Hunting Washington Forum
Big Game Hunting => Other Big Game => Topic started by: Slider on April 27, 2009, 07:39:22 PM
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I took this off of another site. I wish them both the Best!!! Here is the story from Craig Boddington
Gentlemen
As many of you know, I am one of Craig Boddington's partners in our two TV shows "Tracks Across Africa" and" Hornady's Africa With Craig Boddington and Ivan Carter". During a phone call with Craig this morning from Namibia, Craig asked me to post this on AR to answer any questions on what is sure to be a well traveled topic on the rumor mill. Craig's eldest daughter Brittany is an avid, and fairly experienced big game hunter with multiple safaris under her belt, several of which were targeting dangerous game. I have filmed several of her safaris for the show, and always found Brittany to be safety conscious where firearms were concerned ,a result of learning under a father who stresses the point of firearm safety at all times. Last week while filming a leopard with dogs hunt with our Tracks Tv crew in Namibia , an incident happened that resulted in (1) a flat out charge from an UNWOUNDED ,but agitated male leopard (2 ) a dog handler being savaged by the cat (3) an attempt by Brittany to kill what was, by the time of her shot,a wounded leopard that accidentally hit and wounded the man being mauled.
At the time of the accident , Craig was filming in Zimbabwe, but flew to Namibia to assist as best he could, and as you can imagine comfort his daughter from the obvious anxiety of the situation she was dealing with. The attending PH was Nic Kruger, a first rate hunter and Co-owner of Omujeve safaris. Nic is an experienced leopard man, and we have enjoyed several wonderful safaris under his and his brother Corne's care. For those of you who have never experienced a close range charge from an infuriated leopard , trust me , it is scary as hell and it happens with shocking speed. It is easy to second guess these situations ,especially when the facts of the hunt are unknown or blurred second hand accounts. The following is the official police report as filed by both Nic and Brittany. Please read both accounts,and I believe you will reach the same conclusion as I have, that this was a very fast moving situation that both PH and client were trying their level best to control,to the best of their ability and skill. As I said, due to the last name involved, this is bound to get some attention in safari circles. Craig thought, and I agreed, that posting the police reports would be the best method to make sure the facts were accurately portrayed. I have seen some fairly experienced hunters loose their heads under far less stressful situations than the flat out charge of a leopard at point blank range. I think Brittany did her best to stand firm and shoot what she believed to be a wounded cat. The accident was just that, a terrible twist of luck that can happen to each and every one of us that hunt dangerous game.
I, Brittany Boddington, a 23 year old U.S. citizen herewith declare under oath as follows:
I was hunting leopard with Nic Kruger of Omujeve Hunting Safaris Namibia on the Fahlwater farm in the Karibib district. We found some fresh leopard tracks at about 5:15 in the morning and when it was daybreak we put down the dogs. We set out following the sound of the hounds through the brush but this was a very aggresive cat, it was not running from the dogs like most cats do. Zukile was one of the dog handlers, he was contacting us by radio telling us that the cat was fighting the dogs and had injured several of them. These dogs know what they are doing and almost never get close enough to get hurt. After a couple of hours we came up to a really thick area where the dogs were barking and the leopard would not tree. The leopard held its ground and the dogs were tired and bleeding so we sent Classen to get the car so that we could give the dogs some water. At this point we called the dogs away from the leopard and they laid down inthe shade waiting for the car to bring water. After they had all had water and were looking rested the dog handlers started encourageing the dogs to go back into the brush and find the tracks of where the leopard had gone. The dog handlers were sure that the leopard had run away because none of the dogs were barking so we started walking slowly in the direction that the leopard had been. Nic showed me the flattened grass in an area surrounded by bushes where the leopard had been hiding when the dogs were last barking. The dogs were scattered all around us looking for tracks and as I was examining the flattened grass area I heard a dog begin to bark. Before the dog could even get the whole bark out I heard the growl of the leopard. When I heard Nic’s shot go off I stepped out from behind him and saw the leopard come out from behind a bush. The leopard paused for a moment and in the tall grass I could see only slightly more than the outline of the leopard’s back. I saw that the leopard had been hit and it stopped with its head down in the grass. I got my rifle up and took a shot at the part of the leopard that I could see. The leopard then jumped up and Nic hit it again with another shot as the leopard ran into the bush and Nic ran after it to make sure it would not come back to attack again. At this moment I heard Zukile yell, we realized that Punki had been shot and we called Nic back and he sent Classen to get the car. We held pressure on the wound and we kept Punki awake until the car could get through the thick brush to where we were. We loaded him into the back seat of the car and I jumped on the back of the cruiser. The entire way to the hospital I was trying to figure out what had happened. I could only imagine that I had shot over the leopard and hit Punki as he was running away. I didn’t know where they had been standing so I assumed that he had just run when the leopard charged. It was only after we had wheeled him into the emergency room that Simon told me “You should see what the leopard did to his ankle.” My response was a suprised “The leopard bit him? When did the leopard bite him?” Simon then told me that Punki had been attacked and mauled by the leopard and that he was in fact under the leopard when I shot. I screamed “WHAT?” and then it all started to make sense. Nic had seen the two men fall to the ground in the tall grass before I had stepped out from behind him. Both men were wearing full camouflage from head to toe and in the tall grass they were completely invisible to me. The leopard bit through Punki’s leather belt and had been thrashing him about in the grass when I shot. Apparently the leopard was pulling him up from the ground and as I fired my rifle the leopard pulled him up by the left side and the bullet must have missed the leopard and gone through his hip. I know better than to fire when a leopard is mauling someone, I would not have shot had I known that there was a person even close to the leopard. The whole attack from beginning to end took less than four seconds and there was just no time to sort out what was happening.
Brittany Boddington
I, Joachim Nicolaas Kruger, I.D #82041910569, a 27 year old Namibian citizen here with declare under oath as follows:
I am a shareholder and Licensed Professional Hunter with Omujeve Hunting Safaris and a resident on the farm Ongombo West Section II # 56 Windhoek District. I was guiding a legal leopard hunt on the farm Fahlwater in the Karibib on the 24th of April 2009. We found a big leopard track at 05:15 in the morning and decided that it was a big leopard and that we could start the hunt as soon as it was light enough. At first light we released the hounds to start tracking the leopard. After some time Zukile called me on the radio and said he was hearing the leopard. We started to approach Zukile. The leopard was in thick brush and wasn’t afraid of the dogs. He was fighting with the dogs and injured a couple of them, which is very unusual with this experienced pack of hounds.
As time passed it was clear that the dogs were afraid of this leopard and the leopard wasn’t planning on getting in a tree soon. I decided that it was too dangerous to attempt to approach the leopard. We called the hounds back and I send Claasen to fetch the vehicle. We gave the hounds water hoping that the dogs would be fresh again and would have an advantage over the leopard, and that they would then push the leopard into a tree and give us a nice, safe clean shot. Zukile, Punki and myself thought the cat had moved off and we decided to move to the spot where the cat was laying down last and get the hounds back on the track. Zukile and Punki were walking a short distance in front of me with Brittany right behind me and Simon Elton a couple of steps back. Suddenly one of the hounds made a sound and I saw the leopard charging towards Zukile. Zukile fell to the ground and as the leopard approached Punki I saw a gap and shot the leopard but the shot was not fatal. The leopard jumped on Punki and Punki fell to the ground. Then the leopard moved towards Claasen but turned back toward Punki and started biting him. Then I heard a shot from Brittany’s rifle. Brittany didn’t know at the time that Punki was under the leopard because she was walking behind me when it happend and when she stepped out behind me, Punki was already down in the tall grass. That is why she couldn’t see him, and of course she is eleven inches shorter than I am, so she could see much less than I could in the long grass. She shot at the leopard because it stopped which, for her was the right thing to do at that stage. Any hunter in the same situation would have done the same. When she shot the leopard it was busy biting Punki and there was a lot of movement as the leopard was pulling Punki around. Because of her height Brittany was unable to see this. The whole thing happened very quickly, in less than three seconds, much too quickly for me to give any instructions or clarify the situation. I am certain her bullet hit Punki because the leopard pulled Punki up right into the line of her shot, suggested by deep bite marks on his belt. After Brittany’s shot the leopard dropped Punki and started to run away and then I shot the leopard again and ran past Punki. I knew that he was bitten by the leopard, but at this time I did not know he had been hit by a bullet. The leopard was still running away from us and I just wanted to make sure that the leopard was dead because I didn’t want to track a wounded leopard after what has already happend. The leopard was dead when I reached it, and Zukile called me and said that I must come quickly and that Punki was shot. Until that moment I had no idea that Punki was shot and I told my tracker Claasen to run and bring the truck. Meanwhile we took our shirts and held pressure on the wound. While we waited for the truck I called EMED rescue and Doctor Jordaan and made some arrangements as to what to do and where to meet the ambulance. The truck came about two minutes later and we loaded Punki in the truck and raced to the main road that was about 10km away. As we got on the main road the ambulance was on it way from Okahandja and we drove straight to Okahandja Hospital and they were quick to help and to get Punki stabilized. Then EMED rescue came and they then moved him to Windhoek where the doctors were waiting for him.
Joachim Nicolaas Kruger.
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WOW!!!! Even if I was the one shot, I would not blame her. She did what she thought was the best action and given the circumstances, she may have saved the guys life.
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Dangerous game has its name for a reason. Unpredictable animals create unpredictable situations.
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I hope all works out for every one involved. Tragic situation to say the least.
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I agree. Chilling story, and I still think she did the right thing, and for the record, if a cat is munching on me. SHOOT! Thanks Slider. Good read. Felt like I was reading Capstick.
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Dangerous game has its name for a reason. Unpredictable animals create unpredictable situations.
+1
One of those rare hunting accidents where the shooter and victim both apparently did no wrong.
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Very dangerous situation they found themselves in, sounds like they all behaved and acted appropriately, and I'm with Boneaddict, if something is munching me, please shoot it.
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She is definitely a looker. Cute redhead.
Regarding the topic, I guess I am a bit torn on this subject. If I shoot a deer in the woods and don't see another hunter behind the deer and I shoot the hunter, am I at fault? Sure I am. You never shoot unless you are sure where your bullet will go.
All that being said, the guy that was attacked was engaged in a dangerous sport and assumed risk in this sport. It's sort of like playing hockey, if you participate in a physical sport you can't be surprised if you are injured at the sport.
Fair or not, the buck stops with you when you pull the trigger of a gun. :twocents:
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wow what a horrible chain of events!
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Wow!!
Hope the guy recovers from the attack and the shot.
Wonder if she'll get charged with any crime... hope not. I'm w/ Bone... if I'm getting my ass knawed off, shoot the sumbitch.
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I'm w/ Bone... if I'm getting my ass knawed off, shoot the sumbitch.
+1
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www.brittanyboddington.com :drool:
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This story has way to many holes in it if you read it "Before the dog could even get the whole bark out I heard the growl of the leopard. When I heard Nic’s shot go off I stepped out from behind him and saw the leopard come out from behind a bush. The leopard paused for a moment and in the tall grass I could see only slightly more than the outline of the leopard's back. I saw that the leopard had been hit and it stopped with its head down in the grass. I got my rifle up and took a shot at the part of the leopard that I could see." So this leopard had to be dragging the tracker from behind the bush because when she shot it picked the tracker up and her bullet hit him but no one knows that he is there yet and it's STANDING still when she shoots. The PH says it took 3 seconds to happen and in those 3 seconds it attacked 2 trackers went after a 3rd went back to the 2ND tracker started biting him and was shot twice! How far away were the trackers and how could she have been behind the PH she says she was "examining the flattened grass area" I think he punki was shot by her thinking it was the cat. Don't get me wrong I'm glad it was not me having to shoot but the trackers were close enough that she should have known where they were I may be wrong lets see the film you won't see anyone being shoot because no one there knew he was shot my guess is they are covering for Graig and his daughter so they don't lose there sponsors and free hunting
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This story has way to many holes in it if you read it "Before the dog could even get the whole bark out I heard the growl of the leopard. When I heard Nic’s shot go off I stepped out from behind him and saw the leopard come out from behind a bush. The leopard paused for a moment and in the tall grass I could see only slightly more than the outline of the leopard's back. I saw that the leopard had been hit and it stopped with its head down in the grass. I got my rifle up and took a shot at the part of the leopard that I could see." So this leopard had to be dragging the tracker from behind the bush because when she shot it picked the tracker up and her bullet hit him but no one knows that he is there yet and it's STANDING still when she shoots. The PH says it took 3 seconds to happen and in those 3 seconds it attacked 2 trackers went after a 3rd went back to the 2ND tracker started biting him and was shot twice! How far away were the trackers and how could she have been behind the PH she says she was "examining the flattened grass area" I think he punki was shot by her thinking it was the cat. Don't get me wrong I'm glad it was not me having to shoot but the trackers were close enough that she should have known where they were I may be wrong lets see the film you won't see anyone being shoot because no one there knew he was shot my guess is they are covering for Graig and his daughter so they don't lose there sponsors and free hunting
Seriously? Do you know the odds of two people sitting down and writing virtually the same story, even if they had rehearsed it for days? A story that long? Not gonna happen, seems your barking up the wrong tree in my book.
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No one in those reports really say how fast the leopard was moving. Have you ever seen how fast they are? I have. Of the big 5 (including hippo) leopard is considered the the most likely to get to you, but the least likely to kill you out right. The problem will be the infection you are going to get.
I should also add knowing how it works in Africa if she had held her fire and a wounded leopard got to cover there would have been one pissed off PH standing there. He fired first so she stepped out from behind him and at that point was backing him up. I know that is what the PH expected from her. With no warning from the PH it's no surprise she assumed a clear line of fire.
I think what she did was the best thing under the circumstances, and I also feel this was the best way for Crag to handle it. Definitely a sad affair, but questioning what she did serves no purpose.
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I have seen a couple leopard attacks on film too. Those cats move so fast you can't even tell what they are doing. they have to go into slow motion and even that is hard to see. I think you would need to have a high speed camera to really be able to tell what was going on.
I think that in 3-5 seconds a po'd Leopard could easily attack 2 or more people. In 5 seconds I think one could eviscerate someone.
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Show the film then my bet is they never will!
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Show the film then my bet is they never will!
Me thinks someone has a hidden agenda. Why you got such a hard-on against Boddington and his daughter?
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Sorry no agenda just explain how the tracker was lifted into the air got shot yet the PH or the shooter never knew that the tracker was shot or next to the cat. "She shot at the leopard because it stopped which, for her was the right thing to do at that stage. Any hunter in the same situation would have done the same. When she shot the leopard it was busy biting Punki and there was a lot of movement as the leopard was pulling Punki around". So was it stopped or was it biting punki and a lot of movement? again all this plus 2 attacks 1 other shot in 3 seconds again no AGENDA just reading the reports. Sorry for not seeing it your way goldtip but this is America
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nothing will ever be seen for what it is....there is always someone seeing things in a different light, regardless of what the topic of discussion is.
i say the sky is blue, but someone else will battle to the death trying to convince me that the sky is green with
pok-a-dots.
(i may have spelled pok-a-dots wrong)
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Wow ??? you may want to reread the reports. The PH was aware that the cat was on top of the tracker when she fired. And he still feels she did nothing wrong.
The key here is they broke off contact with the cat. Refreshed the dogs and then decided to locate the tracks and try again. And to everyones surprise. The cat was still there. That would be more than a little surprising. I can see how things got very disorganized real fast.
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OK last post here start counting to 3 you hear the dog the cat goes after 1 tracker turns back to the other tracker bites him stops starts to go for tracker #3 turns back to tracker #2 PH shoots 1 shot are you at 3 seconds yet because their whole time line is over by now and she has yet to step out from behind the PH she has to find the cat shoulder her rifle acquire the target and pull the trigger. Again I am only reading the report and counting to 3 and if she had a scope on the gun well. She's just lucky she is not the V.P. of the USA
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I think she did exactly what she should have done.No conspiracy
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Whether she did the "right" thing or not, you are still responsible for the bullet you send out of your gun, no matter the situation. Remember that hunters... :police:
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Like I said, if I am being eatin' SHOOT! I'd rather plug the hole and limp the rest of my life than be eviscerated.
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Who knows? Maybe it was 6 seconds!!! I'm sure everything was in slow motion. One thing people don't realize is how thick the Bushveld is or how tall the grasses are. I don't think any of the incident was caught on tape. I don't know if she had a scoped rifle? I do know it was a 300 wsm. Punki is going to recover and she has set up an account to help him and his family.
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Dangerous for a reason.. they are very unpredictable. Could things have been done different... yes .... but who gets to live their life by looking backwards in time.. ONLY POLITICIANS ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR THEIR DECISIONS NO MATTER HOW BAD!!
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This story has way to many holes in it if you read it "Before the dog could even get the whole bark out I heard the growl of the leopard. When I heard Nic’s shot go off I stepped out from behind him and saw the leopard come out from behind a bush. The leopard paused for a moment and in the tall grass I could see only slightly more than the outline of the leopard's back. I saw that the leopard had been hit and it stopped with its head down in the grass. I got my rifle up and took a shot at the part of the leopard that I could see." So this leopard had to be dragging the tracker from behind the bush because when she shot it picked the tracker up and her bullet hit him but no one knows that he is there yet and it's STANDING still when she shoots. The PH says it took 3 seconds to happen and in those 3 seconds it attacked 2 trackers went after a 3rd went back to the 2ND tracker started biting him and was shot twice! How far away were the trackers and how could she have been behind the PH she says she was "examining the flattened grass area" I think he punki was shot by her thinking it was the cat. Don't get me wrong I'm glad it was not me having to shoot but the trackers were close enough that she should have known where they were I may be wrong lets see the film you won't see anyone being shoot because no one there knew he was shot my guess is they are covering for Graig and his daughter so they don't lose there sponsors and free hunting
Not as many holes as this story has...
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Not trying to be difficult here, but I have the feeling most of the posts are coming from people who have seen Africa only from the comfort of their livingrooms on TV. I have been there, including Namibia (the country this happened). And will be leaving again soon.
Some things are done differently over there. The PH fired first. For what ever reason, when she stepped out from behind him there was no warning to her about not firing.
So I will put this clearly. Had it been the PH I hunt with, and she didn't shoot, with no verbal warning not to, the responce from the PH would have been "WHY THE HELL DIDN'T YOU SHOOT".
You never let a wounded cat get to cover. PERIOD. You're not in Kansas anymore.
By the way 3 or 4 posts here that's true, but 50 years hunting.
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Notice how thick the Bushveld is and how difficult it is to see this Cat!!!
http://trophyroom.com/video/BIkAidNXYP/
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The Leopards legacy lives true, the most efficient killer in high grass. Unfortunate story.
Caretaker
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You're not in Kansas anymore.
Nope, she wasn't in Kansas. If she was, she would probably be in jail...
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Yeah the ACLU would be all over it as a racist thing, a white gal shooting a black man playing with a kitty in the tall grass. They banned that a long time ago in Kansas.
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Yeah the ACLU would be all over it as a racist thing, a white gal shooting a black man playing with a kitty in the tall grass. They banned that a long time ago in Kansas.
:chuckle: :chuckle:
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Like I said, if I am being eatin' SHOOT! I'd rather plug the hole and limp the rest of my life than be eviscerated.
yep- I'd take a bullet in place of fangs any day. She probably did the right thing.
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He's lucky he did not die of blood loss since they kept pressure on the bullet wound but did not know that the leopard had torn apart his ankle. "We held pressure on the wound and we kept Punki awake until the car could get through the thick brush to where we were.It was only after we had wheeled him into the emergency room that Simon told me “You should see what the leopard did to his ankle.”