, frigid perch was a full one-eighty from the luxurious accommodations I had left that morning. I was staying at the world-famous Gleneagles Resort, built in the 1920s to host the well-heeled for a traditional Scottish country holiday of golf, shooting, stalking, and fishing. In recent years it has hosted the Ryder Cup and even a G7 summit, but Gleneagles remains true to its roots and still offers stag-stalking excursions on nearby estates, including this one. The hotel provides a driver to whisk you off to your adventure and pick you up at the end of the day, as well as sending along a magnificent lunch of roast beef sandwiches and Scottish eggs, which I was now wolfing down and following with gulps of hot tea. The combination was finally beginning to counteract the damp Highland chill.

The fog was beginning to lift, too, just as our stalker, Paul, had hoped it would. As the sky cleared, we got to our feet to continue the hunt and I was treated to a big reveal, the reward for the steep climb that morning—a stunning panorama of grassy hills, rocky cliffs, and a marshy green valley far below.

The wind, however, refused to abate. It swirled around us maddeningly as we moved along the ridgeline, glassing the slopes below for deer. Stalking in the wide-open Highlands is all about using the terrain, so you’re always hiking up and down, going around knobs and points and finger ridges. The deer, including a few huge herds of forty or fifty animals, were mostly tucked into the hillside directly below us to escape the wind, and despite our best efforts on every stalk the tricky winds swept our scent to the deer almost every time.

By late afternoon we had come to a hilltop crowned with enormous peat “hags,” which look like giant, grass-capped mushrooms of soft peat moss. These provided excellent cover for stalking a herd with several mature stags, but the deer were restless and spooky. We ran from vantage point to vantage point, crawling on hands and knees to peer around the hags, until my pant legs and gaiters were smeared brown with peat mud. When a chance finally came and I settled belly-down behind the rifle, all the deer were facing us, and then, as one, the herd turned and headed directly away at a trot, providing no shot opportunity. And that was the end of my first day of stag stalking. A GPS phone app showed we had hiked eighteen miles.

Fortunately, there was more to come. After a magnificent meal at Gleneagles’ high-end Strathern restaurant that evening—naturally, I ordered wild Highlands stag in a red wine sauce—and a good night’s sleep in the luxurious bed, I was back at the estate the next morning as the stalkers gathered their gear and saddled up the ponies. Although it was still windy, it was a bluebird day, with clear skies and plenty of sunshine.

This morning my guide was Alistair, the estate’s head stalker. The head stalker is awarded the estate’s best “beat,” so I felt pretty confident as we headed out. We trekked upward along the edge of a small clearcut, topping the ridge in about an hour and a half, and began to glass the surrounding hillsides. I could see our ponyman, Jack, shadowing us with his two charges, just specks on the slopes far below.

The blue sky set off the green hillsides, covered with lush tall grass. The scenery got even prettier when we started spotting deer. There were several large herds of hinds and young stags feeding along the lower slopes, and we covered plenty of ground just as we had done the day before, working our way along the heights and studying the herds through our binoculars.

In the early afternoon we spotted a large herd—some forty or fifty deer—with several mature stags. Alistair and I were able to belly-crawl to the edge of the slope and I rested the rifle, a borrowed Sauer 404 in 6.5 Creedmoor, on my daypack, studying the restless herd below. The stags on the near edge of the herd were just within our 200-yard limit, but they were milling restlessly, and the stag I wanted never stepped clear. We watched them for fifteen minutes or so before the entire herd began to move away from us; soon they were five or six hundred yards distant.

We wormed our way back from the edge and then then jogged around the back of the hill and up the next couple of rises until the herd came back into view. It looked as though they had finally relaxed, with about half the deer bedded down in the tall grass. We were well inside our range window this time, so I got comfortable in a prone position behind the scope once again. Alistair explained which stag he wanted me to shoot, but it was bedded, facing away from us. I wasn’t worried; I’d wait for the right opportunity and be ready when the stag stood. It was comfortable lying there on the soft hillside, bathed in warm sunlight with the cool breeze washing over us.

Twenty minutes later, as if responding to some prearranged signal, the entire herd, including my stag, stood up and moved off, straight away from us, and vanished over a rise. Once again, I never had a shot.

Though frustrated, I had to admit I was impressed. The wide-open country and the large numbers of deer had caused me to assume that stag stalking in Scotland wouldn’t be particularly difficult. I was quickly learning how wrong I had been.

I was afraid we had blown our last chance; the afternoon was wearing on, and the big herd had seemingly vanished. We went around the crest in the direction the herd had gone and dropped down again off several fingers, searching in vain. How could several dozen coppery-red deer simply vanish on a wide-open, green hillside?

Alistair, however, was not one to give up, no matter the odds. Since the deer were not above us or on our level, there was only one place they could be—far down below us, tucked in somewhere on the lower slopes. To my amusement, he sat down and began sliding down the steep slope on his butt, so I followed suit. It was easy and fun, riding the soft, slippery grass down the hill like kids on a slide. We slid a couple of hundred yards, with Alistair stopping occasionally to peer directly below us with his binocular. Then we’d resume our slide. Finally he stopped, flipped onto his belly, and crawled to a slight lip in the hill. He looked back at me and motioned me to join him. I slithered up beside him like a snake.

When I peered over the lip, I was astonished to see the deer, looking surprisingly relaxed, some 180 yards straight down below us. The rifle was resting once again on my daypack, and I studied the herd through the scope as Alistair talked me skillfully onto the right stag—not an easy task in such a large group of deer. At first, other stags were standing too close or behind him, but eventually he stood clear. My opportunity had come at last.

The trigger on the Sauer 404 had been adjusted to require only a light touch, and I squeezed gently as soon as I was steady on the stag’s chest. The entire herd bolted, but my stag lagged behind, staggered, and fell.

I took my eye off my fallen stag only when I realized the rest of the herd was passing right by us at fifty yards, unaware of our presence, making their way back up the hill in a stately procession: hinds, young deer, and stags of every size. It was a magnificent sight.

Alistair bounded joyously ahead of me down the near-vertical slope, while I picked my way carefully to where my stag lay. Long winters and low forage make life tougher for stags in the Scottish Highlands than it is in some other parts of the world where red deer occur, but my stag was in beautiful condition, with a sleek copper coat and fine, tall antlers with good mass and four points on each side. A strip or two of velvet still hung from the lower tines.

Diana Rupp admires a fine Highland stag taken on the second afternoon of the hunt.

Alistair handled the gutting—which the Scots call the gralloch—and at last it was time for the Highland ponies to get to work. Paul had come up to help, and I held the halter while he, Alistair, and Jack heaved the stag up onto the pony’s back and tied it skillfully to the saddle hooks. They then lashed the stag’s head along its back so the antlers would not gouge the pony’s flank. Through it all, the garron stood placidly, a veteran of this task, and its companion watched, switching its tail as if knowing that it was getting off easy this time.

Jack led the ponies down toward the valley in the orange glow of late afternoon. Cooling temperatures and a yellow tinge to the grass signaled that despite the calendar reading late August, fall had already come to the Scottish Highlands. But the real proof was in the century-old scene on the slope below me: three hunters in traditional tweed with two sturdy ponies, one bearing a fine Highland stag, all of us heading home from the hill.

 

Gleneagles Resort

Since opening its doors in June 1924, Gleneagles has been one of Scotland’s most iconic hotels and sporting estates. Set beneath the Ochil Hills, in the heart of Perthshire, the 850-acre estate epitomizes Scotland’s natural beauty. In addition to 232 sumptuous bedrooms and suites, the hotel boasts nine restaurants and bars, including Andrew Fairlie, Scotland’s only two-Michelin-starred restaurant, and the opulent American Bar, featuring cocktails inspired by the Roaring 20s. There are three championship golf courses, an award-winning spa, and a sporting clays facility with instruction available.

Gleneagles now also offers deerstalking, the most traditional of the Scottish country pursuits. Hunters spend a day in the magnificent hills accompanied by a stalker who knows the ground intimately and will show guests how stealth, field skills, and an understanding of the wild deer can take them within range of these majestic beasts. Guests are provided with a delicious picnic, as well as clothing, optics, rifles, and ammunition, as well as transport to and from the hotel.

Price is £1,095 ($1,400) per person per day for stag, £750 ($980) per person per day for roe deer or red hind. Rooms at Gleneagles start at £520 ($680) per night based on double occupancy, and include a full Scottish breakfast each morning and use of The Health Club facilities. For more information, visit www.gleneagles.com.

 

Gear For Stag Hunting

A Sauer 404 rifle in 6.5 Creedmoor, topped with a Leica scope and loaded with Hornady’s 143-grain ELD-X Precision Hunter ammunition, was the ideal tool for a Scotland stag hunt. Suppressors are standard equipment when hunting in this part of the world and my rifle was equipped with one.

Leica’s Geovid Range 10×42 is an excellent binocular, and its rangefinding capabilities are impressive. I had no trouble ranging stags several hundred yards away despite frequent mist and fog, and the LED readout was bright and sharp, as was the optical quality.

I wouldn’t have handled the damp, windy conditions of the Scottish Highlands nearly as well without my Swazi Shikari Coat, which is 100 percent waterproof and windproof and an ideal layer for any hunt in similar conditions. Swazi gaiters were also invaluable; without them my pant legs would have quickly soaked through after hiking through the tall, wet grass.—D.R.

 

 

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Climbing for Chamois

The challenging and rewarding pursuit of Europe’s wary mountain goat.

Hunting chamois (pronounced shammy or shamwah) is a traditional European pastime. These 55- to 130-pound mountain dwellers have been familiar prey and welcome dinner guests for thousands of years. From peasants and herders to kings and queens, hunters have launched expeditions to slay the hearty, elusuve mountain chamois. Many of our oldest hunting traditions and earliest conservation restrictions evolved through management of these unique animals. Even firearms—those trim, light, elegant European single-shots—were inspired by chamois. Climbing the hills, mountains, and rocky ridges of Europe and the Middle East in search of chamois in montane, sub-alpine, and alpine habitats is as classic a hunt as Europe offers.

Thanks to hunters, the agile, sprightly, rock hopping chamois now roam the mountains of New Zealand, too. Homesick hunters introduced them to that far southern island way back in 1907. With no predators aside from humans, chamois have since pioneered nearly all suitable habitats on the beautiful, mountainous South Island. While environmental purists wish to exterminate them, sportsmen are fighting to maintain them at tolerable levels. After all, domestic sheep and humans are invasive species, too, doing far more ecological damage than chamois. No one’s proposing eliminating them.

In Europe, chamois live in suitably rugged terrain as high as 11,000 feet from northwest Spain east to the Caucasus, south to Greece and Turkey and north as far as Czech Republic. Many populations are isolated in small mountain ranges, leading to a confusion of quasi sub-species. Pursuing all of the varieties is a great way to explore the mountain ranges of Europe.

Hunting the different varieties of chamois is a great way to explore the mountain ranges of Europe and New Zealand.

While a member in good standing of the Bovid family and Caprinae subfamily, the chamois is not a true goat or sheep. It is a member of the genus Rupicapra, species rupicapra. Like the similarly unique North American mountain goat, chamois males (I’ve heard them called rams, bucks, billies, and even bulls) do NOT bash horns in the manner of sheep and true goats. They mostly posture and chase. If they do clash, it’s more about pushing, shoving, and hooking/raking the opponent’s body than butting heads. Relatively delicate chamois horns are not engineered for high impact clashing, but evisceration from those wickedly sharp, hooked horns seems a distinct possibility.

Sizes are variable, but most chamois stand 26 to 32 inches at the withers and stretch 40 to 55 inches from nose to stubby tail. An erect neck atop a fairly sturdy, long-legged trunk gives the chamois a lively, alert look. Pelage varies by subspecies and location from tan and brown to chocolate, turning nearly black in winter, especially in males. A white nose blaze extends up between black, hooked horns in both sexes. The lower jaw and throat are white, leaving a dark band of short fur from nose tip through the eyes to the ears. Inner ears usually white, rump often white. Horns are usually heavier and longer in the males, reaching as many as 14 inches around the outside curve with ten inches representing a good to great trophy. Males also have a leathery scent pad/gland at the rear base of each horn that swells during the rut and could be significant for scent marking, establishing dominance or identity, or signaling females about virility and the physiological condition of the ram.

Despite the vertical terrain it favors, chamois are great runners able to reach speeds of a reported 31 mph even over rough, tilted landscapes. Watching them dash steeply downhill over broken terrain is enough to put your heart in your throat. They can leap more than six feet straight up. Like most mountain bovids, chamois maintain their footing with hooves that include a leathery, somewhat spongy inner surface mated to hard hoof edges.

Females and young herd in small bands which otherwise solitary males visit during the brief fall mating season running October through December. Hunts are conducted then, but also across a wide span of months from June to February depending on the country and its traditions. If there can be said to be a chamois stronghold, the Alps of France, Switzerland, Austria, and Italy are it. Turkey has Anatolian chamois across an extensive range. Caucasian chamois are estimated to number around 15,000.

Romania boasts the largest subspecies, the Carpathian chamois, which has the largest horns of all chamois on average. This is definitely the destination for the big ones.

Because of its small size and modest horns, the chamois doesn’t draw hunters’ attention quite as readily as an argali, kudu, or Cape buffalo. But climbing mountains in the shadows of ancient Greeks, Carpathians, Romans, and Goths lends enough mystique to the adventure for most hunters.

Chamois Facts

Other names: gems (Dutch); gams (German); camoscio (Italian); gamuza (Spanish)

Heraldric Representation: Chamois imagery has been found on more than 50 heralds and coats of arms.

The long, black nape and back ridge hairs of chamois are often worn on Tyrolean hats as accents called gamsbarts.

Like many mountain animals, chamois seek security in cliffs and rugged terrain from which they habitually watch for danger from below. Stalking from above gives hunters some advantage.

Chamois horns can be aged by counting annual growth rings.

Countries with chamois (though not necessarily hunting seasons): Spain, France, Switzerland, Germany, Czech, Slovakia, Poland, Austria, Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia, Yugoslavia, Albania, Macedonia, Greece, Bulgaria, Romania, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Turkey, New Zealand.

 

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The .300 Weatherby Magnum

There are many great cartridges in its class, but Roy Weatherby’s flagship .300  remains one of Boddington’s favorites.

It’s probably not inappropriate that, sometimes these days, I feel old. That’s a natural and unavoidable progression, but I like it less when I feel that I’m becoming obsolete! Like, for instance, when I tell folks I’m shooting a .300 Weatherby Magnum and they look at me like I have at least three heads.

True enough, the case design is no longer “modern.” Based on the full-length .300 H&H case with body taper removed, the case length of 2.825 inches requires a .375 H&H-length action. It has Roy Weatherby’s distinctive double-radius shoulder which, to my knowledge has never been proven to have any real advantage. On the other hand, it also hasn’t been proven to do any harm. Like all Weatherby cartridges, the .300 has a belted case, which we all know to be just about as old-fashioned as me! Come to think of it, and if you really want to be old-fashioned, there are no flies on the parent cartridge, the .300 H&H . . . but it’s so uncommon today that I won’t try to make an argument for it.

Of course, the .300 Winchester Magnum also has a belted case. With its 2.620-inch case length the .300 Winchester Magnum fits into a .30-06-length action. Despite its outdated belted case, the .300 Winchester Magnum is doing just fine. It is the world’s most popular magnum cartridge, chambered and loaded by virtually all manufacturers. When I first started using the .300 Weatherby Magnum back in the early 1980s, there was a notable velocity difference between it and the slower .300 Winchester Magnum. But the .300 Winchester Magnum is more efficient, and does better in a 24-inch barrel. The .300 Weatherby Magnum really needs a 26-inch barrel to reach its full velocity potential. Also, popular cartridges like the .300 Winchester Magnum receive more load development with the newest propellants. I concede that, as loaded today, the gap between the .300 Winchester and .300 Weatherby is less than it used to be, and not much at all with 24-inch barrels.

Historically most of my .300 Weatherby Magnum rifles have had 26-inch tubes. Largely by accident, the .300 Weatherby Magnum barrel for my Blaser R8 is 24 inches. Although extremely accurate, it is not a fast barrel. Lately I’ve been shooting mostly 200-grain ELD-X. Actual velocity is 2,900 feet per second. I can almost get that from a .300 Winchester Magnum.

Groups with the .300 Weatherby Magnum barrel on the Blaser R8. At this time Boddington was shooting mostly 180-grain SST; he currently shoots mostly 200-grain ELD-X, similar accuracy but improved performance at longer ranges.

What about modern case designs? You bet, they’re out there. We have no shortage of fast .30-caliber cartridges. The .300 Remington Ultra Magnum (RUM) also requires a .375 H&H-length action. Based on the fatter unbelted .404 Jeffery case, the .300 RUM also needs a 26-inch barrel, but it has greater case capacity than the .300 Weatherby, so should be faster. But now it depends on who is doing the loading. Weatherby ammunition is loaded by Norma to slightly higher pressures than domestic manufacturers have been comfortable with. Also, one of Roy Weatherby’s specifications was a bit of unrifled free bore behind the rifling. Weatherby’s 200-grain factory load by Norma is rated at 3,060 fps. This is probably honest velocity in a 26-inch barrel with a Weatherby chamber, but difficult to duplicate. Remington’s 200-grain Swift A-Frame load for the .300 RUM is rated at 3,025 fps.

Obviously, these loads are considerably faster than what I’m getting from my 24-inch Blaser barrel. But do I care? Not a whole bunch! Barrels differ and so do loads, and game animals are unable to recognize the difference of a hundred fps. If I wanted faster I could upgrade to larger-cased cartridges like the .30-.378 Weatherby Magnum, which is a belted case. Or, to fatter unbelted cartridges like Lazzeroni’s 7.82 (.308) Warbird or the current darling of the sniper community, the .300 Norma Magnum. The Warbird and the .300 Norma are based on the extra-fat .416 Rigby case; the .30-.378 Weatherby case is a belted version of the .416 Rigby.

So, more velocity is out there, readily at hand. Or I could downgrade and go for modern efficiency with one of the short, fat, unbelted magnum .30s. There are at least four choices: .300 Ruger Compact Magnum (RCM), .300 Remington Short Action Ultra Magnum (RSAUM), .300 Winchester Short Magnum (WSM), and Lazzeroni’s fat and fast 7.82 (.308) Patriot, all sized to fit short (.308 Winchester-length) bolt actions. The RCM, RSAUM, and WSM run a bit behind the .300 Winchester Magnum, but no game animal will know the difference. Lazzeroni’s Patriot is faster, running close to the .300 Weatherby.

Hey, even though I’m old and boring, I’ve used most of the fast .30s: Long, short, fat, thin, belted and unbelted. As I’ve written many times, there isn’t much you can’t do with a fast .30-caliber. There are advantages and disadvantages, and differences in velocities, but all these cartridges are similar enough to fall into the same class of power and versatility. The fact is, I’m comfortablewith the .300 Weatherby Magnum. It is not my only fast .30, but it’s the fast .30 that I’ve used the most over the past 35 years.

The .300 Weatherby is not renowned for extreme accuracy, but Boddington has found it plenty accurate enough. His Rifles, Inc. .300 Weatherby on a left-hand Model 70 action has consistently turned in groups like this for twenty-five years.

The .300 Weatherby Magnum was one of Roy Weatherby’s original cartridges, introduced in 1944. A bit of cartridge trivia: As Roy Weatherby wildcatted what would become his Weatherby Magnum line, the shortened .270 Weatherby Magnum actually preceded his .30-caliber. However, from the start and to this day, the .300 Weatherby Magnum is the flagship of the Weatherby line. It is the best-selling of the Weatherby Magnum cartridges, and has become the most available, now also loaded by Federal, Hornady, and Remington. For many years it was the fastest .30-caliber cartridge. It was surpassed in 1999 by the .300 RUM, at least in terms of case capacity and potential velocity, but by then that was ancient history. Roy Weatherby developed the .30-.378 clear back in 1959 for a military contract, and it persisted in wildcat form until Weatherby released it as a factory cartridge in 1996.

Neither the .300 RUM nor the .30-.378 have approached the .300 Weatherby Magnum in popularity. I can only speculate that these, and the many faster wildcats and proprietary cartridges, might offer too much of a good thing. The .300 Weatherby Magnum is a fast, effective, and hard-hitting cartridge, legendary for its performance in the game fields of the world. It is also a hard-kicking cartridge and is definitely not for everyone. Faster .30s give you a bit more, but produce more recoil. Today the .300 Weatherby certainly qualifies as a world-standard hunting cartridge, but it is not nearly as popular as the .300 Winchester Magnum.

I would never tell anyone to get a .300 Weatherby Magnum instead of a .300 Winchester Magnum. Performance-wise the two are similar, and efficiency and availability should be considered. Excuse my idiosyncrasies, but I have a long history with the .300 Weatherby Magnum, and I still like it. I got my first one in 1982, a left-hand Mark V with 26-inch barrel. This was after devastating burglaries (yes, that’s plural!). For several years it was one of few rifles I owned, so I used it a lot and came to love it. It was followed by another left-hand Mark V, and in about 1990 Lex Webernick built me a .300 Weatherby Magnum on a stainless left-hand Model 70 action with 26-inch fluted barrel. This rifle remains a favorite, used on numerous hunts both here and in Asia.

A very good Dagestan tur taken in 2006 with the Rifles, Inc. .300 Weatherby on a left-hand Model 70 action. The shot was about 400 yards, taken with a 180-grain Hornady Interlock.

As I said, my 24-inch Blaser barrel in .300 Weatherby was “accidental.” Back story: In 2010, when the R8 model was new, I got one with a .300 Blaser Magnum barrel. It shot wonderfully, but Blaser decided not to market their unbelted Blaser Magnum cartridges in the U.S. This created an unnecessary complexity, so I traded that barrel for the .300 Weatherby barrel. It was a spur-of-the-moment decision; if I’d thought harder I might have insisted on a 26-inch barrel, or made it a .300 Winchester Magnum instead. Doesn’t matter–this barrel also shoots great, and I’ve never looked back.

It is often said that the .300 Weatherby is not particularly accurate. Other fast .30s with more modern case designs are theoretically capable of greater accuracy. However, I believe that quality of barrels plus bedding and rigidity of action are more important to accuracy than case design. I’m not saying I’ve had a .300 Weatherby Magnum that could win benchrest matches, but all of mine have been comfortably sub-MOA rifles. This has made them suitable for hunting non-dangerous game under virtually any conditions anywhere in the world. The same can be said of any accurate fast .30, regardless of case design or dimensions. The .300 Weatherby Magnum isn’t the only choice and may not be the best choice, but it’s a choice I have confidence in. Which is why, despite all arguments, I continue to use it.

 

 

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Field Tested: Prois Cumbre Hunting Gear

Engineered specifically for women, this new line of hunting clothing is proving itself on the world’s toughest hunts.

Prois has been making great-fitting, high-performance women’s hunting clothing for the past decade, and now–just in time for hunting season and the holidays–they have brought a whole new level of quality and construction to what was already a great lineup with a brand-new clothing line in the company’s own Cumbre camo pattern. I recently had the opportunity to wear the new Prois Cumbre clothing on what turned out to be the ultimate field test—a 10-day ibex hunt in the mountains of central Asia, where conditions were as tough and variable as you’re likely to find on any hunt. The gear performed like a champ. Not only did it hold up well in rough, rocky conditions, but the performance fabrics proved their worth, stopping the wind, keeping me warm, and efficiently wicking sweat away from my skin on the toughest mountain climbs I’ve ever done.

Thermoregulation—staying warm without overheating—can be the toughest part of a strenuous hunt. I’m a huge fan of baselayers constructed of merino wool, which is soft, doesn’t itch, wicks beautifully, and keeps you from getting stinky. Prois’s line of Olann Merino baselayers is the absolute best I’ve found. The line includes a half-zip top, tank top, merino bottoms, glove liners, and… FINALLY—someone has made a merino sports bra! On the hunt, we made a brutal five-hour climb to our spike camp, and there was no way to avoid sweating profusely. Some of the less-well-equipped members of our party were soaked and shivering in their poorly wicking base layers, but my Olann Merino baselayers kept me dry and comfortable for the entire hike. The sports bra and tank top have joined my regular clothing rotation not just for hunting but also for wearing during cold-weather workouts, winter hikes, and even strolls around the neighborhood.

Left: Prois Olann Merino half-zip base layer top. Right: Prois Olann Merino sports bra.

 

The Tintri Lightweight line is great for early-season hunts or for layering in changeable weather. The half-zip top, short-sleeve top, pants, and neck gaiter are made from a poly/spandex blend with a water-resistant finish and 4-way stretch. These layers fit great, especially the pants. I wore the neck gaiter almost constantly on the ibex hunt; it was just the right weight to protect my neck from high-altitude breezes.

Right: Prois Tintri Lightweight hunting pants.

 

Prois’s Callaid down jacket, vest, and mittens are the ultimate layer when temperatures plunge—which happened on my hunt every evening when the sun dipped behind the horizon. Keeping your core warm is crucial, and the Callaid line is made with a water-resistant polyester ripstop shell stuffed with lofty 800 gray goose down. The vest and jacket have deep hand pockets and chest pocket as well as vents constructed of breathable poly/spandex for optimal movement and ventilation.

Left: Prois Callaid down jacket.

The Torai Midweight line was my go-to for this hunt, since mountain weather is unpredictable. Jacket, pants, beanie, and gloves are made of a poly/spandex blend and lined with plush fleece for warmth, and everything is windproof and waterproof. And because it’s made by Prois, it fits and looks good, too.

Right: Tajik hunting guides Anisa and Latifa stayed warm and comfortable in their Prois Torai jackets and beanies during hours-long stints glassing for ibex at 14,000 feet.

A note on the Cumbre camo pattern: developed in partnership with Veil camo, it proved a great pattern for open slopes and rocky peaks, helping me avoid the sharp eyes of the ibex we were hunting, but it’s also an extremely versatile pattern that worked well on a more recent hunt in wooded country. It’s also a distinctive, good-looking pattern you won’t find on any clothing you buy in big-box stores.

Prois gear is available online, direct from the company, and you can also find it on the racks at your local Scheel’s store. Check out the full line at proishunting.com.

 

 

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Michel Mantheakis Safaris is DSC Outfitter of the Year

Tanzania outfitter receives prestigious honor.

Congratulations to Michel Mantheakis Safaris, a longtime Sports Afield advertiser and Rowland Ward Fair Chase Outfitter, on being named DSC’s 2019 Outfitter of the Year.

“Michel Mantheakis Safaris has earned the honor of being selected as DSC’s Outfitter of the Year,” DSC Executive Director Corey Mason, said. “Their reputation as a premier safari operator is well known, and Michel is a great ambassador for conservation and the Conservation Through Hunting model.”

The prestigious award will be presented at the event that kicks off the 2019 DSC convention in Dallas, Texas—the Welcome Party and Auction on Wednesday evening, Jan. 16, 2019, at Gilley’s. The Convention and Expo opens the following day and runs through Sunday, Jan. 20. Michel Mantheakis Safaris will be exhibiting at the convention at booth #2015.

The success of Michel Mantheakis Safaris derives from the vision of both Michel Mantheakis and his wife, Nicole. Established in 2010, their family-owned company promotes ethical hunting and conservation, and markets to discerning hunters.

“It was a joint dream to own and operate a hunting company based on strong conservation principles, maximum anti-poaching effort, luxury service and corporate social responsibility,” Michel Mantheakis said.

Michel Mantheakis’s reputation is based on his academic background in zoology and wildlife science, his passion for hunting and conservation, and more than thirty years of experience hunting in Tanzania. Nicole is the general manager, making sure the operation continues toward their conservation-driven goals on both the local and broad scale. They cater to a clientele that cares about conservation and prefers to hunt with an outfitter who not only works tirelessly to get the best quality trophies, but who also truly believes in and practices conservation.

Their commitment to anti-poaching initiatives and community development extend beyond the lands they personally manage. Mantheakis is a strong international advocate for the hunting community as Chairman of Tanzania Hunting Operators Association (TAHOA) in Africa and around the world.

 

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Slowing Down

The old still-hunter’s mantra is a good lesson for the woods, and for life.

The end of the year is a time to reflect. It’s also a time to take advantage of the wonderful hunting adventures we enjoy here in North America. Depending on where you live, the seasons are either ramping up or winding down, but throughout the continent hunters are stocking their freezers, and their memory banks, with the fruits of this year’s hunts.

Such reflections got me to thinking about a recent experience I had while deer hunting in Pennsylvania, the state where I was born and raised, and where I still return often to try my luck on its exceptionally wily, wary whitetails.

It was a snowy day two Decembers ago, the kind of northern Pennsylvania winter day I remember from my childhood. A couple of feet of soft snow were on the ground, large white flakes drifting gently into my face from the slate-gray sky. There was deer sign all over the ridge top I was on: tracks, droppings, and places where they had pawed through the snow to get to some hidden treat.

It was the second week of the rifle season. I had both a buck and a doe tag in my pocket, and I had been hunting for the better part of the week without filling either of them. I’d seen some deer, but every sighting had played out the same way–tails bouncing away through a maze of tree trunks, or a momentary face-off with an alert brown form that instantly rocketed away.

I was making silent progress through the fresh snow toward the edge of the ridge, where I figured I would stop for a break and look down the other side. As I came over the top, three deer that had been bedded just on the other side exploded practically at my feet like a covey of ruffed grouse, bounding away down the hill and out of sight. I dropped to one knee, searching frantically for a target but finding only gray tree trunks. I lowered the rifle and sighed with frustration.

Sitting down in the snow, I had a drink of water and thought about the week. My lack of success boiled down to a simple fact: The deer were seeing me before I saw them. That meant I had to do two things: one, go slower, and two, see better.

I possessed the means to see better: the excellent high-end binocular hanging around my neck. I thought about the way I normally used it: picking apart a big sage-covered hillside in the West, piece by piece, in hopes of spotting a deer or elk. I rarely used it in the thick northern Pennsylvania woods, where you can barely see fifty yards. It seemed silly. But no sillier than spooking all those deer. I resolved to start glassing as if on a Western hunt, studying everything below me and ahead of me with extreme care.

The other thing I needed to do was slow down. Like most human beings in the modern world, slowing down is not something I’m good at. The old still-hunter’s mantra: “Go as slow as you can, then go slower,” was fine in theory, but I rarely put it into practice. But now I resolved to do so. I shouldered my pack and my rifle, got to my feet, and took a couple of steps. Then I stopped. I glassed ahead and around me. I took two more slow steps. And stopped and glassed again.

My brain screamed at me: This is pointless. You’ve already spooked the deer out of this area. You need to get to a new spot, fast. You need to cover more ground!

I took a deep breath and studiously ignored the doubts. Two silent steps in the soft snow. Stop. Glass carefully.

It took a while, but a strange thing happened. I got into a quiet cadence. My brain settled down. Birds and squirrels went about their business, seeming to take little notice of my presence. I began to feel like a part of the woods instead of an intruder. It had been a long time since I had been able to slow my impatient steps enough to feel this way.

I stopped worrying about what time it was. So I don’t know how far I had silently stolen along the ridge at my glacial pace when, studying the trees below me through the binocular, I spotted an ear.

Just an ear. I swapped binocular for scope and a deer’s head took shape. It was a mature doe, standing stock-still, fifty yards below me, looking straight ahead. It hadn’t seen me.

I watched it for a moment through the scope. I had done it. After a week of spooking every single deer I had encountered, I had turned it around. The ear flicked and the doe turned its head slightly to look down the hill. That snapped me out of my reverie. I dropped the cross hairs to the deer’s chest, slid the safety forward, and pressed the trigger. The boom of my mom’s old .30-06 carbine shattered the snowy stillness.

After reloading and engaging the safety, I made my way down the steep hillside to where the deer had been standing, noting a large splash of bright red in the snow and a toboggan-like trail where the deer had slid down the hillside. At the end of the plowed-up snow, piled up against an old tree stump, was a fine big doe.

I slid down and put my hands on her warm hide. She represented a freezer-load of delicious steaks and chops, but she also meant much more. She had reminded me I did not need to do everything at breakneck speed. I shed my pack and coat, filled out my tag, pulled out my knife, and then sat in the snow for a while, just enjoying the moment, before getting to work. For once, I wasn’t in a hurry.

Enjoy your late-fall adventures, and be sure to take some time this season to slow things down and immerse yourself in the natural rhythm of the woods and fields where you hunt.

Photo copyright Vic Schendel

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Use Enough Gun!

But how much gun is enough?

There is a difference between what you can (sometimes) get away with, and what you should do. The title phrase predates Robert Ruark, but Use Enough Gun is the title of his excellent posthumous collection, published shortly after the author’s death in 1965. Ruark was referring mostly to dangerous game, which in his short but peripatetic safari career he had rich opportunity to pursue: Lots of buffalo, several big elephants, a score of leopards. Ruark was badly mauled by an Asian leopard. He blamed faulty Indian ammunition, but in those days of unrestricted travel I’ve always wondered why he was using questionable ammo? Ruark took two lions on his first safari, and apparently had no desire to hunt them again, but he shot multiple tigers. He also took his famous Westley Richards .470 on an Alaskan brown bear hunt, so he practiced what he preached.

With dangerous game, common sense tends to rule. Generations of experience—and some local laws—suggest sensible parameters for dangerous game rifles and cartridges. In Botswana thirty years ago, a local hunter came in behind us on a buffalo herd, wounded one, and got himself badly unzipped. He was using a .30-06, which tradition suggests is unwise, and Botswana law said was illegal.

Unfortunately, it isn’t always the brash hunter who bears the consequences. Veteran B.C. guide Cy Ford was guiding a hunter who wounded a huge grizzly with a 7mm Remington Magnum, despite warnings the cartridge was too light. The shot was fairly good, but not good enough. Ford went into thick stuff after the bear. The search party later found the bear, dead in a small clearing “like a black Volkswagen beetle.” Several hours passed before they found Ford’s mangled body. His .30-06 was unfired, and it appeared he never had a chance.

Guide Alisha Rosenbruch-Decker and Donna Boddington with a big Alaskan brown bear taken cleanly with a .338 Winchester Magnum. Decker’s experienced outfit prefers a .375 minimum for brown bear, a thought worth considering.

Big bears can be tough. In 2013 Donna took a giant brown bear with a .338. I think that was a good choice, but we either missed (or possibly ignored) the outfitter’s stipulation of “.375 minimum for brown bear.” Fortunately, she pasted her bear perfectly; her follow-up shot was unnecessary. Only later did guide and famous bear hunter Alisha Rosenbruch-Decker tell us that this was the only brown bear she’d seen taken cleanly with a .338. The .338 should be enough gun, but this is food for thought.

Most of us accept that big, dangerous animals require more power, and most of us comply. Some would say that I often “over-comply.” I am a child of the first magnum phase, the 1950s and 1960s. Good Lord, I shot my first elk (and my first sheep, caribou, and moose) with a .375! That was unnecessary power, but it worked. I’ve mellowed, but I find being “overgunned” a more elusive concept than being “undergunned.” The downsides to the former are you’re carrying more gun weight and sustaining more recoil. You are not necessarily ruining more meat, because large-caliber bullets tend to punch through. However, without question, you are not carrying the ideal tool. To me, the downside to not using enough gun is worse. On non-dangerous animals nobody is going to get hurt. But, as ethical hunters, isn’t it our credo to take game as cleanly as possible? Lack of “enough gun” leads to wounded animals and wasted game, and this is not acceptable.

A century ago, when smokeless powder velocities and jacketed bullets were new, we had almost simultaneous smallbore fads in both Africa and North America. They were different because African hunters were euphoric over the awesome penetration from long-for-caliber “solids” in early smokeless military cartridges from 6.5mm to 8mm. In the early 1900s these cartridges were widely used for game up to elephant. They worked, but times were different; if you read old accounts carefully you’ll discover a wounded-and-lost rate that would be unacceptable today. By the 1930s the argument in Africa was pretty much over; cooler heads had prevailed and things were much as they are today: The 9.3mms and .375s are considered minimal, and many hunters use larger calibers.

An accurate CZ chambered to the old 9.3×62 Mauser. Today this cartridge is generally considered a bare-bones minimum for African dangerous game. Mild in recoil with heavy-for-caliber 286-grain bullets it’s a sensible minimum based on decades of experience.

In North America we ran out of mammoths in the last Ice Age and, by the time of smokeless powder, the bison were nearly gone. Our “adequacy issues” started in 1912 with the .22 Savage Hi-Power and continued in 1915 with the .250 Savage, the first commercial cartridge to reach 3,000 feet per second. The Savage Hi-Power used a 70-grain .228-inch bullet at 2,700 feet per second. Unlike .22 centerfires that followed, it was intended for deer-sized game. The .250 Savage used a light 87-grain bullet to achieve its velocity. Both were ground-breaking cartridges, and both suffered from lack of bullet technology to withstand the velocity. The .22 Hi-Power was briefly the darling of the sporting press, and then came the .250-3000.

Both were used on all manner of game much too large for their caliber, power, and bullet performance. When all went well they dropped game like lightning, but things didn’t always go well. Word got out. Centerfire .22s came to be considered varmint cartridges. The .250 Savage is a fine deer/pronghorn cartridge, but it achieved its lasting reputation with 100-grain bullets at lower velocity.

It seems we have to keep learning the same lessons. Today’s great bullets make a huge difference; with heavy bullets (and in careful hands) the .22 centerfires are effective deer cartridges, but nobody advocates their use for elk or black bears, and no one should. In North America we don’t have the Big Five. Our “special case” animals are our big bears, plus a few bison, muskoxen, and walruses. We have deer-sized game: Deer, sheep, goats, and pronghorns; caribou aren’t enough larger than deer to up the ante. Black bears are potentially bigger and always tougher. So are wild hogs. However, we also have elk and moose, much larger than all the rest! Moose, though bigger, are not especially tough; elk are very tough, and a mature bull elk is a whole different order of magnitude from a tasty cow or spike.

The current popularity of the 6.5mm Creedmoor is an interesting phenomenon. It’s a great little cartridge, ballistically identical to the .260 Remington, also a great little cartridge, though not as popular. Both are awesome for deer-sized game at medium ranges. Likewise, the 7mm-08, and old-timers like the 6.5×55 and 7.×57. Their standard 140-grain bullets, all at similar velocities, are capable of taking elk-sized game cleanly at moderate range. Mild recoil aids good shot placement, but I am concerned about the seemingly magical properties currently ascribed to the 6.5mm Creedmoor. It uses a 140-grain .264-inch bullet at 2,700 feet per second. This is not a giant slayer. Although a wonderful long-range target cartridge, it is not an ideal long-range cartridge even on deer-sized game; and it is marginal for elk. This group of cartridges do not equal the fast 6.5mms, and they do not equal the .270s. These, to my thinking, offer sensible minimums for elk, but not at longer ranges. If you want a low-recoil option for elk, think about the .308 Winchester, but keep to medium distances. It will take time for the word to get out, but, as autumn seasons get underway, it is a fact that, right now, elk are being unnecessarily wounded with mild 6.5s and 7mms. I predict the euphoria will pass, as it has before.

This Greenland muskox was taken with a single 130-grain Barnes X from a .270. Reasonably and sensibly, the outfitter prefers a .30-caliber minimum for muskox. When one goes against conventional wisdom there’s always unnecessary risk.

Over the course of extensive hunting experience most of us, for various reasons, will push the envelope now and again. Knowing one is inadequately armed leads to extra care, so most of the time we get away with it. One year in northern Mexico my gun case didn’t arrive, so I went mule deer hunting with the ranch rifle, an old CZ in .222 Remington. One shot and down; I got away with it, but I knew it was risky. In Greenland outfitter Bjorn Birgisson stipulated a reasonable .30-caliber minimum for muskox. For some reason I pitched up with a .270. With a tough bullet it worked fine; it’s a good thing, or the “I told you so” would have been unpleasant. It is impossible to gauge exactly how much bullet weight, frontal area, and kinetic energy is required because every shot and every animal is slightly different. Still, we have generations of experience to rely upon. Little has changed since the shift to smokeless powder, and we have an ever-increasing mandate to take our game cleanly, efficiently, and humanely. And we have lots of choices. There is no compelling reason to defy those decades of experience to see what we can get away with.

 

 

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Feathered Fiesta

Discovering the bounty of white-winged doves and colorful ducks along Mexico’s Sea of Cortez.

There’s something almost magical about watching an expert wingshot. The way the shotgun comes up as if an extension of the shooter’s body; the long smooth moment when the bird and the barrel seem to move as one; the shot that brings the bird down cleanly, folding and dropping.

“Nice shot,” I said admiringly as my hunting partner, Tim Joseph, dropped a widgeon into the water. The sun was coming up behind us and casting a rosy glow onto the calm waters of the Sea of Cortez. I shifted slightly on my stool, which sat on a temporary platform built along a marshy shore redolent with mud and saltwater. A screen of tall reeds and grass hid us from the decoy spread. A warm breeze touched my face; the morning had a balmy, tropical feel.

There was a sudden flurry overhead and Tim and I ducked low behind the reeds. A flock passed above us with a chorus of whistling wings. The birds wheeled, stalled, and several ducks came straight for our decoys, wings cupped.

“Now!” Tim said. We stood up and both shotguns spoke. Three ducks dropped and the rest roared back into the air as we shoved more shells into our guns and grinned at each other.

“Incoming!” I swung smoothly on a passing pintail and pulled the trigger just as the barrel cleared its beak. Smoke curled from the muzzle of my shotgun as I watched the duck splash down in front of the blind, a single feather drifting down after it in the still air.

The action continued all morning–flocks large and small, pairs and singles, some aiming straight for our decoys, and others whistling on past, presenting us with a variety of challenging shots. Tim accounted for the lion’s share of our morning’s bag, but I was pleased with my own stack of ducks, primarily widgeons, redheads, and pintails.

As Vice President of Marketing for Benelli, Tim has been honing his wingshooting skills for many years, chasing ducks, geese, doves, and upland birds from coast to coast. He and Josh Ward, who handles PR for Benelli, had invited me, along with a group of other writers and editors, on a mid-December trip to sample some of Mexico’s fabled duck and dove hunting and to put Benelli’s 20-gauge Ethos shotgun through its paces. Our hunt was based out of a comfortable lodge in the modern, bustling city of Ciudad Obregon in southern Sonora.

Obregon is in the Yaqui Valley, part of Sonora’s coastal agricultural region. This part of Sonora is the staging and feeding ground for wintering Pacific flyway ducks, and from November through March it is home to an estimated population of 2 million ducks–pintails; gadwalls; green, blue, and cinnamon teal; black ducks; canvasbacks; Pacific black brant; widgeon; redheads, and many others—sixteen species in all. Mexico’s liberal bag limits and the sheer diversity of species makes this a can’t-miss destination for anyone who wants to experience duck hunting the way it must have been in the “good ol’ days” north of the border.

Hunters are delivered via airboat to natural and man-made blinds along shallow-water estuaries, marshes, and freshwater ponds adjacent to grain fields. We shot over a decoy spread on a saltwater bay one morning, and over a small freshwater pond on the next.

Having a chance to duck hunt by the ocean is a rare treat for me, and between flocks I savored the balmy salt air and the muddy smell of the shoreline marsh. By the time the sun was well up, Tim and I had accounted for a good number of ducks, and more just kept coming, many getting more suspicious and slicing past us with fast fly-bys that made for challenging crossing shots. It was a blast.

Every hour or so the deafening noise of the airboat shattered the peaceful bay as the guides roared past, scooping up the ducks we had dropped and piling them in the bow of the boat. Once they’d retrieved the birds, they returned to the dock and quiet would descend once again on the bay, punctuated only by the periodic pow-pow-powof our semiautos when a new flock came in for a closer look at our decoys. Several times I was privileged to hear that distinctive whistling sound made by the wings of a large flock passing low over our heads, something I had read about but had never experienced firsthand.

Cactus-Field Doves

The vast fields of sorghum, sesame, corn, and cereal grains in the Yaqui Valley region, bordered by thick, brushy areas of mesquite and chaparral, support millions of both white-winged and mourning doves. These are resident birds that trade back and forth between the fields and cover year-round. It was my first time shooting whitewings, which are large, strong-flying, beautiful doves. On our first afternoon we set up near a power line in a lovely field studded with mesquite brush as well as a variety of beautiful, spiky cacti, including ocotillo, cholla, and prickly pear. Doves were whirring overhead before I could even fumble the first few shells into my gun.

Each shooter had his or her own “bird boy,” whose job was to help us spot incoming doves, keep us well-stocked with shells, and pick up the birds we dropped. Assigned to me was Edgar, a bilingual and well-traveled young man in his twenties, and throughout the shoot we chatted amiably about hunting and places we’d been. The action was nearly nonstop, with concentrations of doves to rival those in South America, and the shooting was incredibly challenging. Before long I had picked up enough Spanish to be able to make excuses for missing in two languages.

“Muy alto,” I’d grin at Edgar after missing an especially tall bird. “Dang it. Muy rapido!”

But the doves seemed plentiful beyond numbers, and Edgar tossed more and more of them into my slowly growing stack.

During occasional lulls, Edgar told me about the culture of the Yaqui Valley. We had arrived on December 12, the day Mexico celebrates the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe, and on our way to the dove field we had passed an impressive shrine carved into the side of a mountain, with a crowded and colorful fiestagoing on below. Edgar explained that people walk and drive from all over the region to pay their respects to the Virgin Mary and say some prayers, and then they hang around to socialize and drink a few cervezas with friends.

I was impressed at the ability of all the bird boys to spot and find nearly every dove we dropped, no matter how fast and furious the shooting. At the end of the day, the communal pile of dead whitewings and mourning doves was impressive. Happily, the joy we had in shooting these birds was not the last they would provide. As we drove back to the lodge, we detoured through a hardscrabble village along an irrigation canal; its residents would be the grateful recipients of the day’s bag. A group of barefoot kids spotted the logo on the outfitter’s truck and darted out of small adobe houses, racing across yards of packed dirt to meet us with joyous shouts of “Palomas! Palomas!” (Doves! Doves!)

On our last evening in Mexico, we sipped frothy margaritas in the cool shade of the lodge patio and sampled homemade guacamole as a mariachi band entertained us. In the morning we would head north again, taking with us memories of balmy mornings on a saltwater bay, warm afternoons in a field of cacti, and the sound of wings in the Mexican sky.

 

If You Go: Hunting in Mexico

Plenty of bird hunters fly right over Mexico on their way to more famous wingshooting destinations in South America. After experiencing the incredible dove and duck hunting on the west coast of Mexico, though, I’m not sure why. This region is a much shorter flight for the average American hunter and offers tremendous numbers of doves—both whitewings and mourning doves—and a huge variety of waterfowl. Best of all, you’ll be escaping to the tropics when winter is clamping down north of the border. Travel to Mexico gets a bad rap these days, but we flew into Hermosillo and drove south to Ciudad Obregon with the outfitter, and I never felt the slightest bit unsafe. Gun importation, facilitated by our outfitter, was no problem. Timing is important, of course. The best dove shooting is August through October, while the best waterfowl hunting (including a chance for Pacific brant) happens in the winter months. Our trip in mid-December was a bit of a compromise, providing good shooting for both doves and ducks although not the highest concentrations of either.

Frank “Gabino” Ruiz runs Gabino’s Outdoor Adventures, headquartered in a comfortable, welcoming lodge in downtown Ciudad Obregon, and he offers hunts all over Sonora’s Yaqui Valley. You can book this hunt through Ramsey Russell’s GetDucks.com.

 

What to Take: The Benelli Ethos 20-gauge

The star of the show on this Mexican hunt was actually a beautiful Italian—the Benelli Ethos 20-gauge shotgun. The Ethos is a sleek, nimble, graceful semiauto. Originally produced in 12-gauge, Benelli added the 20-gauge version a couple of years ago (it now comes in 28-gauge as well), and its light weight and easy-swinging feel is ideal for the long days in the field and hundreds of rounds you’ll shoot at fast-moving birds when you’re hunting south of the border.

The Ethos has an elegant, traditional look, with an AA-grade satin walnut stock and nickel-plated and engraved receiver. It’s designed to be exceptionally practical as well, with an inertia-driven action, progressive comfort recoil-reduction system, and lightweight carbon-fiber rib with interchangeable fiber-optic sight. It’s easy to load thanks to a beveled loading port, redesigned carrier, and two-part carrier latch that allow shells to glide into the magazine quickly, which is great when the doves are coming in one after another. In several days of hunting I never had a problem cycling even the lightest loads. The Ethos also has a slightly oversized trigger guard that is great for shooting while wearing light gloves, as I prefer to do.

It’s a cinch to disassemble for cleaning, too, with a magazine cap that unscrews easily and doesn’t bind in dusty or muddy conditions. The Ethos comes with a custom-fitted hard case, five choke tubes (cylinder, improved cylinder, modified, improved modified, and full).

 

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