Hunting Washington Forum
Other Hunting => Upland Birds => Topic started by: jetjockey on June 12, 2015, 01:02:01 PM
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I could have posted this in the water fowl forum, but since a majority of our hunting will be for upland type birds, I posted it here. Day 1 consisted of goose hunting in the morning, with ducks in the evening. Now, I'm not a big waterfowl hunter, so I have nothing to really compare this to, but today we shot 29 Egyptian geese this morning, more than 40 ducks this evening, and three more geese this evening while pass shooting. At one point this evening I couldn't touch my barrel, or load shells fast enough to keep up with the influx of ducks. We also saw a spur wing goose, which is the biggest goose in the world, but couldn't get a shot. I've been told that Africa has some of the best waterfowl hunting in the world, and after today, I can't disagree. Tomorrow we shoot driven guinea fowl, doves, and more ducks in the evening..... I can understand why people fall in love with Africa. I've seen wild giraffe, wart hogs, ostrich, every kind of "boch" you can imagine, and the sign outside our lodge says "watch out for hippos." And the sign isn't lying. It is simply amazing here in Africa.
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:tup:
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I could have posted this in the water fowl forum, but since a majority of our hunting will be for upland type birds, I posted it here. Day 1 consisted of goose hunting in the morning, with ducks in the evening. Now, I'm not a big waterfowl hunter, so I have nothing to really compare this to, but today we shot 29 Egyptian geese this morning, more than 40 ducks this evening, and three more geese this evening while pass shooting. At one point this evening I couldn't touch my barrel, or load shells fast enough to keep up with the influx of ducks. We also saw a spur wing goose, which is the biggest goose in the world, but couldn't get a shot. I've been told that Africa has some of the best waterfowl hunting in the world, and after today, I can't disagree. Tomorrow we shoot driven guinea fowl, doves, and more ducks in the evening..... I can understand why people fall in love with Africa. I've seen wild giraffe, wart hogs, ostrich, every kind of "boch" you can imagine, and the sign outside our lodge says "watch out for hippos." And the sign isn't lying. It is simply amazing here in Africa.
I have to ask this. Are you planning on shipping that meat back or what? That's a lot of dead poultry. Looks like good hunting. :tup:
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I could have posted this in the water fowl forum, but since a majority of our hunting will be for upland type birds, I posted it here. Day 1 consisted of goose hunting in the morning, with ducks in the evening. Now, I'm not a big waterfowl hunter, so I have nothing to really compare this to, but today we shot 29 Egyptian geese this morning, more than 40 ducks this evening, and three more geese this evening while pass shooting. At one point this evening I couldn't touch my barrel, or load shells fast enough to keep up with the influx of ducks. We also saw a spur wing goose, which is the biggest goose in the world, but couldn't get a shot. I've been told that Africa has some of the best waterfowl hunting in the world, and after today, I can't disagree. Tomorrow we shoot driven guinea fowl, doves, and more ducks in the evening..... I can understand why people fall in love with Africa. I've seen wild giraffe, wart hogs, ostrich, every kind of "boch" you can imagine, and the sign outside our lodge says "watch out for hippos." And the sign isn't lying. It is simply amazing here in Africa.
I have to ask this. Are you planning on shipping that meat back or what? That's a lot of dead poultry. Looks like good hunting. :tup:
Why? Why would you care? I am sure there are people who need the meat there, if he isn't going to ship it back. Cannot see why you would even ask that?
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What country are you hunting?
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Why? Why would you care? I am sure there are people who need the meat there, if he isn't going to ship it back. Cannot see why you would even ask that?
Because he doesn't know. The meat will be used at the lodge, taken by the PH, taken by either of the 2 game trackers in the photo, or given to elders in the local village. Nothing goes to waste there.
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Nice ...can not beat a lot of trigger time :tup:
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What country are you hunting?
His other thread said South Africa.
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What country are you hunting?
His other thread said South Africa.
Thank you. I was there in May. Wonderful experience.
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Spent some time in east Africa in the early 90's and enjoyed shooting lots of birds. Francolin and sand doves I believe they were. We would give them to the Moroccan infantry in trade for smoked duiker. Love to go back one day, shoot some pirate thugs also.
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Nice
I have a question. Since it is waterfowl I assume the birds fall in some water.
How do you Retreiver them.?
Dogs ?
Or too dangerous for dogs? :dunno:
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Sounds like a blast!
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Why? Why would you care? I am sure there are people who need the meat there, if he isn't going to ship it back. Cannot see why you would even ask that?
Because he doesn't know. The meat will be used at the lodge, taken by the PH, taken by either of the 2 game trackers in the photo, or given to elders in the local village. Nothing goes to waste there.
That answers it. Thanks.
If you don't ask, you don't learn.
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Nice
I have a question. Since it is waterfowl I assume the birds fall in some water.
How do you Retreiver them.?
Dogs ?
Or too dangerous for dogs? :dunno:
Yes, they "might" fall in water, but we do have labs to retrieve the ducks. The "water" isn't much though.
Today we shot driven guinea fowl, doves, and we finished with another duck hunt.. The hunt I was least looking forward to was the driven hunt. I honestly thought it would be cheesy, but boy was I wrong. It might end up being my favorite hunt of the trip. Guinea fowl act like pheasants on steroids, but flock like geese. Before I hunted them, I couldn't understand why we don't use dogs to point or flush guinea. Then I saw them run, and run, and run. To hunt guinea, you find the flock by watching the fields. Once you find a flock, you come up with a game plan to have "beaters" push the guineas towards the shooters. It's a lot like pheasant hunting with pushers and blockers, except guineas won't fly until they absolutely have to. And when they fly.......WOW! We had flocks of guineas up to 80-90+ birds fly right past us. It's unreal! Guinea fowl are s fsir but bigger than pheasants, and are grey with blue tick marks. They are beautiful birds and are hard to get flushed in the proper direction. They make a pheasant drive look like kids play.... Final talley for the day was 18 guinea, God only knows how many doves, 34 ducks, and another goose.
For those of you wondering, all the birds are eather stored properly for mounting, or given to the locals who will eat everything except the bones and feathers. The doves we killed today we're going to be given to the local school. Nothing is wasted in Africa... This place is nothing short of amazing and addicting.
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What a hunt! The guinea hunt sounds like a blast!
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jetjockey; Thanks for the post and cool story, hope you have more photos to share.
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Very cool. Would have never thought of waterfowl hunting in Africa.
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Sounds like a trip of a lifetime. Enjoy :tup:
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Very cool. Would have never thought of waterfowl hunting in Africa.
X2, one more reason I want to go to Africa now.
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After a 16 hr flight from Joburg to Atlanta, unfortunately I'm back home. This trip turned out to be more than I ever could have imagined. Final talley was 7 different types of birds taken (3 kinds of ducks), 86 boxes of shells over 4 days, and one sore shoulder. We killed egyption geese, ducks, guinea fowl, francolin, doves, and also did some pest control for the farmers and killed crows and pigeons as well. My favorite hunts were the driven Guinea fowl, and Francolin over the dogs. Those were also the toughest hunts. One morning hunt on Francolin produced only two shootable birds and we completly wiffed on both. Unfortunately I don't have any good pictures of the Francolin on my iPhone, but I have Francolin headed to the taxidermist. Just like here in the states, timing can be everything. The Francolin hunting was tough due to the maze still being mostly in, but we still managed to bag 11 Francolin. For those of you wondering, nothing in Africa is ever wasted (well, with the exception of the crows and pigeons which are pests). The trackers took most of the edible birds while the doves would go the local schools. When I say nothingis wasted, NOTHING is wasted. On our last day as we were leaving camp for the airport, locals were on the side of the road butchering a cow that had been hit the night before by a car.
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Jet,
Looks like you had more than an awesome trip, the bad thing is, Africa will be in your mind and you will have to go back. I made 4 trips to Africa and would like to do one more buff hunt but I will retire next year and can't justify spending $12,000 on another hunt. Still have my 375 H&H and buying lotto tickets so it may be possible.
Your right nothing is wasted in Africa. I had a wonderful tripe stew made from the stomach of the buff I shot in Zambia. No stomach, heart or liver is wasted there. I never shot any birds there but was offered a chance to kill some guinea with a 22.
Thanks for sharing your hunt with us.
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84 boxes of shells in 4 days sums it up for me!!! wow. :drool: never burned that through a barrel~
hey shotgun experts, how would this affect that barrel running that hot for a few heat cycles? would you need to replace, check upon return?
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Wow that's a lot of fowl! :tup:
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Looks like a sweet hunt! Thanks for sharing.
What outfitter/safari company did you go with?