riohog 5,701 Posted September 5, 2018 Report Share Posted September 5, 2018 plains game , dangerous game , will not suffer from overhunting " legally " there dimise is over killing by poachers for horn and hide.for the chineese market predominantly , 3 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Born Hunter 17,751 Posted September 5, 2018 Report Share Posted September 5, 2018 8 minutes ago, Aussie Whip said: You know its morally wrong,thats why you feel the need to defend yourself.You have no chance against me,any thinking hunter and the rest of society in this.Hopefully they put an end to this before all hunting is ruined. f***ing LOL. I'm still waiting for you to actually start your argument! So far you have just made a load of unsupported statements and thrown out the odd Nazi and coward. Things might be a bit arse about face where you're from, but in England we defend things we believe in, not the other way around. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Aussie Whip 4,092 Posted September 5, 2018 Report Share Posted September 5, 2018 Glad to see you went back home for support.I'm married to an English women and she's far removed from the coward you are. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Born Hunter 17,751 Posted September 5, 2018 Report Share Posted September 5, 2018 21 minutes ago, Aussie Whip said: Glad to see you went back home for support.I'm married to an English women and she's far removed from the coward you are. Oh she defends things she thinks are wrong then? Weird! It's like you can't even keep on topic so just revert to another insult. I know you think that big game hunters only do it to look hard and powerful so calling me a coward and a girl makes sense to you but it's actually piss funny. If you were able to string together a decent factually grounded counter argument you wouldn't need to bounce around all over the place with such gutter level tactics. 2 3 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Aussie Whip 4,092 Posted September 5, 2018 Report Share Posted September 5, 2018 Shooting a pet lion is pretty close to the gutter in my eyes,pompous twat, or as we call it here, stuck up cnt. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Welsh_red 4,629 Posted September 5, 2018 Report Share Posted September 5, 2018 6 minutes ago, Aussie Whip said: Shooting a pet lion is pretty close to the gutter in my eyes,pompous twat, or as we call it here, stuck up cnt. Pet lion . Haha 2 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Aussie Whip 4,092 Posted September 5, 2018 Report Share Posted September 5, 2018 3 minutes ago, Welsh_red said: Pet lion . Haha MEOW. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Born Hunter 17,751 Posted September 5, 2018 Report Share Posted September 5, 2018 7 minutes ago, Aussie Whip said: Shooting a pet lion is pretty close to the gutter in my eyes,pompous twat, or as we call it here, stuck up cnt. More names, less substance..... Give me one example of a PET lion being shot as part of a legit African sport hunt. At least you're not using the word 'murder' anymore......... and incorrectly. Let me try to bring some substance to your argument for you, bless ya. Canned hunting happens and is probably what you're referring too. Plenty of countries and outfits that hunt proper wild quarry under fair chase. Pretending that Canned hunting is the standard is again like pretending all dog men run their quarry down with their scooby. 2 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Marcos 44 Posted September 6, 2018 Report Share Posted September 6, 2018 On 22/08/2017 at 20:14, Savanna said: My merkel side by side with what was an angry buffalo They have a fairly impressive boss, would take a bit to get through? Does it get so big to impair their vision? How old would this buff be? How do you rate your Merkel, What calibre? Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Savanna 112 Posted September 6, 2018 Author Report Share Posted September 6, 2018 4 hours ago, Marcos said: They have a fairly impressive boss, would take a bit to get through? Does it get so big to impair their vision? How old would this buff be? How do you rate your Merkel, What calibre? Halo Marcos yes if you hit the boss, your bullet dont go very far, but they dont grow over the eyes, so no matter how big, they dont impare their vision. This bull is between 11 and 12 years old. You can see the tips are worn, and the boss is rock solid. This is what we always look for in a bull, and then ofcoarse we look at the spread of the horns alswell. But the hardness of the boss is the most important thing for me. I have to tell you, I am extremely happy with my merkel, it is accurate and balanced well, so it doesnt kick all that much. I shoot a 375 h&h in the merkel, but I am in the process of building 470ne barrels for it. But a 375 is enough gun in my mind...I have stopped alot of charging animals, all with the 375... Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Savanna 112 Posted September 6, 2018 Author Report Share Posted September 6, 2018 20 hours ago, bird said: no , no point because in 30-50 years time , the big 8 out in India = tiger, Afica lion, rhino, buffalo , leopard, etc will be fook'n gone anyway , they close to it no anyway , but you carry on old pal kill the feck'n lot , i out with dogs now got better things to do than this , carry on .! A while back bodswana bands hunting on elephant, this week they found 90 carcasses of elephant poached. A whole heard POACHED...So you tell me who is wiping them out... 2 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Born Hunter 17,751 Posted September 6, 2018 Report Share Posted September 6, 2018 9 minutes ago, Savanna said: A while back bodswana bands hunting on elephant, this week they found 90 carcasses of elephant poached. A whole heard POACHED...So you tell me who is wiping them out... I can't remember the exact figures but isn't it something like an estimates 80+ elephants are killed every single day by poachers, often poisoning entire family group on the off chance some have ivory. Compare that to the 2-3 a day that are legally allowed to be hunted by CITES quotas. Legally hunted in areas that manage them as a sustainable harvestable commodity. I think an argument against Elephant hunting is more strongly grounded when based on the sentience of the species and of the genetic and behavioural impact of taking out mature male 'tuskers'. There some interesting debate there certainly. Another example is the lion cull in Bubye Valley conservancy. 200 lions needed to be removed, largely through culling because they are on a high and threaten the stability of the local ecosystem if left to naturally decline through the starvation caused by over predation of their prey populations. 200 lions that could have been a source of conservancy revenue to further fund wildlife management but wont because of the plastic internet outrage caused by the Cecil saga. https://blog.nationalgeographic.org/2016/02/25/culling-to-conserve-a-hard-truth-for-lion-conservation/ If that continues then the lion in these self funding sustainable conservancies becomes an economic liability and will be less tolerated. 2 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
bird 9,871 Posted September 6, 2018 Report Share Posted September 6, 2018 2 hours ago, Savanna said: A while back bodswana bands hunting on elephant, this week they found 90 carcasses of elephant poached. A whole heard POACHED...So you tell me who is wiping them out... yeh , and you shooting the legally 2-3 day quoted below by our intellectual idiot B/H below , they got no chance of every recovering , thats them and the other big 8 . there all in decline , and you still want to shoot them what sad pricks you are. The best thing can happen is all the big 8 become extinct so nothing poach, and nothing to shoot legal . it got the biggest crime rate in the world S/A , shoot them black feckers over there if you want to kill something lol Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Born Hunter 17,751 Posted September 6, 2018 Report Share Posted September 6, 2018 (edited) 25 minutes ago, bird said: yeh , and you shooting the legally 2-3 day quoted below by our intellectual idiot B/H below , they got no chance of every recovering , thats them and the other big 8 . there all in decline , and you still want to shoot them what sad pricks you are. The best thing can happen is all the big 8 become extinct so nothing poach, and nothing to shoot legal . it got the biggest crime rate in the world S/A , shoot them black feckers over there if you want to kill something lol "intellectual idiot" I'll refrain from throwing insults back at you seeing as you struggle with basic f***ing English and punctuation. You are utterly wrong and all emotional about it. Managing a species with hunting is not a threat to them and is in fact protecting them from decline in those areas. Read a book ffs or a link I put up wih the views of actual independent conservationists explaining the situation. Hunting reserves and conservancies are protecting wildlife habitat. More wildlife habitat than even the national parks protect! They are NOT responsible for population decline because the 2-3 killed a day fund the conservation of an equal and greater amount! Revenue from limited harvesting (2-3 /day) fund the fight against poaching and agricultural encroachment in those areas. This is an demonstrable fact! But I'm the idiot. Prove I'm wrong if you can. Present the evidence that supports your abusive rambling. Claiming it's 'common sense' doesn't cut it when I can and have shown examples of you being wrong. Counter them with your own examples and studies. Oh and 'big eight' isn't just African mega fauna, it's a new term that includes wale, shark and wild dog. Pretty sure you mean the big five seeing as no c**t is walking around Africa shooting f***ing wales. Edited September 6, 2018 by Born Hunter Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Born Hunter 17,751 Posted September 6, 2018 Report Share Posted September 6, 2018 The Bubye Valley Conservancy does not rely on trophy hunting to manage the lion population. I will discuss the economics of hunting in brief. The most recent and robust lion population survey data calculate a current lion population on the Bubye Valley Conservancy of between 503 and 552 lions (it is impossible to get a 100 percent accurate count on the exact lion number — which also changes daily with births and deaths). Carrying capacity is an extremely fluid concept, and changes monthly, seasonally, and annually depending on all sorts of factors including rainfall, disease (of both predator and prey), and economics. It is estimated that 500 lions eat more than U.S. $2.4 million each year (the meat value used is a very conservative $3 per kg – compare that to the price of steak in a supermarket, and then remember that the Bubye Valley Conservancy used to be a cattle-ranching area, and if wildlife becomes unviable, then there is no reason not to convert it back to a cattle ranching area once again). Quote Link to post Share on other sites
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