In my last entry I wrote the
first part of the story of my warthog hunt. Now, there are always two parts to
any hunting story: what happens before the shot, and what happens after the
shot. This is the rest of the story.
We remained in the blind for
about 15 minutes waiting for the adrenaline shakes to subside and took the
opportunity to review the footage. Unfortunately, Dad got excited and kept the
camera just a bit high so we were unable to see the placement but we were
confident in my shot. We left the blind and walked around the waterhole to my
arrow, in the process scaring away the impala that had scattered and milled
around in the back ground. The arrow was every bit as bloody as it looked from
the blind and the leaves around it were spattered with blood. After placing my
arrow back in the quiver we began our tracking.
My arrow, covered with blood.
Now, anyone who has followed a
blood trail in the States knows that finding blood is pretty straight-forward
if you know what you’re looking for and you know which direction your animal
went. There are enough dead leaves and grass, so that, assuming you aren’t
tracking through a freshly turned field, blood is fairly obvious. Well, this is
Africa, the middle of the dry season. There is hardly any grass, absolutely
none on the trails, leaving nothing for blood to land on but fine, dry, red
sand. This sand wreaks havoc on blood, turning bright red liquid into caked
areas of sand, only identifiable from being recently wet. We searched for over
half-an-hour, no blood. As I mentioned before, we failed to carefully watch
which direction the hog had taken off in after the shot so had only a general
idea of which way he had gone. Eventually, I managed to find one splotch of
blood about 75 yards down the trail that had puddled in the sand.
At this point, we were very confused. My shot
placement was good, my bloody arrow was indicative of that, so where was the
blood? And, more importantly, where was my warthog?
Climbing a termite mound to get cell phone
reception, we SMS’d (“short message service” text) the farm manager to let him know I had
shot a warthog, then continued the search with a fine-toothed comb between the
shot site and the blood spot. Finally, after another 10 minutes, we found one
small stick coated in blood. Another 15 yards down the trail, I found a freshly
caked patch of sand very much like a large splash of blood would be shaped.
After marking these locations, we returned to the blind to wait for the
manager. He arrived shortly and we showed him the sign we had found. He confirmed
that the spots were, indeed, blood which was a relief to us! Connecting the
dots now, we found 2 more spots of blood, and continued along the trail. They were
few and far between, but served to keep us on track. Just when we started to
wonder if he had turned off, we would find another splotch. Finally, about 100
yards from the shot, I looked to my right from a drop of blood, and there he
was, piled up 5 yards from the side of the trail!
After the initial excitement of
recovering the hog had worn off, we examined the entry and exit points of my
arrow. I had made a near-perfect shot, the entry wound in the center of the
lower half of the shoulder. Rolling him over, we discovered that my arrow had
collided with a bone that had caused it to drastically change course. The arrow
to exited in the middle of the ribs on the opposite side, despite the perfectly
broadside shot. This trajectory is what caused the sparseness of blood while we
were tracking him. The entry and exit holes were not positioned to allow proper
draining of the blood, most of which remained inside the hog until we cleaned
him.
After taking our pictures, we
dragged him back to the vehicle and took down our blind. The other workers
could not believe that I had killed the big hog with only a bow.
This hog had definitely been
around for a while. In addition to his magnificent tusks, he had many battle
scars on his body, as well as several gashes on his hindquarters that had not
yet healed. An apparent characteristic of warthogs, he was crawling with ticks.
The real work began at the
skinning shed. We skinned him out, and removed the trophy head before taking
care of the guts and meat. We were now able to properly analyze the performance
of my arrow and bow. The 100-grain Muzzy 3-blade broad-head performed
flawlessly, slicing cleanly through the shoulder muscle and some ribs,
shredding the left lung, nicking the heart, and clipping the liver before
exiting through the center of the right side of the rib cage. My 70-pound draw
strength Parker Buck Hunter compound bow delivered the Cabela’s Big Game Hunter
arrow quietly, on target, and with more than enough force to propel it cleanly
through the tough old warthog. I also used a Trophy Ridge sight, and a 7-inch
Octane stabilizer.
Though the scale was broken we
determined the cleaned carcass weighed roughly 25-30 kg (55-66 lbs). We then loaded
up, settled up, and returned home. Later we took the skin to the taxidermist
and were pleased to find out the shoulder mount will be finished within 4
months. In other words, we will get it back before we return to America in
December. It will look fantastic on our wall!
All in all, it was an awesome
day! Dad and I had several excellent hours in the blind, and finally went home
with an awesome trophy that was well worth the wait. I loved every minute of
our hunt.
I welcome your comments.
Until next time, may your arrows stay sharp!
Success at last!
Oh my goodness gracious! I couldn't wait to read this second part after finishing the first! I don't normally find hunting autobiographies to be compelling reads, but this was great!! You set up and told the story so compellingly well. (And its a pretty stinking awesome story anyway! You did it justice!) Congratulations on the writing AND the hog!! =)
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