OH Man!!! I envy the trip you had! Trips like that, is why I am keep working all the overtime. One day, some day, I will have hoarded enough back to go. You Lucky Man!
Not ignorant at all! Be glad to answer anything about it. I went through ingwe-safaris.com. Main reason is a buddy of mine is the booking agent. Even though he's a buddy, I didn't get any special deals. What I paid will be the same as you pay. Other safari firms that I had looked at offered similar rates and fees. For 8 days, 1 on 1 guide, five animal package(Kudu, Gemsbok, Blesbok, Springbok, Impala), with all meals and accomodations. $5200 . Normally it's a 6 day hunt. I added 2 days for wingshooting. That $5200 paid for everything while I was there. Of course, you will have airfare costs, trophy preparation and shipping costs, and such. But altogether, I figured total cost is less than $10,000.This may be an ignorant question, you don't have to answer if you don't want to but I'm sure others want to know.
What does a hunt like this set a guy back?
What are the rules/regs/are there any on game that can be taken over there? You did a good bit of harvesting of a variety of animals it sounds like.
That'd be a very nice bull. Totally agree with the appeal of the Gemsbok. The Kudu and Gemsbok were the primary animals I wanted. Just by chance I was able to take two of each. Those Gemsbok just look awesome to me.Thanks for the info, I killed a 39" gemsbok bull in Namibia several years ago. For me, the gemsbok is the prettiest antelope in Africa. Hard to choose between the Kudu and the Gemsbok, but the color contrast of the black, tan and white of the gemsbok really appeals to me.
That'd be a very nice bull. Totally agree with the appeal of the Gemsbok. The Kudu and Gemsbok were the primary animals I wanted. Just by chance I was able to take two of each. Those Gemsbok just look awesome to me.
Enter your email address to join: