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Jason
August 5, 2015 at 8:43 am
It doesn’t look to have a matching side. I think you would be able to see it if it did. Monster no matter what, jiust not a typical.
Maverick
August 4, 2015 at 2:06 pm
What a freaking monster! Oh man that is a huge left side..I sure hope this bucks right side matches bc I think he definitely has a solid shot of 200 inches gross. Good Luck to the hunter.
steve cornetti
August 3, 2015 at 2:01 pm
Hi Mike,
I am glad you posted about this. I have not seen any other outdoor sites touch this. I have only been on one US guided hunt, so my knowledge of this type of thing is limted to mainly what I read. I have no problem with people hunting lions. If I had paid 55 grand, I would assume the PH had the lion permit-I would not have asked to see it. I read different accounts of how the hunt went down – some stating they drove a carcass inside the preseve to draw the lion out….Regardless, my thoughts are that is primarily on the PH – but agree the client has some responsibility. The one point that makes me wonder though – he apparently shot the lion the first day of the hunt, recovered it the second, left for home the third day (because no elephant….). My understanding is lion hunts generally run 20 days. He did not want to stay one extra day and enjoy the scenery, food, drink generally relax, etc? Makes me think he knew sh$t was going to hit the fan and if he wanted to keep the lion head – he had best get it out of the country ASAP. I still think the PH carries most of the responsibility for this fiasco. Just my thoughts for now – facts on the actual hunt seem scare right now. Enjoyed the post Mike – Thanks
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It doesn’t look to have a matching side. I think you would be able to see it if it did. Monster no matter what, jiust not a typical.
What a freaking monster! Oh man that is a huge left side..I sure hope this bucks right side matches bc I think he definitely has a solid shot of 200 inches gross. Good Luck to the hunter.
Hi Mike,
I am glad you posted about this. I have not seen any other outdoor sites touch this. I have only been on one US guided hunt, so my knowledge of this type of thing is limted to mainly what I read. I have no problem with people hunting lions. If I had paid 55 grand, I would assume the PH had the lion permit-I would not have asked to see it. I read different accounts of how the hunt went down – some stating they drove a carcass inside the preseve to draw the lion out….Regardless, my thoughts are that is primarily on the PH – but agree the client has some responsibility. The one point that makes me wonder though – he apparently shot the lion the first day of the hunt, recovered it the second, left for home the third day (because no elephant….). My understanding is lion hunts generally run 20 days. He did not want to stay one extra day and enjoy the scenery, food, drink generally relax, etc? Makes me think he knew sh$t was going to hit the fan and if he wanted to keep the lion head – he had best get it out of the country ASAP. I still think the PH carries most of the responsibility for this fiasco. Just my thoughts for now – facts on the actual hunt seem scare right now. Enjoyed the post Mike – Thanks