SA Hunting Experience

SA Hunting Experience We have a variety of concession in the Limpopo province to cater for all your hunting needs. We acco Let us help you to create your lifetime of memories

We at SA Hunting Experience pride ourselves to conduct all our hunts in an ethical way. We are driven by a passion for hunting and through our hunting help to conserve our natural heritage for our future generations. It is our aim to give our clients an unforgettable African hunting experience and help you to realise your dreams. You will experience the much celebrated South African hospitality. W

e will serve you with mouth watering South African dishes, complimented with award winning South African wines.

22/09/2020

The cyanobacteria the country now blames for 330 elephant deaths is pervasive in more than half of SA's dams, and that is likely to get worse.

21/08/2020
14/07/2020
27/11/2019

Happy Thanksgiving to all our American friends.

29/08/2019

SADC Statement at End of CITES Conference Today
Draft Intervention – closing plenary Mr Chairman, Tanzania takes the floor as the Chair of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and speaks on behalf of the following SADC countries: [to be confirmed: Botswana, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Eswatini, Lesotho, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Zambia, Zimbabwe including Tanzania].
This Declaration is made to express the grave concern that the SADC Parties mentioned here have with regards to the implementation of this Convention.
As members of the global multilateral system and democratic, representative governments, we are obliged to ensure that we meet our commitments to all those international agreements and declarations to which we are signatories, as well as responsibilities to our citizens.
Recognizing that CITES is one of the oldest wildlife and trade agreements, we are obliged to give it due consideration but within the context of subsequent and contemporary agreements and declarations to which it bears relevance and to which we are also signatories.
CITES in its Preamble accepted the principle of: “Recognizing that peoples and States are and should be the best protectors of their own wild fauna and flora” and the Convention on Biological Diversity 1992 in Article 3 provides that: “States have, in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations and the principles of international law, the sovereign right to exploit their own resources pursuant to their own environmental policies, and the responsibility to ensure that activities within their jurisdiction or control do not cause damage to the environment of other States or of areas beyond the limits of national jurisdiction.”
We contend that CITES, in form, substance and implementation, is not aligned with other international agreements of equal weight and arguably greater relevance to the challenges of today. These agreements emphasize the following principles: - sovereignty over the use of national resources; - inclusive, equitable development through the sustainable use of natural resources; - recognizing that rural communities living with wildlife have inalienable rights over the use of their resources; and - recognizing that in today’s world of rapid changes in climate and land use and the accelerating pace of transformation of wildlife habitat, the survival of wildlife depends on the perceptions and development needs of people living with wildlife. The way CITES is currently operation is contrary to its founding principles. Today CITES discards proven, working conservation models in favour of ideologically driven anti-use and anti-trade models. Such models are dictated by largely western non-State actors who have no experience with, responsibility for, or ownership over wildlife resources. The result has been failure to adopt progressive, equitable, inclusive and science-based conservation strategies. We believe this failure has arisen from the domination of protectionist ideology over science decision in making within CITES.
This anti-sustainable use and anti-trade ideology now dominates decisions made by many States who are party to CITES. States are increasingly influenced by the dominance both at meetings of the decision-making structures of CITES and in their run up by protectionist NGOs whose ideological position has no basis in science or experience and is not shared in any way by the Member States of SADC and their people.
This conservation model is based on entrenched and emotive rhetoric and discourse, backed up by intense lobbying, as opposed to science. Foremost amongst these motifs now dominating CITES is the unfounded belief that all trade fuels illegal, unsustainable trade, ignoring clear evidence to the contrary.
Examples of this are the attempts by others to impose new trade restrictions for species that are effectively conserved – and utilized – in our States, such as lions and giraffe, while the real threats in those States where such species are in decline due to habitat loss and human-wildlife conflict continue to go unattended.
The Southern African countries have observed, with great discomfort the polarised discussions on African charismatic large mammals at this CoP 18. It is very disturbing to see the North South divide across the African continent rearing its head again.
We are further concerned that positions of some Parties appear to be based on national political considerations aimed at catering to the interests of national, intensively lobbied constituencies, as opposed to proven, science-based conservation strategies. This undermines the SADC States, on whom the responsibility to manage species falls, and our ability to do so effectively. As it is currently implemented, CITES undermines the rights of people living in rural areas of SADC States to have access to and use in a sustainable manner the natural resources present in their communities that are required to enjoy adequate living conditions and the right to participate in the management of these resources. The consensus expressed through CITES by the majority of States undermines our region in our efforts to secure social and environment justice through the sustainable use of our natural resources. In doing so it is compromising our ability to meet obligations and responsibilities to other multilateral agreements and to our peoples.
The populations of iconic African wildlife species in our region illustrates the effectiveness of our conservation models. Similar examples of successful conservation outcomes have not been forthcoming under ideologically driven approaches to conservation. Yet, at previous meetings of the Conference of the Parties to CITES, efforts made by us to advance and strengthen the same conservation strategies that have worked so well have been rejected.
Those who bear no cost of protecting our wildlife, nor bear any consequence for decisions of CITES on our species, vote without any accountability against working conservation models in southern Africa. To this end, we have had to invoke measures such as announcing a dispute, the first time ever in CITES. As members of the global community we fully appreciate the importance of multilateral negotiations, such as those that take place within CITES, in identifying and collectively working towards solutions for the greater good of humanity.
We have been committed Parties to CITES since its inception or our accession to it and would wish to remain so. But we can no longer ignore these glaring shortcomings and threats to our national interests and to our commitments to the broader multilateral context. Mr Chairman, the time has come to seriously reconsider whether there are any meaningful benefits from our membership to CITES. I thank you.

Sadly FC passed away after he was mauled in an unprovoked attack by a buffalo that had a cable snare from a poacher on h...
28/08/2019

Sadly FC passed away after he was mauled in an unprovoked attack by a buffalo that had a cable snare from a poacher on his leg. It is a sad reality of our profession, we love what we are doing and know the dangers that are lurking in the bush. Please support this fundraiser to help Estelle cover expenses.

Our hearts are shattered and broken today. Our dear friend Professional Hunter, FC Prinsloo has gone to heaven, succombing to multiple injuries from a cape buffalo attack. Please pray for his dear wife Estelle and the Bushmans Quiver Quality African Safaris family. We are all simply devastated, but....

27/08/2019

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I have 2 X 30 lb and 1 x 40 lb Elephants available. If you are interested please contact me.
15/08/2019

I have 2 X 30 lb and 1 x 40 lb Elephants available. If you are interested please contact me.

Please support this petition.
15/07/2019

Please support this petition.

Can you spare a minute to help Jaco Human?

13/07/2019

Doing load development for my 416 Rigby, what a day.

A great example of Journalism today....A little girl leaning into a lion's cage. Suddenly, the lion grabs her by the col...
13/07/2019

A great example of Journalism today....

A little girl leaning into a lion's cage. Suddenly, the lion grabs her by the collar of her jacket and tries to pull her inside to slaughter her, under the eyes of her screaming parents.

A biker jumps off his Harley runs to the cage and hits the lion square on the nose with a powerful punch.

Whimpering from the pain the lion jumps back letting go of the girl, and the biker brings the girl to her terrified parents, who thank him endlessly. A reporter has watched the whole event. The reporter addressing the Harley rider says, 'Sir, this was the most gallant and bravest thing I've seen a man do in my whole life.

The Harley rider replies, 'Why, it was nothing, really. The lion was behind bars. I just saw this little kid in danger and acted as I felt right.'

The reporter says, 'Well, I'll make sure this won't go unnoticed. I'm a journalist, you know, and tomorrow's paper will have this story on the front page. So, what do you do for a living, and what political affiliation do you have?

The biker replies, "I'm a U.S. Marine, a Republican and I voted for Trump".

The journalist leaves.

The following morning the biker buys the paper to see if it indeed brings news of his actions, and reads on the front page:

** U.S. MARINE ASSAULTS AFRICAN IMMIGRANT & STEALS HIS LUNCH. **

And THAT pretty much sums up the media's approach to the news these days.

11/07/2019

British Shooting Show at the Birmingham NEC to welcome hunting guides

Happy INDEPENDENCE DAY to all our American friends.
04/07/2019

Happy INDEPENDENCE DAY to all our American friends.

Hunting is an essential brick in the wall of sound African conservation practiceThere is huge pressure from lobby groups...
28/06/2019

Hunting is an essential brick in the wall of sound African conservation practice
There is huge pressure from lobby groups in developed nations to ban trophy hunting in Africa. Would the outcry be the same if farmers in the UK had to deal with man-eating crocodiles in their rivers, marauding lions around their cattle farms, and elephants killing people and destroying their crops? .. to read the full letter click http://bit.ly/ReadWhyHuntingIsEssential


.Nature.Foundation.NNF delta conservation and anti-poaching

25/06/2019
Hats off for his brave deed.
23/05/2019

Hats off for his brave deed.

A Kruger Park game ranger lauded for bravery when he stopped a leopard from attacking a colleague, was honoured posthumously this past weekend.

We still have openings available
24/04/2019

We still have openings available

24/04/2019

IWFF caring for AFRICA

24/04/2019
We proudly support IWFF
24/04/2019

We proudly support IWFF

PLEASE SUPPORT THIS IWFF INICIATIVE THANK YOU

What a good explanation
09/04/2019

What a good explanation

Too funny not to share.
03/04/2019

Too funny not to share.

😂

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