While working as an assistant PH in South Africa (assistant to the PH), I got the opportunity to hunt by myself. I was to shoot a warthog, an impala, and a wildebeest.
The warthog and impala were easy to find so I bagged one of each by the second day. The thing about the wildebeest though, they were very skittish because that one piece of property was hunted frequently.
While I was following Wile E. Wildebeest, I came down with a fever. Unknown to me at the time, I had contracted Tick Bite Fever. It is just as you imagine it would be to hunt in the warm sun while you ache so much you don't want to stand, let alone walk. Miserable. What was compounding this was that my three day hunt was stretching into its sixth day.
I was coming to realize that I couldn't keep up with my quarry, shuffling through the brush like I was. I was going to have to sit in a blind, a move that I hated making, but this nonsense had to end. I prayed a prayer that I had been repeating for three days, "Please help me finish this and send me a blind one!" That week I was learning about His sense of timing and how He is clearly on a different schedule.
I was trudging along this road, on the way to this ground blind when I look up and see him.
This is a unique experience for me because he is just standing there, 20 yards away, letting me look at him. After it took me a full five seconds to snap out of my disbelief, I leveled the rifle and WHAM! A .375 H&H bullet punched through both of his lungs, just kissing his heart.
I let out a shaky sigh. It was over. I would have shot a milk cow by then but I walked up to an old, pretty, and big bull Wildebeest. I kneel there, admiring him and damned if he isn't blind!
The warthog and impala were easy to find so I bagged one of each by the second day. The thing about the wildebeest though, they were very skittish because that one piece of property was hunted frequently.
While I was following Wile E. Wildebeest, I came down with a fever. Unknown to me at the time, I had contracted Tick Bite Fever. It is just as you imagine it would be to hunt in the warm sun while you ache so much you don't want to stand, let alone walk. Miserable. What was compounding this was that my three day hunt was stretching into its sixth day.
I was coming to realize that I couldn't keep up with my quarry, shuffling through the brush like I was. I was going to have to sit in a blind, a move that I hated making, but this nonsense had to end. I prayed a prayer that I had been repeating for three days, "Please help me finish this and send me a blind one!" That week I was learning about His sense of timing and how He is clearly on a different schedule.
I was trudging along this road, on the way to this ground blind when I look up and see him.
This is a unique experience for me because he is just standing there, 20 yards away, letting me look at him. After it took me a full five seconds to snap out of my disbelief, I leveled the rifle and WHAM! A .375 H&H bullet punched through both of his lungs, just kissing his heart.
I let out a shaky sigh. It was over. I would have shot a milk cow by then but I walked up to an old, pretty, and big bull Wildebeest. I kneel there, admiring him and damned if he isn't blind!