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Reged: 25/12/02
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Loc: Barossa Valley, South Australi...
Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting
      01/03/16 04:36 AM

"A Safari is not a destination, it is a journey through life ..." & "An exciting buffalo hunt" It ran through my mind

"This buffalo is going to kill me."


The story continues ...

I was invited to hunt with another local Katherine guy. So drove down to Katherine and stayed at a local motel so we could meet up for dinner. Unfortunately he was working on the weekend, actually mustering buffalo, or sorting out in the yards the buffalo they had already mustered during the week. His boss wouldn't give him time off to go for a hunt. So we just met up for dinner and had a good chat and time. His hunting area was actually the station immediately North of where JB and I had been hunting.

So I arranged instead to go back to the same place and look for a bull and maybe some meat for myself.

Drove down to the station house again and picked up the key again to the gate locks. I was staying in town this time on Saturday night as I had booked the motel over the weekend due to the earlier uncertainty and also as the place had been near full the first night. So after the day's hunt would head back to town.

My plan was to hunt the same area where JB's bull was taken but further South, trying out the banks of a larger river South of the swamps where we had seen the largest number of buffalo. Maybe check out the area South of the River as that had been suggested as well. Would stay free and see how it went.

Stopped under some shady trees which obviously served as a fishing spot at times with some line and bits and pieces lying around or in the trees.


The makeshift 'camp'. I had to setup the generator to make sure the Engel fridge kept running through the heat of the day. It was filled with buffalo meat and crocodile. I bought some croc meat from a wholesale butcher in Darwin.




The river is decent sized in this area. One thing we missed out was never dropping a line here to see what would bite here.

I headed out to the East along the Northern bank of the river. There is a fair amount of tangled bush near the water so some pushing through or dodging around the worst bits is required. The forest opens out a hundred to two hundred metres away from the river.

Took my time enjoying myself hunting along and scanning for buffalo or pigs. We never saw a pig this trip but did find tracks earlier in this area in some wet or muddy stream tributaries to this river. Maybe I would be lucky and bump into some pigs.

A couple of kilometres along ducking under and through some brush, I "bumped" into a bull and a young cow, some other buffalo hidden behind. A got quite a surpirse to walk "into them" like that. They were on the South side of the river across some deeper water and lying down in the heat of the late morning sun. Both got up immediately but for once did not run immediately. I knew the inaction wouldn't last for long. The horn on the bull looked nice and large and impressive enough. Excitement built immediately. But with them stading in the deep shade, I could see only one horn of the bull now, the right one. The young cow was covering the front part of the bull, both standing broadside with their heads turned to see what I was, but facing in opposite directions.

I decided I could not wait and raised the Jeffery double rifle I was carrying in my hands and fired at the bull. Enough of his chest was showing in front of the cow's nose to allow a back of lungs shot. The 480 gr Woodleigh Weldcore RN hit him well, but all the buffalo were immediately off. I expected that and hoped the shot was good enough he would drop sooner than later ...

There were some rocky areas to my left further upstream so cross the river there, and headed back to look under the tree and the tracks leading away from it. No blood did I see.

The tracks were pretty evident here plus I knew which direction the buffalo had ran leaving the banks so set off in that direction. The tracks continued for 50 metres and then I hit some solid flat rock and gravel so they were not so evident to me, a skilled tracker would probably have found them like a highway, but not me. I kept in the same direction looking carefully for any sign of buffalo. This was getting a bit worrying as a wounded buffalo could cover a considerable distance.

Waling up an incline to my left maybe a couple hundred metres away I could see something dark under a tree. The binoculars revealed it to be a buffalo. One by itself. It had to be my bull sitting there feeling sick. The rest had cleared out of the area. These buffalo in this area are not milk cows and are very skittish and disappear when they realise humans are about. Hunting pressure no doubt has taught them this.

I covered maybe half the distance to the bull when he stood up. He stood with his head down, obviously glaring at me. I decided to try to drop him by shooting him through the spine above his lowered head .... I missed completely seeing the bullet impact to the right ... and down he came ... straight at me down the hill. A small tree caused him to diverge but DAMN ... he corrected his run to come straight back at me. The second left barrel of my Jeffery fired and again DAMN not even a flinch from the bull. I was pretty sure I hit him. Now I had an empty rifle, so hurriedly pushing the top lever and opening the double rifle, extracted the two empty shells ... also taking a number of steps backward to put a small, quite insignificant little tree in between me and the incoming buffalo, while pulling two more rounds out of my ammo belt pouch and pushing them into the chambers.

During all this I thought, having had some lack of confidence on these hunts of buffalo not dropping as they should when hit!!! "This Buffalo is going to kill me." Not, this buffalo is trying to kill me.

I intended to use the tree if necessary to play a circular game if necessary running to keep the tree between me and the buff while shooting him in the head, if necessary.

Raising my eyes and the rifle, no, the buffalo was no longer coming at me, he was now maybe ten metres in front but twenty metres to the side. I think my last shot had turned him a little and he was no longer intent on my demise. I fired into his broadside as he passed. Again not even a flinch. Off he ran into some thick brush along the river banks a couple of hundred metres on.

Picking up some of the shells, I set off to find him. Approaching the thick brush, I could hear what sounded like a buffalo crashing off on the other side a couple hundred metres or more on and off to the left, back 'inland' from the river.

So decided to skirt the heavy bush and check out that crashing sound. The ground was more open a hundred metres inland and I checked out what I could towards the creek as I went. But it was very thick here and not much could be seen.

I did find some buffalo tracks on the far side and followed them. I ended up covering a good two kilometres and ended up back at the same area as my vehicle except of the wrong bank. The water looks nice and deep at this point and I would not chance crossing here unless pushed.


I was just on the other side from here at this point.


Lots of trails of buffalo in this area, if he had gone well inland I would have some time finding him. OR he could be holed up somewhere closer to the river bank. I had made my way at least a couple hundred metres away from the bank where the forest is far more open.

Now I decided I would search the area right near the creek where the going is far harder. About a kilometre back I had to stop and cool down. Stop and had a quick meal and drink. Doesn't hurt either to let a wounded buffalo expire or stiffen up. So on again. The bush kept getting thicker. At this point I checked the GPS and this damned thick stuff was at the other end of the patch I had earlier skirted where the bull had entered. I had stopped to mark the spot on the GPS before following.



The bush near the South side of the river was very thick near the water's edge.

The riverine brush here was thick. Small saplings with lots of green leaves. Visibility got down to three metres .... then got down to ONE METRE ... I could only see to end of my barrel. Adrenalin was up, "what is that?" a dark log, "and that?" a large grey rock, I laughed to myself I would die of shock when I would probably trip over a dead buffalo I couldn't see until it is at my feet. I continued along.

At some point I decided to head to the right inland and see if a better way in was possible. Perhaps it was, I ended up searching the whole area of the thick sapling "jungle" to no result. There were enough buffalo tracks in the sand and soil to not know which were from my bull.

By now it was getting late. I estimated I had enough time to search the other side of the river and get back to the Landcruiser. I could search the river bank on the Northern side and keep an eye further inland. Maybe the bull crossed the river and I would find him on that bank or inland. If he headed South he wouldn't be easy to find. If I didn't find him this day. I would hunt the same areas tomorrow and maybe bump into him.

Crossing the river again almost at the same place, a few hundred metres further on, "what is that?" There the bull was lying dead in the river inself. I think after I shot him again passing me by and he crashed into the thick bush he continued straight on, down the bank and collapsed in the water. I could not see him as the bank was high enough to cover him on the edge of the river.



Took a few photos and decided to come back tomorrow morning to get the skull and horns. Would be a "fun" carry out by myself and even more fun getting the head off in the water. What else might be lurking in the river?





Got back to the vehicle, again stupidity headed there too close to the river. Will i never learn.

Packed up the generator. Had a cold drink from the engel fridge, what luxury! I was parched. Had a smoke as well. Then off back to town. Arrived in time before the restaurant closed and a night's sleep. On the way close to town, telephoned Claydog and asked a serious question, "how likely or not, is it that the river would hold saltwater crocodiles?" Claydog thought it pretty unlikely which was my guess anyway. He had though warned us not to go swimming in the deeper bigger pools in the rivers here. Also told him my plan to carry in the trifor type winch to winch the bull out of the water. His comment about the trifor being as heavy as the bull's head made me question that plan.

Next morning back at the fishing spot, decided to carry less crap. Decided to take the M98 .375 instead of the Jeffery as it is a lot lighter. Maybe I would still bump into some pigs or more buffalo.

Again stupidly ended up back in the thicker stuff near the river ...

Got to the buffalo and no crocs feeding on it. Good start.

Crossed the river and dumped my crap on the bank. Now started the cutting of the neck to get to the spine as close to the skull as possible. It was harder as only about 20% of the neck was out of the water. Cutting underneath the neck meant kneeling in the brown muddy and full of blood water to reach under in the water. Got quite messy. The bull blew regular bubbles, its lungs and stomach having bloated in the heat and now expelling gasses.

Tried to tip the bull at some point to get at the other side better but no luck. So ended up cutting on that side of the river too with my back to it. If there was anything bitey in the river, I rang the dinner gong with bloody scent for sure. Using a tomahawk again, got the spine severed and the last bit of flesh. Carried the head across the water. Wasn't that deep anyway..




Bloody heavy.




Laid it on the wet soil on the Northern bank in the shade. Got the rest of my gear and spent a couple hours removing as much skins, meat, eyeballs, tongue, brain, jaws etc as I could. Some lovely red meat ants were massing to attack me, so threw them bits of meat to divert them as much as possible. Other bits I fed to the crocs that no doubt inhabited this fresh water river, Johnson's crocs, not salties.

DONE AT LAST.



Covered the bloody skull in a couple of plastic bags. Tied it up with paracord to my daypack as best as I thought, rifle on the other shoulder and back to camp. THIS TIME I would head direct to the track, no bloody thick river brush to fight through. It was heaven to walk the open forest and not have to push continually through stuff. Also the buff head minus jaws, skin and meat was quite light. But the good job of mine tying it to my pack turned out to be deficient so it ended up hanging under my left shoulder with the pack twisted and the rifle on my right.

After a kilometre and a half hit the track and dumped the head there, walking the kilometre or whatever back to the Landcruiser. A very welcome cold drink and a smoke.


The vehicle is always a welcome sight when getting back.


Drive up to the spot where the head was left and tie it on the back roughly. Driving out I detoured near the highway in the property on a boundary fence and dumped the head under a tree hidden from sight. It might be too ripe for town.

Back to town. I was pretty disgusting, my clothes saturated with mud, blood and gore. The restaurant was probably closed at the hotel, so into town for a fast food place. Some chicken place was the only likely looking one and it looked like it was closing. The very very nice young lad inside sweeping up told me they were already closed, but he could still get me some chicken. I probably looked like the creature from the black logoon anyway ....

Back to the motel, a shower and the hot meal. At worst I could have got something out of the food box, but felt like a hot meal was needed. Or could have gone to the hotels BBQ area to cook myself, but again, I was pretty bushed.

Next day, visited Claydog to return his GPS and satphone. Then the start of the long drive home. Dropped in to the station to return the key, drop off some beer as a gift and a chat.

Then drive down to pick up the head. Wrap in well up in layers of plastic, with lots of tape. Keep any stink of a four day drive through the heat of central Australia as enclosed as possible. Would it work ????



--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"


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* A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North NitroXAdministrator 06/09/15 10:22 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North NitroXAdministrator   10/05/23 09:23 PM
. * * A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North NitroXAdministrator   06/09/15 11:24 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North NitroXAdministrator   03/03/16 10:37 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North NitroXAdministrator   03/03/16 11:39 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North NitroXAdministrator   03/03/16 11:45 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North NitroXAdministrator   03/03/16 11:51 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North NitroXAdministrator   04/03/16 12:07 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North NitroXAdministrator   04/03/16 12:16 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North NitroXAdministrator   04/03/16 12:30 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North NitroXAdministrator   04/03/16 12:31 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North DarylS   04/03/16 02:23 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North NitroXAdministrator   05/03/16 06:16 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North NitroXAdministrator   05/03/16 06:22 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North stug   04/03/16 02:16 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North NitroXAdministrator   04/03/16 04:42 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North Al333   04/03/16 03:40 PM
. * * A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North NitroXAdministrator   07/09/15 12:02 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North Sville   07/09/15 10:12 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North Ripp   08/09/15 04:13 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North Bidgee   09/09/15 10:35 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Drive North Jorge_in_Oz   10/09/15 01:21 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   16/09/15 01:24 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   16/09/15 01:56 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   16/09/15 02:55 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   19/04/17 12:11 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   20/04/17 02:18 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   16/09/15 03:29 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   16/09/15 03:30 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   16/09/15 03:31 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   16/09/15 06:57 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   16/09/15 07:51 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting Sville   16/09/15 04:23 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting stug   16/09/15 05:14 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   16/09/15 06:28 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting Iowa_303s   16/09/15 09:06 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting larcher   19/09/15 04:41 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   24/09/15 08:26 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting larcher   27/09/15 10:03 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting Ash   10/10/15 09:06 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting Rino   07/11/15 12:01 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   07/11/15 01:53 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting Bidgee   08/11/15 12:34 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   01/03/16 04:18 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   01/03/16 04:36 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   01/03/16 06:01 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting Charles_Helm   06/04/16 01:56 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting MFC   08/05/16 10:50 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   13/05/16 02:52 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   16/05/16 01:16 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   10/05/23 09:02 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   01/06/16 03:25 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting pondoro62   16/05/16 06:57 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting mikeh416Rigby   01/03/16 08:46 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting Rino   02/03/16 12:05 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   05/03/16 06:28 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting 4seventy   03/03/16 07:49 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   05/03/16 06:29 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting 4seventy   06/03/16 10:13 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting stug   20/09/15 12:26 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting aromakr   21/09/15 02:00 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting larcher   21/09/15 02:23 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   22/09/15 08:01 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   22/09/15 08:08 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting Iowa_303s   22/09/15 10:42 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting larcher   23/09/15 05:00 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting Rule303   23/09/15 04:36 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting larcher   24/09/15 04:29 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting Ripp   24/09/15 05:36 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting 93x64mm   23/09/15 06:09 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting Claydog   21/09/15 08:05 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting Sville   21/09/15 06:55 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting larcher   21/09/15 09:59 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting DarylS   22/09/15 01:25 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting karamoja   22/09/15 04:50 AM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   16/09/15 07:39 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   16/09/15 07:53 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   16/09/15 07:57 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   16/09/15 07:46 PM
. * * Re: A safari is a journey + an exciting buff hunt - Hunting NitroXAdministrator   16/09/15 07:48 PM

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