Sports A Field

Extreme Africa

Safaris in central and west Africa are not for everyone, but they provide great rewards for the adventurous.

The saying on the street, especially among folks who haven’t been there, is that African hunting is too easy, just a matter of driving around and shooting animals. There’s some truth to that here and there, although in all cases ethics and in many cases law precludes shooting from a vehicle. It’s also true that much African hunting is pretty cushy, certainly compared to North American standards. Usually you’re hunting from a comfortable, well-appointed camp, and African outfitters have a huge advantage that doesn’t exist in many regions: Available help! Often there’s more than is really needed, because creating employment is part and parcel to maintaining hunting areas.

The average safari in East and Southern Africa is conducted from a comfortable camp, well-supplied and ably staffed. Yes, they do laundry every day and, yes, much hunting is done by driving until actual animals or fresh tracks are spotted. Then things change. No two hunts are alike, and any hunt can turn into an all-day ordeal. Buffalo and elephant usually require serious tracking, but almost any animal can occasionally be taken just by stepping out of the truck.

No different than hunting whitetail deer or anything else, you never exactly how a hunting day is going to play out, but if you really like to work for your game, and you think Africa sounds too easy for your tastes, there’s another side to it. Think about getting off the beaten track and hunting in Central and West Africa, where currently ten countries are open to hunting, about half the continent’s total of hunting countries. Although there are broad transitional zones, there are two primary habitat types: From northern C.A.R. and Cameroon and southern Chad westward across northern Benin and Burkina Faso all the way to Senegal lies a wide belt of sub-Saharan thornbush and savanna; below that, from southern C.A.R. and Cameroon and both Congo’s westward through Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea lies the true forest zone.

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Boddington and Ralf Schneider at their first “spike camp” in the Liberian forest in 2013. African camps vary a lot, but this was pretty much at the bottom of the scale!

Conditions vary considerably. In most of these countries genuine professional hunters and real outfitters have concessions, so the conditions have some relationship to African hunting elsewhere. Uniquely, some of these countries allow “chasse libre”—“free hunting”—whereby it’s possible to rent a hunting block, hire a vehicle and help, and do it yourself. In some areas it’s a bit of a blend, where you can work from established camps through an “outfitter,” but you’re actually hunting with local hunters and trackers, absent a “professional hunter” as we know the term. Regardless of the exact circumstances, this entire region has one thing in common: This is Africa’s tough stuff, “extreme Africa” if you will.

Logistics are difficult throughout this region, so camps tend to be rougher and supplies harder to come by. The weather is generally much hotter and, unlike southern Africa in the long dry season, in the forest zone rains can be expected. This is good and bad. Bad: Mobility can be severely impacted. Good: A shower brings relief from the heat and, more importantly, forest animals love to move just after a rain…and tend to hunker when it’s dry and the forest floor is noisy. (The old adage in the forest is “no rain, no bongo.”)

Species diversity tends to be less than in southern Africa, but a lot of these areas still hold lots of game. Part of the attraction, too, is some of Africa’s great prizes: Derby eland and western roan in the north; bongo and forest sitatunga in the south. Buffalo of three varieties remain widespread, and there are pockets of both lions and leopards (neither currently importable to the USA). Of great importance to long-gone African nuts, the region holds a wide variety of pygmy antelope not found elsewhere: in Ghana, the tiny royal antelope; in Liberia, a selection of little guys including zebra duiker and water chevrotain. Pigs, too; warthogs in the north, giant forest hogs in the south, and the red river hog widely distributed.

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This is a western kob, one of several animals available in northern Cameroon at reduced cost–much less expensive than a Derby eland.

So there are many reasons to hunt this part of Africa beyond simply proving how tough you are. But let’s be clear: This hunting is not for everyone. Not everybody is going to like it, not everybody is in adequate condition for it, and this is not a good region for inexperienced hunters. A few examples. Just a couple of years ago, on a blistering March day in Burkina Faso we wounded a buffalo at daybreak. We eventually got it, but that morning we stayed on the track longer than we should have, and when we broke off at midday it was an honest 130 degrees. More than twenty years ago, when I was a lot younger, we took the track of a Derby eland bull just after dawn. We got the shot at eleven, but it was another imperfect shot. We stayed on the track and got him at about five o’clock, and it was a long, long way to the truck. In both cases straighter shooting would have shortened the days, but the point is this is a region with no fences, few roads, and no shortcuts.

There is also an essential knowledge base. I’m halfway through my second hunt in Liberia, which I would call a semi-guided hunt. The camp is OK and the people are great—and excellent forest hunters—but there is no hunting tradition here. It’s very hot and very humid, a deadly combination for the meat and hides, and although the guys are willing, they are unskilled in preparing skins for taxidermy. So my hunting partner, Mike Adams, and I have been spending at least a third of each day helping with and supervising the skinning, changing salt, and fussing over the skins.

Timewise, this is not a huge problem here because most of the small forest animals we’re hunting are nocturnal, so a lot of the hunting is at night. But unless you know skinning, including turning the ears and splitting the lips, and how to preserve skins in an unfavorable environment—and you’re willing to pitch in—chances are you’ll be disappointed when your taxidermist gets your skins.

Even at that, this safari is a vast improvement over my first hunt in Liberia three years ago. Then, although base camp was similarly comfortable, there was no game in proximity to camp. So we had to spike out a half-day’s journey, then sleep in hammocks or makeshift shelters, returning to base camp when we ran low on food. This year, in a new area, we can walk from camp and find game.

The do-it-yourself (chasse libre) safaris in this region are a whole different order of magnitude. I’ve avoided them for practical reasons. First, I don’t speak French, and that’s the common language of Central and West Africa. Absent reasonable fluency in French, difficulties are compounded. Second, it has seemed to me that these hunts are costly (in both time and money) in relation to success achieved. Which perhaps reveals a personal character flaw: The adventure sounds great, but I also want results!

On the other hand, Sports Afield’s Publisher, Ludo Wurfbain, is a huge fan of the chasse libre safaris, and has done a number of do-it-yourself hunts in several countries in the region. Over the years he has achieved amazing results, and has taken most of the key game in the region, but usually just a couple of animals per safari.

The region has a reputation for costly outfitted safaris, and this is absolutely true if you’re after either of the two great prizes, bongo or giant eland. Take those off the list and safari costs in C.A.R. and Cameroon go down dramatically. Move a bit farther west to Benin and Burkina Faso, and you can find the least expensive buffalo hunting on the African continent. The hunting in Liberia is so specialized that you have to be a pretty far-gone African addict to be interested, but the safaris are not expensive and government trophy fees are low.

On my first hunt in Liberia I was fortunate to share camp with another chasse libre veteran, Ralf Schneider. The Liberian hunt was actually one of his first outfitted hunts in years but, like me, he wanted a zebra duiker and a water chevrotain. Like me, he got neither, but persistence sometime pays. Hunting with the same outfitter, Morris Dougba’s Liberia Forest Safaris, I shot a water chevrotain and a zebra duiker on my current safari. But here’s the point: Ralf is an expert in this weird region of Africa, and I learned a lot from him. I knew to bring essentials like a hammock to sleep in (off the ground and away from creepy-crawlies), water purification tablets, headlamps, and good skinning knives. I also knew to bring niceties like a battery-powered fan, electrolyte mixes, and some goodies just in case. Ralf brought preparation to a new level. His “emergency safari kit,” sealed in a waterproof five-gallon bucket, was a treasure trove: backpack stove, raingear, bivy sack, tea and coffee, Top Ramen, and maybe even a wee nip of something. He could survive for weeks just out of his bucket!

I paid attention. On this hunt I haven’t needed the hammock, water purification tablets, or the freeze-dried emergency rations I added to my kit, at least not yet. But we’ve used most everything else! We’ve also sweated a lot and put up with some frustrations. But the skins on the drying rack tell the tale. The forest has been good to us!

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For extreme African hunting it’s important to pack very carefully, and include some items you may not have thought about. Clockwise from top: A good first aid kit (this one from African Sporting Creations); multi-tool; gloves (against bugs or thorns? You never know!); an array of lights, for both night-hunting and functioning safely in the dark . . . these are the Spanish-made LEDWave lights; silverware and water purification tablets; a battery-operated fan (with lots of batteries), an incredible blessing in tropical climates; and a satellite phone, essential for emergencies and easily rented with plenty of minutes.

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Ibex Adventure

An expedition to central Asia in search of the magnificent mid-Asian ibex.

In October 2014, I traveled to the fascinating country of Kazakhstan, along with my husband, Scott, to hunt one of the world’s most interesting mountain animals, the mid-Asian ibex. This successful and enjoyable trip was arranged by The Hunting Consortium. You can read the story of the hunt in the January/February 2015 issue of Sports Afield. Because space did not allow Sports Afield to publish as many of the photos from the hunt as I would have liked, I am posting here some additional photos from our fantastic central Asian adventure.

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We found the skulls and horns of wolf-killed ibex in many of the ravines we hiked. Our guides explained that the wolf packs hunted ibex by splitting into two groups; one group would drive the ibex into a ravine, where the other wolves would be waiting in ambush.

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We thought we’d be staying in tents on this hunt, so we were surprised to find that our base camp was this cozy lodge at the base of sheer cliffs. We had comfortable beds and hot meals each night.

This cave was once used by nomadic herders as a stopover in their treks between seasonal pastures. As it was raining pretty hard on the first day of the hunt, it was nice to seek shelter for a few minutes in this nice, dry cavern.

One day we sneaked to within 20 yards of this ibex billy, who was tucked into a cave, chewing his cud.

This sign marked the entrance to Altyn Emel National Park. The whimsical paintings depict some of Kazakhstan’s iconic wildlife: a Persian goitered gazelle, a golden eagle, and, of course, a mid-Asian ibex.

Scott and I pose with my mid-Asian ibex. It was a great day in the mountains.

Yes, we ate the meat of the ibex we killed. This is bishbarmak, a traditional central Asian dish of boiled meat served atop flat, homemade noodles. The meat is from Scott’s ibex.

One of my Kazakh guides, Bek. He had worked in the area for many years and was extremely knowledgeable about the wildlife in the region as well as the historic and archeological sites. He was also a character. Here, he strikes a “serious” pose.

The best part about hunting in faraway lands is meeting great people. Enjoying a celebratory dinner on the last evening of the hunt are, from left to right: Scott, guides Bek, Deydar, and Janat, and interpreter Oleg. Thanks to all of these guys for a fantastic hunt, and a shout-out to Corey Knowlton and Bob Kern of The Hunting Consortium for making it all possible!

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How to Pack for a Safari

What to bring on your African adventure

I do an awful lot of packing and unpacking, and I don’t take much time doing either. But even after thirty years and sixty-odd African hunts I still get a special thrill when I pack my safari gear. So although I don’t spend as much time as I once did in actual packing and repacking, I spend quite a lot of time thinking about the gear I’m going to take. This is part of the anticipation, just like a ritual rereading of classics like Horn of the Hunter and Green Hills of Africa—and studying the appropriate country sections in Safari Guide II.

– By Craig Boddington

It also makes sense to plan carefully, because having the right gear is important to the enjoyment—and sometimes success—of any hunt. That said, an African hunt is probably one of the least gear-intensive hunts in the entire world. I tend to overpack, but with baggage limits dropping and overweight charges escalating, this year I’ve made a New Year’s resolution to pack lighter. Maybe I really will!

In almost all African camps they really do laundry every day, so you can get by with three sets of hunting clothes. There was a time when a coat and tie (or, for the ladies, a genuine dress) was almost mandatory if you wanted to have a nice dinner in an African city coming or going. Old habits die hard, but things are a lot more casual today. I can get by just fine with two long trousers and two shorts, two short-sleeved shirts and two longs—and I’ll travel in one set.

Gone, too, are the days when camouflage was specifically illegal in many jurisdictions. Some hunters wear it today, and (horrors) I even see the occasional younger professional hunter wearing camo. I prefer not to. It works just fine, but isn’t traditional, and I’m one of those old fossils who believes tradition is important. A good neutral green works just as well, and in Africa I feel more at home so dressed. Note: Green is a departure from the old classics that would have us dressed in khaki. Remember that most of the great African literature came out of East Africa, where much hunting was done in grassy plains. You can still get by just fine with khaki in areas like the Kalahari and the Karoo, but in the thornbush that blankets most modern hunting country tan or khaki is too light and too bright. A soft neutral green or olive drab will work everywhere.

Stick with cotton. It breathes, and unlike blends with too much synthetic it will stand up to the hottest iron. This is important, because ironing with an old-time iron filled with hot coals is part of the laundry ritual. On the surface this is a very nice touch, but it has a most practical twist: The hot iron kills potential parasites that you really don’t want to get next to.

Okay, from top to bottom. In years gone by I always took a broad-brimmed “safari-style” hat. Yep, they look great in photos, and they protect your ears and neck from the sun. Over the years I’ve taken such a hat less and less, and often when I do take one it stays in camp, because the darned things are almost more trouble than they’re worth. In thornbush they catch on everything, and they blow off in an open vehicle. A cloth cap with a brim isn’t as sexy but is far more sensible, and these days I often just wear a baseball cap augmented with lots of sunblock. I take a big bottle, nothing less than “50 SPF” for me, thank you!

Footgear is no less important in Africa than anywhere else, but the requirements are different. With some exceptions there are few real mountains to climb, so genuine hunting boots generally aren’t necessary—and their hard, aggressive soles may be counterproductive because they’re too noisy. The first requirement is comfort, enough support and enough sole to walk all day if necessary. The second requirement is a sole that is soft enough to allow quiet stalking. The last couple of seasons I’ve been wearing Russell’s “Mountain PH,” which offers more support in hilly country than the standard PH model, but either are wonderful. Another good option is plain old cross-training hiking shoes, and of course the Zimbabwe-made Courtenay boots and shoes are specifically designed for African hunting. I hedge my bets. The Russell’s go in my duffel along with a pair of tennis shoes for camp wear, and I travel with Courtenay’s on my feet.

Let’s not forget some keep-‘em-warm stuff! While the days are usually wonderful, mornings and evenings can be brutally cold in the southern African winter. I’ve been snowed on in South Africa several times, and I’ll never forget an amazing cold snap all the way up in Zambia. High country, whether Tanzania’s Masai Steppe or Ethiopia’s mountains, can always be cold. I always take a knitted sweater—quiet and comfortable—and add a windproof parka with a hood for an outer layer. I also take a wool watch cap and gloves. For camp wear, and for an extra layer if needed, I take a sweat suit. Add about four each of socks, T-shirts, and underwear, and don’t forget all the toiletries, medications, extra eyeglasses and sundry—enough to last the full time you expect to be away.

I put most of this stuff in a soft duffel bag that will be waterproof and dustproof, and will allow for a bit of squashing in a charter plane or the back of a Land Cruiser. I like the Beano bags from Red Oxx—mine are on their seventh season and seem indestructible. Now comes the carry-on. I take my computer bag with various power options. This is because my editors are merciless, and I know that I actually will find—or make—some time to write. I don’t recommend you take anything you don’t actually expect to use.

Just remember this: Your professional hunter is many things. He is your host, guide, mentor, and (hopefully selectively and sensibly) your celebrating partner. He is not your twenty-four-hour babysitter. He has a lot to do, including running the camp, managing the staff, maintaining the vehicle, planning the next day’s hunt, and maintaining his own gear. He’ll be more effective and you will be more successful if you give him a bit of space, so pack something to entertain yourself for a bit of time in the evenings and midmornings. This may mean books, magazines, cards, a well-loaded IPOD, or even a DVD player with a couple of favorite movies, whatever works for you.

I carry a daypack as my primary carry-on, and then it goes on the hunt to carry cameras and other essentials. Recently I seem to have gone through at least one daypack a year—I’m hard on them—and a problem I’ve had is the best daypacks are in camouflage, which I hate to travel with visibly. My new one for this season is from Texas Hunt Company. It’s in olive drab, and it not only has sensible pocket arrangements, but it looks like it’s going to last. Using it initially as carry-on baggage, I put in it everything that I simply cannot do without, excepting no-nos like knives and ammunition. Come to think of it, I can borrow guns and knives. What I can’t do without is camera, binoculars, any medications (which, for me, includes sunblock!), and extra reading glasses, and I throw in my sweater and at least one of changes of underwear and socks. I have had relatively few problems with baggage, but I pack my carryon as if it’s the only bag I will receive.

That’s about it, except for the guncase and ammo. The rules vary slightly from one airline to another, so you must always check with your carrier. The basics, however, are quite simple. A sturdy lockable hard case is essential. These days I like SKB and AmeriCase, stout but not too heavy. Ammo in original factory containers, less than five kilograms (eleven pounds). Mostly they want the ammo in the duffel, not in the gun case, but this is inconsistent and subject to change.

Now, when I start actually packing my bags let’s see if I can limit myself to what I’ve mentioned. I’m sure going to try!

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The Changing Face of the African Safari

Over the course of sixty years, safaris have undergone a radical transformation.

Story and photos by Harry SelbyOver many years, the word “safari”–that magical word which brings to mind high adventure in the wilds of Africa, immortalized by Theodore Roosevelt, Martin and Osa Johnson, Ernest Hemingway, and Robert Ruark–has become synonymous with a hunting/photographic expedition involving sportsmen and women from across the world.

A safari in the earliest days of East Africa, prior to the outbreak of World War I, was known as a “foot safari.” It would consist of a group of a hundred or more people, including a number of visiting hunters, one or more professional hunters, local gunbearers, cooks, and skinners, but the majority would be porters who carried loads made up of tents, camping equipment, and food for the entire group. Everyone walked, as horses and donkeys would not survive due to the dreaded disease-carrying tsetse fly infesting most of the hunting areas.

The origin of the safaris I will discuss in this article, however, coincided with the use of motor vehicles on safari sometime in the 1920s. These safaris typically numbered from twelve to twenty people, and they were completely self-sufficient, willing and able to cope with whatever situation might crop up. The professional hunter and his clients rode in a hunting car and a baggage truck followed, carrying everything required to set up camp wherever one chose–staff, fuel, foodstuffs, tentage, medical chest, camping furniture, cooking utensils, and china tableware; later, even refrigerators were provided.

Safari vehicles on the move in Masailand in the 1940s.

The professional hunter was truly the “captain of the ship” and the success of the entire safari, its well-being, and even the lives of the group depended on his decisions. A competent professional hunter was of necessity knowledgeable and a pleasant companion, at times a diplomat, a doctor, and a mechanic; hunting was second nature to him. Furthermore, he required a sound knowledge of the country and the local people, leadership qualities, self-reliance, and the ability to handle a difficult situation, especially when the clients were often men controlling huge business empires and who were used to giving the orders, not taking them.

When a safari left Nairobi for perhaps one or two months in the field, there was no easy way to contact the Nairobi office even in an emergency. If an accident should occur, or a member of the party became ill, recovery would follow in time. If the situation was very serious, one of the small single-engine aircraft stationed in Nairobi would need to be summoned, and even that in itself was no simple matter as in the remote centers where there might be a phone, which sometimes worked, long delays of many hours could be expected. In many cases, a makeshift landing strip would have to be cleared, and then dragged with a large bush attached to the hunting vehicle in order to smooth it sufficiently for an aircraft to land.

For urgent incoming messages, safaris relied on an arrangement with the local Nairobi broadcasting station that after the nine o’clock evening news an urgent message could be transmitted to a safari in the field. An announcement prior to the news broadcast advised that there would be a message for a certain group or individual, resulting in a very tense twenty minutes of news while the group waited for the message, which usually was not good, and then the frustration of being unable to reply to it.

During the late 1950s and early 1960s, two-way HF radios became available and made a tremendous difference to the isolated safari in the field; in fact, their arrival on the scene could be considered one of the two fundamental landmarks in the history of safari, together with the advent of the four-wheel-drive vehicle.

Mobile Safari

As all traveling was by vehicle, it could take three days of hard driving to reach the intended hunting grounds in southern Tanganyika (now Tanzania), Western Uganda, or the Southern Sudan from Nairobi, but it would be interesting, seeing colorful people from various tribes such as the Masai, Samburu, and the Dinka; extinct volcanoes; snow-capped mountains; beautiful lakes; forests of huge baobabs; and historical sites such as the compound shared by Livingstone and Stanley near Tabora. If the route should cross the Serengeti after skirting the rim of wildlife-rich Ngorongoro Crater, one would see, if the annual migration was in full swing, unbelievable numbers of wildebeest, zebra, antelopes of various species, and gazelles on the move, followed by prides of lions and other predators.

On long trips, the hunting party would bivouac beside the road in order to get going again early the next morning, and, amazingly, a very acceptable meal would be forthcoming from the cook within a couple of hours of having halted for the night. There would be a breakfast of bacon, eggs, toast, and coffee the following morning, before the safari got under way again.

The safari staff usually rode atop the loaded baggage truck.

Eventually, on reaching the hunting area, the camp would be erected by experienced hands and made habitable in a matter of hours. In this way, it was possible to move very freely and rapidly from area to area, especially as there were no concessions in existence, or blocks to be booked, and quotas were unheard of. Hunting was lawful anywhere so long as the area was not a game reserve, national park, or private land. If the safari moved into an area and found it was disappointing, it pulled up stakes and moved on.

The number of animals allowed on each hunter’s license was overly generous, having been formulated at a time when the early foot safari would require meat for eighty to 100 people over several months. For example: twelve buffalo, twenty zebra, twenty wildebeest, twenty kongoni, four lions, unlimited leopards, and equally generous numbers of all other species. Elephant and rhino required a special license even then, as the elephant ivory and rhino horn could be sold.

The complacent colonial government controlled from London took a long time to initiate a reappraisal of the entire licensing system, and that didn’t happen until some years after World War II. It often required tact and a firm hand on the part of the professional hunter to prevent abuse by trigger-happy individuals.

In those early days, the time factor was not as important as it is today. Safaris often lasted for two months or possibly three. I would estimate that a third of the entire safari would be spent traveling from one hunting area to another, and many hours would be spent getting the heavily laden vehicles freed from the clutches of either tenacious mud or heavy sand.

Remember, too, that safaris did not have four-wheel-drive vehicles, so a lot of hunting was done on foot, which took time and was hard work. It was generally agreed that 100 miles, plus or minus, would be walked for every elephant taken with tusks of 90 pounds or more. I remember spending a whole week at Kondoa Irangi in Tanganyika clambering up and down steep, rocky hills until a kudu was finally bagged.

In those days, more emphasis was placed on the entire safari experience–photography and bird shooting, for instance–rather than just the collecting of trophies. Naturally, clients expected to get good trophies. It was the collecting of them that provided the thrill, and a fine trophy was the reward for a memorable hunt. Today, the burning question as soon as a trophy is bagged often is: “Will it qualify for the record book?”—sadly, sometimes, irrespective of how it was hunted.

As hunting pressure increased in the most accessible areas, some pioneering and resourceful professional hunters cut tracks or built makeshift bridges to get into virgin country and escape the ever-increasing number of safaris entering the field. There were occasions when an entire day might be spent manhandling the two-wheel-drive safari vehicles over a soft sand riverbed. Several days might be spent erecting a makeshift bridge.

If a previously used river crossing had become too deep to ford with a hunting vehicle, and you needed to hunt the opposite side, you simply removed everything from the vehicle, including tools and spares, disconnected the battery, drained all oil and fuel, and then, using the heavy rope every safari carried, your crew, possibly assisted by locals, pulled the vehicle through the river, sometimes completely submerged.

After a night to dry out with the drain plugs removed, the oil and fuel were refilled, the battery reconnected, and the hunt continued. The hunters would cross the river morning and evening between camp and hunting car by dugout canoe or wading; the hunting car stayed on the other side of the river until the safari was ready to leave that area, at which time it was pulled it back through the river again.

Miracle Workers

The professional hunter was, at times, called upon to perform near-miracles mechanically and medically, as a few incidents that took place on my safaris will illustrate. I remember one cold, windy night on the Serengeti at one o’clock in the morning, soldering the leaking radiator of the baggage truck carrying the camp equipment. I heated the soldering iron in a fire made of wildebeest dung, as there was no wood. Our supper had been prepared the same way.

One evening at Ikoma, after traveling for three days from Nairobi, one of the skinners was bitten by a snake as he opened up his bedroll. He became hysterical, so I had him rushed to the mess tent, where the only bright light on the safari was kept, to examine the bite. I found two fang punctures, indicating a bite from a venomous snake. I proceeded to administer the antivenin shots to the protesting man, oblivious to the fact that four wide-eyed clients were watching the whole performance. Next morning he was sore, but OK; either the antivenin had done its job or he had received a “dry” bite, as I understand sometimes happens.

On one safari, we were camped south of Ngorongoro in the vicinity of Lake Eyasi in Tanganyika. Our camp was situated a couple of hundred yards from a steep-sided donga (ditch), at the bottom of which flowed a small stream. When we drove into camp about midday after one morning’s hunt, Juma, my headman, informed me that the truck was in trouble at the river.

It transpired that the truck had been driven there with two of the staff in order to fill the water drums on the back. The driver walked back to camp. When the drums were filled, the men called to the driver to retrieve the truck. He was a bit slow, and a young lad, the cook’s helper, climbed into the cab and while fiddling with the controls, pressed the starter button.

The truck was parked in reverse gear, and unfortunately the engine fired instantly and the truck rolled backward over the bank into the stream, winding up with all wheels in the air. That was what met my horrified gaze when I walked to the spot. We were miles from nowhere, and there was no radio in camp in those days.

The safari truck overturned in the riverbed, miles from nowhere.

We had to fend for ourselves, so for the next day or two while we were hunting, the camp staff busied themselves digging one bank down sufficiently to allow the truck to be hauled up.

When this was completed, we attached the big rope to the far side of the truck and to the rear of my hunting car on the opposite bank. When all was ready the hunting car, assisted by our crew and a number of friendly locals to whom we had given meat, hauled on the rope and, fortunately, we were able to turn the truck back on its wheels, and finally pull it up the bank.

I will never forget one unfortunate safari: Shortly after we had crossed into Tanganyika from Kenya, the baggage truck did not arrive when I stopped for it to catch up. I had a foreboding that all was not well, and a couple of miles back I found it lying on its side, having rolled over after having gone into a skid aggravated by the shifting weight of the men perched on top of the load.

As I drove up, Juma came forward, and in reply to my question, “Is anyone dead?” he replied, “Only one.”

Two other men were badly injured, and after getting the truck back on its wheels I instructed Juma to pitch a tent beside the road for the clients. I then took the two injured men and the corpse back into Kenya in the hunting car. The injured men I left at the reasonably sophisticated hospital in Narok, in Masailand, as traveling was very painful for them. I phoned Nairobi telling them what had happened and asked that replacements be on hand. I then carried on to Nairobi with the body of the unfortunate skinner.

When I returned to the safari, we hastily packed up and carried on across the Serengeti to Banagi, where we bivouacked. I had been without sleep for sixty hours.

Changing Times

During the 1950s, hunting areas in Kenya came under increasing pressure as more clients decided to hunt in Africa and more “occasional” hunters took up professional hunting, some with limited experience. The Game Department tried to lessen the pressure on the game populations, especially the Big Five, by allowing the taking of only one of the Big Five per week of safari. Should a hunter want licenses to hunt all five, the safari must last at least five weeks. This measure helped to some extent, as with the advent of the four-wheel-drive vehicle, hunting became easier as remote areas became more accessible and some clients tried to collect huge bags in the shortest possible time.

During the late 1950s, the “block” system was introduced in Kenya: the country was divided into numbered blocks. It was necessary to reserve the chosen block sometimes months in advance, with no idea of what would be found there when the safari finally arrived. If the game situation was really disappointing, the safari had to wait until its next block booking became available before moving on.

Other changes were making themselves felt as well. East Africa was in a state of political flux; Kenya had experienced six or seven years of the Mau Mau insurrection, and independence from Britain was the goal of all three East African territories–Kenya, Tanganyika, and Uganda, and independence was being actively negotiated by their representatives with the British government. No one had any idea what a post-independence East Africa would be like, especially after the Congo debacle.

In the early 1960s, I moved with my family to Bechuanaland (now Botswana) and opened a branch of Ker, Downey & Selby Safaris there. Our company was granted two very large tracts of land known as “concessions” in which to conduct hunting safaris. One was adjacent to the Okavango Delta, and the other was in the northern Kalahari.

The distances between camps in these concessions was not great, and I soon realized that a more efficient method of operation would be to have static camps, fully staffed, at strategic locations. The clients, together with the hunter and hunting vehicle, would move from one camp to another, thus reducing overhead by literally halving the staff that had been required to pitch and break camps during the days of the mobile safari.

One supply vehicle would do the supply rounds periodically, thus eliminating the situation where a truck remained idle for long periods in each camp. This arrangement worked very well, and in fact it had been in operation in Mozambique and Angola for some time, before politically motivated insurgencies erupted there.

Due to a number of factors, the traditional mobile safari was gradually on its way out in the East African countries where it had originated. Border controls on individuals, vehicles, equipment, and firearms, and the transfer of funds between newly independent states became a problem. Safaris did continue to flourish in Kenya for some years after independence in 1963, often ranging as far north as the Sudan, until, unexpectedly, the Kenya government closed all hunting in 1977. Safaris already in the field were summoned back to Nairobi, and hunting has remained closed there ever since, effectively putting an end to the “classic East African safari.”

Harry Selby with his safari crew and several clients in Kenya in 1950.

After independence in 1961, Tanzania, previously Tanganyika, created a state-owned and controlled safari organization which prohibited private safari companies from conducting safaris. The venture was not a success.

For some years, Botswana was one of the very few countries in Africa where no independence struggle was taking place. Rhodesia, Angola, Mozambique, and South-West Africa were all coping with bush wars. Eventually, as the political and security situation improved in those countries, and South Africa joined the ranks of countries offering hunting safaris, the “static camp” became the only way to go
When privately owned safari companies were allowed to resume operations in Tanzania after the disastrous attempt to establish a state-controlled organization, a similar system of static camps was employed there, except that a hunting car remained in each camp and aircraft were used to transfer clients and their hunter from one camp to another.

To establish a static camp, it was necessary to have an exclusive lease on the area, so concessions or some form of lease on specific blocks became the norm in most countries where the land was government-owned. In some countries, large privately owned ranches became “game farms” where the emphasis was on breeding game animals rather than domestic stock. Static hunting camps were established on these ranches to accommodate visiting hunters.

Initially, these static camps consisted of the standard safari tents with a flush toilet and shower enclosure attached to the rear. Semi-permanent structures were provided for the mess and the kitchen, which was equipped with the necessary furniture and a gas stove.

As time progressed, the camps in some countries became more sophisticated being erected on wooden decks, with regular furniture and in many cases electric power for lighting, ice making, and refrigeration. VHF radio contact with base became standard in all camps and in many of them a satellite phone is provided. Today, some clients bring their own satellite phones, and many camps are within easy reach of airfields and helicopters are available on call should an emergency occur.

Moving clients over short distances is usually accomplished by vehicle, but where long distances are involved, aircraft are used. This cuts traveling time considerably, resulting in significant savings to the client and allows for more time to be spent hunting, making it possible for hunters who previously had been unable to spare both the time and the money to undertake an African safari to do so. Now most safaris are between ten and twenty days long.

Air travel today is so available and quick that within a couple of days of leaving home, the clients are in the hunting camp, and as they have possibly read all about safaris or been to one or more conventions, they arrive with their wish list in one hand and, possibly, the record book in the other, ready to begin hunting.

The hunting will be intensive because of the short time available, and any mishap such as the hunting vehicle getting badly bogged down or malfunctioning might be regarded by the clients as time wasted. In some cases they might even expect a refund.

The professional hunter will be under considerable pressure to “produce”—and, greatly to the credit of the present-day PHs, successful hunts and very fine trophies are being brought in.

The clients, unless camped in tribal areas, will see very little of Africa or its people, other than a few hanging around the airport where they landed before leaving by vehicle or aircraft on the way to the camp.

I realize that the only way game will survive in Africa is to pay very handsomely for its existence, and the only way that can be achieved is by bringing in more hunters, photographers, and general tourists, all attracted by Africa’s magnificent wildlife, all bringing money into the country, thus demonstrating to the local people that the wildlife is more valuable on the hoof than in their bellies. To achieve that situation, permanent camps and air transport are essential to make it affordable, both in time and cost.

It was inevitable that “safari” had to change, and it will continue to change in order to exist. Africa itself has changed out of all recognition both physically and politically, and the old-time self-contained safari would have no place to go in today’s Africa. There are hunters today who would prefer to have experienced the sense of freedom of an old-time safari, as I am sure there were those who went on safari many years ago who would have preferred something along the lines of what is offered today. The two experiences are as different as night is from day; the only feature common to both is the name. . . that magical word, “safari.”

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A Lesson from Kenya

Hunting has been closed there since 1977, and wildlife is worse off than ever.

The BBC reported last week on new research in the Journal of Zoology that shows that wildlife populations in the famous Masai Mara reserve in Kenya have crashed in the past three decades (read the BBC story here). According to the report, numbers of impala, warthog, giraffe, topi, and Coke hartebeest have declined by more than 70 percent. Even fewer animals survive outside of the reserve, where buffalo and wildebeest have all but disappeared.

The team of scientists looked at data gathered since aerial monitoring of Kenya’s wildlife began in 1977. “We were very surprised at what we found,” one of the researchers told the BBC. “The Mara has lost more than two-thirds of its wildlife.”

Hunters familiar with the history of wildlife conservation in East Africa will note the significance of the date 1977. That’s the year that Kenya, formerly the top destination in Africa for safari hunters, closed all big-game hunting in the name of preserving its wildlife. Hunting there has never reopened. Nor, apparently, has much wildlife been saved.

Next door in Tanzania, which has taken Kenya’s place as the leading hunting destination in East Africa, companies that lease hunting concessions employ hundreds of local people, run continuous antipoaching patrols through their areas, and ensure through their businesses that the country’s abundant wildlife remains worth a great deal of money to the Tanzanian economy. Tanzania’s wildlife model is by no means perfect, but its abundant herds of elephant, buffalo, and antelopes speak for themselves. As the saying goes, when wildlife pays, it stays.

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Mental Fortitude: A Party in Pakistan

Sometimes it’s the hardships and challenges we experience on hunting trips that make our adventures truly memorable.

If you’re going to hunt in some of the world’s most remote places, you’d better be prepared for some unexpected adventures. Being a hunter with a restless spirit, I can’t seem to get enough of the both the joys and hardships that come with hunting the world’s far-flung regions. Here are a few of the most memorable tests of my “mental fortitude” I’ve experienced to date.

A Party in Pakistan

Now I don’t speak a word of the Pakistani language, but when I was stranded by weather in a high-mountain village not far from the Afghanistan border, with an official trying to extort $1,000 from me with a great deal of yelling and pointing, I understood the word “Taliban” very well.

I’ve always had a thirst for adventure in far-flung corners of the world, while unfortunately not having adequate finances to support this habit. Therefore I’m always bargain-shopping for inexpensive hunting trips, and since I have many outfitter friends I’m always the first to volunteer to be a “guinea pig” for an exploratory hunt into a new area. Sometimes these are areas where they need to see if the quality of the game is good enough, or maybe find out if the terrain is too extreme to take a “real” client. This has led to some uncomfortable, extreme, and even dangerous situations, but I’ve found that by keeping a positive mental outlook through all the trials and tribulations, the rewards can be beyond compare.

Such was the case in Pakistan. An outfitter friend of mine had a leftover tag for a Himalayan ibex. He offered it to me at a great price, and off I went to Pakistan. Upon arrival in Islamabad, I went to retrieve my luggage only to find my rifle had made the trip and nothing else. Normally that would be good news, except my ammo didn’t make it, and nowhere in Pakistan can you buy ammo for a .300 Ultra Mag. All I had to wear were the clothes on my back; luckily my thermal underwear, optics, and cameras were in my carry-on bag.

What my friend didn’t tell me was I would be hunting out of a high, remote village not far from the Afghanistan border, and I would be the first paying client ever to hunt there. I layered on my thermal underwear, kept my positive attitude, borrowed a rifle, and got a beautiful Himalayan ibex.

The local villagers were the most gracious hosts I’ve ever met, but the government wildlife agent who was supposed to issue me a free transport tag for the ibex wasn’t. When we went to get it, he wanted $1,000 for the “free” tag. He thought I was a rich American hunter and didn’t realize I had come on a discount “buddy” deal on a reconnaissance hunt. Not only was I not going to give him $1,000 for a tag that wasn’t supposed to cost anything, I didn’t have $1,000 anyway. That’s when he proceeded to yell that he “will have the Taliban come shoot this man!”

Well, that made things a little uncomfortable. With the weather turning bad and all flights to Islamabad cancelled, I was now stuck in a town on the Pakistan/Afghanistan border, locked away in a little hotel with outside doors so thin you could lean on them and fall through. I was told not to leave my room for any reason without my bodyguard, and to keep my curtains closed and not even step out on my balcony. Plus, I was running out of money, fast.

The next morning, I was escorted to the hotel restaurant to eat breakfast when a man came in, yelling at the top of his lungs. He went up the stairs and straight to my room! He began beating on the door to my room, still yelling. I was terrified, just waiting for the explosion, when everyone around me started laughing. It seems he was looking for his wife–who wasn’t in my room, by the way. Luckily, I wasn’t either, or I probably would have been preparing to fend off this man with my bullet-less rifle. I don’t know which is worse, the Taliban or a jealous husband!

I needed a way out of this situation, and the sooner the better. My guide made plans for me to buy a goat that would be slaughtered for a meal, arranged a musical program in the hotel, and invited some local dignitaries, including the official who was holding my ibex transport permit hostage. They arrived at my hotel room stone drunk on some local mulberry moonshine they’d brought in from the Kalish villages. They were falling over each other, laughing, yelling, and demanding I drink with them. My guide shook his head, indicating I shouldn’t drink the stuff, so I filled my glass and smiled. When they were distracted, I would slide the full glass under my bed and my guide would slide me an empty one.

After several glasses hidden successfully under the bed, they were happy and decided it was time to eat. As we stood up, one man fell and knocked over the TV. Another official got to laughing so hard he fell off the bed backward and got stuck with his head between the bed and the wall! The rest jumped on the guy who fell on the TV and we had a big dogpile of men laughing and wrestling in the middle of my room. My guide and I had to climb across them and the beds to pull the guy stuck headfirst between the bed and wall out of his predicament.

We finally had supper and attended the musical program. After having to dance with the crowd, I finally made it to my room. I was glad it was over, and the gambit had worked—I was now in possession of my transport permit! That uncomfortable yet entertaining night had saved my bacon.

But the next morning again brought bad weather. The morning flight was canceled for the fourth straight day. That left only one possible flight, at noon, to get me to Islamabad in time to make my flight out of Pakistan. Upon arrival at the airport, my heart sank at the sight of hundreds of people trying to get on this same flight. I was just standing there, feeling sick to my stomach, when here came three men who had been at the party. They introduced themselves as a local chief justice and civil justice, and the president of the airline. They thanked me for the party and the great time they had. I then told them of my predicament. Next thing I knew, I had a first-class ticket out of there. Thank goodness for moonshine and a not-so-fortunate goat!

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The Last Bite

A European Hunting Tradition

One of the many charms of hunting in European countries is the importance of tradition. Age-old rituals meant to honor the game animal and the hunter are still practiced in many regions.

A roebuck from Austria and the “last bite.”

One of these traditions is the letzebissen, or last bite, which is practiced in Germany, Austria, Holland, and some Eastern European countries. The animal is placed upon a bed of leaves as a sign of respect, and a sprig of vegetation is placed in its mouth. Another sprig of greenery is placed in the successful hunter’s hatband to let others know of his or her good fortune. And if you hunt in Germany or Austria, you will hear the term “Weidmannsheil,” which functions as a good-luck sendoff as well as a form of congratulations when you return with that telltale sprig of vegetation in your hatband.

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Featured Destination: The Chugach Range

These magnificent mountains in southern Alaska are a sheep-hunter’s mecca.

The state of Alaska is larger than many countries. You’d need a fat book, if not a small library, to describe all of its lands and many hunting opportunities.

Let’s limit our exploration to just one small corner of The Great Land, the Chugach Mountain Range, which covers an area “only” 300 miles long by 100 miles wide, running west to east from Anchorage to the Canada border. That’s roughly 30,000 square miles of floor space and considerably more if you add the vertical terrain—and most of the terrain is vertical.

These young, rugged mountains leap from the east edge of Anchorage and heap one atop another almost nonstop to the Copper and Chitina River valleys on their northeast edge. Many peaks stretch above 11,000 feet. Mount Marcus Baker towers to 13,176 feet. Such elevations tend to wring moisture from the air, and there’s plenty of moisture blowing up from the soggy south coast of Prince William Sound and the Gulf of Alaska. An average of 600 inches of snow falls in parts of the Chugach Mountains each year, one of the highest totals on earth. Prince William Sound averages 150 inches of rain annually. Both the Chugach Range and some of its 150 glaciers plunge hundreds, even thousands of feet into the sound, creating a formidable barrier to exploration. Nevertheless, the first highway into Alaska’s interior passed from the port town of Valdez through the heart of the Chugach Mountains.

Valdez, which might be more accurately named Valdez-aster, given its history, was christened by Spanish explorer Salvador Fidalgo in 1790, an odd reminder of the once long arm of Spain. In those days the Russians and British were also prying into the coastal corners of recently discovered Alaska, mostly bent on extracting furs. Americans didn’t really get involved until after the Civil War, when Secretary of State William Seward convinced Congress to vote 2.5 cents per acre to buy Alaska from cash-strapped Russia, then stinging from the expenses of waging its Crimean War against France and Britain. “Seward’s Folly” indeed!

Ice-free Valdez didn’t amount to much until 1898, when construction began on the Richardson Highway, the first road leading north to interior gold fields near Eagle and later, Fairbanks. The Alaska railway from Anchorage to Fairbanks stole much of this traffic by 1920 and the ALCAN Highway stole more after World War II. Valdez settled into life as a sleepy fishing village on the ragged but visually stunning edge of the vast Chugach Range until its first disaster. On March 27, 1964, a 9.2 earthquake, the second-biggest ever recorded, sent a 220-foot wave through Valdez Inlet. A big slice of the waterfront fell into the bay. The remains of the village were moved to more solid ground four miles away.

By the late 1970s, Valdez was again booming thanks to construction of the Trans-Alaska pipeline and its terminus at Valdez. Tanks there store more than 9 million barrels of oil. On March 24, 1989, three days shy of twenty-six years after the 1964 earthquake, the Exxon Valdez departed Valdez oil terminal and struck Bligh Reef, spewing roughly 500,000 barrels of crude oil into the sound.

Despite all these man-made developments, plus the growth of Anchorage on the western edge of the Chugach, virtually no development occurred within the mountain range itself. There were no major ore discoveries, no more highways nor railroads built, no farms or ranches or cities established. The Glenn Highway was laid along the Matanuska and Tazlina Rivers on the north edge of the range, but the mountains themselves remained the lonely haunts of the wilder denizens of Alaska, in particular Dall sheep, the Chugach’s claim to fame.

The second-largest Dall ram ever recorded by Boone and Crocket was collected in the Chugach Mountains by Frank Cook in 1956. Its right horn, the longest ever measured on a Dall, curled 49 4/8 inches from a 14-inch diameter base. If some five inches hadn’t been broomed from the left horn, Mr. Cook’s Chugach ram would stand as the world’s best.

The third and fifth biggest Dall came out of the Chugach, too. To this day, hunters lust after a chance to pursue a dream Dall of their own in the Chugach. It isn’t easy. Permits to hunt a mature ram must be applied for and won in an annual lottery, and nonresidents must hire the services of an experienced guide/outfitter. Given the size and severity of these mountains, a guide is a wise investment. There aren’t many gentle valleys, but plenty of steep cliffs, rockslides, fog, blizzards, and 150 glaciers. Big glaciers. The Matanuska Glacier is twenty-seven miles long and four miles wide. The Tazlina and Columbia glaciers are even larger. This is no region for the unprepared or timid.

The bulk of the Chugach’s sheep, and the best of the rams, are concentrated in Game Management Units 14C and 13D, plus the Knik Glacier corner of 14A.

A magnificent Dall ram taken in the Chugach Mountains.

The southern and eastern sections of these mountains are too wet and snow-covered to support sheep. Here, according to Dave Crowley, Cordova area wildlife biologist for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, mountain goats predominate on the cliffs and alpine regions. Black and brown bears roam the coast and the dense Sitka spruce and hemlock rainforests of GMU 6. Black-tailed deer flit through coastal forests on several islands. Ten-inch goats with lush pelts are common, but not where they are easily accessible. You’ll need a guide “in the know” with the ability to get you into the back corners for a trophy.

Crowley said brown bears run eight to nine feet here, smaller than on the Alaska Peninsula and Kodiak Island, but tags are easy to obtain and the season is long. Black bears are also plentiful, and moose, though not abundant, are big in the Copper River Delta area.
“There may be only about 1,200 moose, but in GMU 6A over the last years, the antlers I measured went from an average of 60 to 69 inches,” Crowley said. He also noted there were no caribou at all in GMU 6. A few are hunted in GMU 13, the northeastern slope of the Chugach, by permit only. Wolves, wolverines, and interior grizzlies round out the big-game species.

Other wildlife includes pikas, marmots, snowshoe hares, and ptarmigan. In the deep fiords and in the sound swarm five species of salmon, halibut, sea otters, seals, sea lions, and whales. The 700,000-acre Copper River Delta hosts the largest spring concentration of migrating shorebirds in the world, some thirty-six species, and the world’s entire population of dusky Canada geese nest in the area.

Taken as a whole, the Chugach country is a representative cross-section of Alaska’s natural riches, and one of the world’s great sheep-hunting destinations.

Chugach Facts and Figures

Part of: United States
Size: 300 miles wide, 100 miles long, 30,000 square miles.
Highest point: 13,176-foot Mt. Marcus Baker
Annual Precipitation: Up to 150 inches rain in Prince William Sound, up to 600 inches snow.
Snow Cover: Varies by elevation. Roughly mid-October to mid-May above treeline (1,800 feet on south slopes.)
Habitats: Alpine tundra, alder thickets, muskeg, coniferous rainforest, delta wetlands, tidal coasts and bays, rocky streams and big rivers, permanent snowfields, and 150 glaciers.
Freshwater Fish: Chinook, chum, coho, pink, sockeye, Dolly Varden, rainbow trout, cutthroat trout.
Native Peoples: Athabascan natives, the nomadic Dena people, hunted the valleys and edges of the Chugach for thousands of years, sometimes trading with the coastal Eyak people around Prince William Sound.

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Head North Without the Hassle

Take the Canadian Firearms Safety Course for stress-free border crossings.

American hunters traveling to Canada often encounter long lines, confusing firearms regulations, and hidden fees. But if you hunt in Canada often, there’s a way to avoid all of that.

Now you can prepare ahead, and cross into Canada with a firearm while dealing with less paperwork and fewer hassles. The key to easier border crossings is to complete a Canadian Firearms Safety Course (in Canada), pass a written test, and then file an application for a possession and acquisition license under the Canadian Firearms Act. After you pay a $55 test fee, and then a $70 application fee (at the time this was written), you’ll receive a card that will permit quick processing through lines when you reach the border and want to cross with your firearm. The at-the-border fees will also be waived.

Hunters completing the Canadian Firearms Safety Course.

The Canadian Firearms Safety Course takes approximately eight hours to complete. Don’t be surprised to find questions about suicide, obsolete cartridges, and questions about revolvers and other handguns-even though you cannot take handguns into Canada. Much like U.S. firearms and hunter education courses, the Canadian version covers hunting with groups and basic safety principles. The Canadian firearms safety course goes into deep detail on cleaning a firearm, and provides information on a five-shot magazine restriction.

For more details, call the Royal Canadian Mounted Police at 800-731-4000. You can also e-mail questions and requests for forms or course details to: [email protected].

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The North American 27

The Ultimate To-Do List?

The so-called “North American 27” is based on the categories of North American game animals as recognized by the Boone and Crockett Club since 1971. The traditional North American 27 consists of the following animals:

Stone sheep, Dall sheep, desert bighorn, Rocky Mountain bighorn; brown, grizzly, black, and polar bear; barren-ground, Quebec-Labrador, mountain, and woodland caribou; mule, white-tailed, Columbia black-tailed, and Coues deer; Alaska-Yukon, Canada, and Shiras moose; as well as bison, muskox, cougar, jaguar, pronghorn, American elk, walrus, and Rocky Mountain goat.

To make things confusing, B&C traditionally recognized two walrus (Atlantic and Pacific) and two muskox (barren-ground and Greenland), which actually makes 29 different animals. Hunters have only ever counted one walrus and one muskox, hence the North American 27.

Recent changes to the B&C record book have altered the number even further. In 1999, B&C dropped the Greenland muskox category but added central Canada barren ground caribou, Sitka blacktail, and Roosevelt elk, bringing the total to 31 categories. The 2005 record book also includes Tule elk, making it 32. But traditions die hard: Most hunters still refer to the “North American 27.”

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