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ARTICLES
RECORD BOOK SPIKE
The author’s first whitetail, a spike,
had longer horns than the steenbok he took in South Africa
28 years later.. yet the diminutive antelope is among the
best of its breed.
When we swung into the graveled drive in front of the brick
farmhouse, I assumed that Thomas, our guide, was stopping
to get a key to a locked gate, behind which was supposed
to be boundless herds of impala and toothy warthogs. I was
surprised when a barefoot youngster charged out of the house
and climbed into the Toyota’s bed alongside me.
His name was Jun (pronounced Yuri). When we came to the
first gate, the 11-year-old jumped down, ran to it, opened
and held it until we’d driven past. After he closed it behind
us and twisted the wire that served as the gate’s primitive
latch, he hopped back into the truck. Before continuing,
Thomas began conversing with Jun in Afrikaans.
After an exchange involving a flurry of hard consonants
and the kid’s pointing, the professional hunter turned and
explained. “A large herd of impala has been seen several
times at the edge of a field,” Thomas said. “We’ll start
there!”
My partner, Tim Martin of Auburn, was up first. I’d shot
a gemsbok the previous evening, and it was his time to ride
standing against the truck’s cab, which can be a lot like
planting your knees against the gunwale of a deep-sea fishing
boat. But that’s the way most plains game safaris start
out in South Africa. You usually get off after spotting
an animal and stalk within range. Sometimes, as you’ll read
later, it isn’t necessary.
Soon into our drive through what resembled a badly overgrown
pasture, Tim and Thomas dismounted to stalk some impala.
They were unable to head ‘em off at the pass, so to speak,
so we resumed the slow drive through the property until
a trio of warthogs made the mistake of trying to run faster
than Tim could shoot.
Afterward, when I was the gunman, we crossed the main gravel
road to hunt the opposite side of the sprawling farm. I
was astounded to learn later that the farm actually belongs
to young Juri, not to his father. And nobody knew the land
as well as that kid did. That was why he’d joined us; it
wasn’t because “the old man” needed a babysitter.
The second place we visited held cattle, and not the Hereford
or Angus varieties that one sees in rural Alabama. If not
for their domesticated demeanor, the lop-eared, humpbacked
creatures more resembled some species of bulked-up antelope
than cows. I must admit that I even fancied one hanging
above my mantel before we rounded a dusty bend and I spotted
a for-real antelope.
Okay, I actually had no idea what it was. From a distance
of a quarter-mile, it could have well been a rabbit. And
truthfully, even from a couple hundred yards it still might
have been a rabbit. I’m talking small!
While I studied the miniature deer-like shape through my
scope, which was cranked all the way up to 12-power, Thomas
was looking at it through binoculars. At first, I was just
mildly curious, never once thinking that I’d like to waste
the ammunition on what had to be a steenbok (steen-buck).
I’d seen several of them in three days of scanning the brush.
But then the little fellow turned his head and the sun struck
his coal-black horns, which really got my attention. Even
to my untrained eye, he was an exceptional male, a fact
that Thomas somberly acknowledged.
“That is a great trophy,” he half mumbled before turning
his brown eyes on me. In them, I recognized that if I wasn’t
interested, it would take all the self-control that Thomas
could muster NOT to take my rifle and shoot it himself.
Behind me, Tim also cooed: “Man, he IS a nice one!”
But I’d already decided to take the shot before either of
them said a word.
As soon as my crosshairs drifted over his shoulder, I gently
squeezed the .30-06’s trigger. The shot felt as smooth as
butter, and I was certain that the165-grain grand slam bullet
would obliterate the animal’s boiler room. But instead of
falling, he just turned and walked a few yards into the
bush. Within seconds, Thomas and I were on the ground and
creeping forward.
“There he is, standing beside that tree,” he whispered.
“Shoot him again!”
I couldn’t see the steenbok’s head or neck, but his shoulder
was visible.I scoped the tree first, then moved a little
right — putting the crosshairs just behind his front leg
— before touching the trigger. I couldn’t believe it when
he remained on his feet. The bullet had barely nicked the
tree, though fragments still tore into my target. Yet it
took more than a minute for him to fall.
While examining my prize, I discovered that the first shot
had blown straight through him. The exit hole was no bigger
than the entrance, though the shot had pierced both lungs.
That’s the only reason I got a second chance. The follow-up
did tremendous damage, even after and probably because it
had glanced off the tree.
I was joking when I proclaimed back at camp that I’d bagged
a “world record” steenbok, but I wasn’t too far off the
mark. I didn’t know until more than a month later, but my
steenbok sailed into both Safari Club International’s and
the Rowland Ward record books.
None of the other guests paid much attention to the “Chihuahua
with horns” until Christo Carstens and Bud Weakland, two
of the three partners behind Amber African Adventures, began
ogling the 5-inch-long horns. Of all the superb animals
taken that week, none received more attention than my little
trophy.
I didn’t know it until I got there, but there is a growing
number of people who long to take Africa’s “Small Five.”
The Big Five, commonly referred to as “dangerous game,”
includes elephant, rhino, Cape buffalo, leopard and lion.
Try as I might, I haven’t been able to find out the other
species among the Small Five, but steenbok is among them.
So is duiker, which I also saw during my safari.
The duikers were just too fast for me. As soon as I saw
them, they’d already seen me and were slicing through the
tall grass like the velociraptors of Jurassic Park. And
while the duikers were generally seen in pairs, the steenboks
were always alone.
Scoring steenbok horns, at least by SCI’s yardstick, is
a matter of taking four measurements to the nearest sixteenth
of an inch — two overall lengths and each horn’s circumference
at the base. Minimum for inclusion in the SCI record book
is 11 inches, the best on record carrying 16 12/16 inches.
Highveld Taxidermists in South Africa scored mine at 14
inches.
Booking Information: To book your African safari, call Russell
Weakland at Amber African Adventures (301) 790-2084 or e-mail
him at hunterwbg@aol.com. |