Duiker Ducking Dispatch

Lee Foote
14 min readAug 21, 2020
Duikers; dimuntive and deceptive dammit!

In the back of everyone’s mind were the elegant spiral horns of a desert Greater Kudu (Tragolaphus strepiceros). The Kalahari is not the best Kudu habitat but they are sprinkled throughout. Kudu are Africa’s poster child over a huge geographic range; the grey ghost, the spiral-horned beauty. They are to the African veldt what North American Whitetails are to the rural farm landscapes. We were to see Kudu several times on our Botswana hunting safari, in all cases within range, but they were not the individuals I had specified I was seeking. My criteria were a mature bull of representative or better quality yet the first pair we saw were a cow and calf strolling elk-like out into the middle of an open pan at sunset. No bull.

An elegant kudu cow

Another day, while pursuing Springbok (Antidorcas marsupialis), we saw spiral-horned shadows at mid-day under a distant Acacia. Even though I got very excited PH Robert gave a glance and put down his binoculars with two words “Young ones”. Although 2 ½ year old Kudu are very pretty, like a responsible hunters of Bighorn Sheep (Ovis canadensis), I was committed to a mature animal. Some of the hallmarks we sought were ivory-tipped horns that completed their 3rd spiral and were pointing back forward with good length, indicating an older animal.

Kudu horns are a complex mixture of three-dimensionality. There are no straight lines, all of the curves are on variable radii, and the depth of the curls is compensatory to the height, thus, gains in some dimensions constitute losses in others. To quantitatively judge Kudu from afar one must rely on experience and the general “Zen” or gestalt to distinguish large from average. As with trophy Bighorn Sheep (Ovis canadensis) though, if one has to agonize over an animal’s appearance, it is probably not a mature animal. When a real head-turner appears there is no question in the first few seconds of viewing.

Sheep hunter Alex standing in the presence of 209 inches of horn greatness

Most PHs, particularly those with extensive buffalo (Syneceros caffer) experience, contend the worst possible animal to remove from the region is a high-scoring young animal with some serious growth potential and breeding years remaining. The loss of horn mass on Buffalo heads where the soft bases shrink or are boiled off is unfortunate. Hunters are directed at hard-boss older males.

An old, hard boss with some buffalo horns on his head

Of course, it is the sheep or buffalo hunter’s choice, but the role of trophy-chasing is part of it for those so motivated. A similar ethos applies to teenaged Kudu and headgear is one of the pivotal pieces of “trophy” consideration. The animals are allowed to remain in their wild context for up to 95% of their natural lives, doing their breeding, influencing herd dynamics, and being subject to predation pressure. If they manage to run that gauntlet successfully they enter a short term category of being subject to the trophy hunter’s gun. Their genes remain in the bloodlines and many never are shot before they expire naturally.

The idealist in me said things like “I don’t want to just drive around and shoot at creatures in Africa, I want to maximize my time walking and reading sign with the trackers”. That was before we went over to actually hunt the Kalahari. The reality is that one has 7, 10 or even 21 days to try to see a reasonable chunk of the millions of acres of game-rich wildland. Animals are distributed across a huge, well-vegetated area and they move long distances with weather, remember, this is a desert and moisture is widely scattered.

There is simply not enough time to walk a significant area of hunting ground to reasonably expect many animal encounters. Certainly it could be done and we could have fed our tent mates with juvenile Springbok or an occasional Steenbok but if one is after 5-year-old males with reasonable headgear, one must encounter then bypass many many other animals along the way. It is clearly a spot-and-stalk regime. Walking in soft sand with soaring mid-day temperatures will limit most hunter’s foot travel to 3-hours in the morning and 3-hours in the afternoon. The waist to head-high vegetation is great at obscuring wildlife, so being elevated on the truck box helps even the detection score a little bit.

A company of foot-weary hunters returns to camp

Given the simple numbers game of having to locate, glass and sort through many dozens or hundreds of animals to select one on which you want to plan a stalk, some sort of elevated and faster-than-walking mode of transport makes sense. Additionally, the auxiliary non-game wildlife encounters are maximized by covering a lot of ground. We bumped into an Aardvark (Orycteropus afer), a Honey Badger (Mellivora capensis), and several cool venemous snakes; unusual encounters all. We also saw a plethora of birds that we would not have seen by restricting ourselves to a few square km of foot-hunting. Although we didn’t happen to bump into any of the big cats, most hunters do see them in the course of a week’s hunt. Tracks are much easier to investigate from above as well. I would certainly boot-hunt if I lived here and knew the habitats but for now it was a combination of overview then focus in and stalk.

I also had specified I wouldn’t shoot from the back of the vehicle, and although legal, that was never expected. Maybe if I were 80 years old and couldn’t walk I would think differently and set up a blind or a platform adjacent to a vehicle in Africa. Not ideal but with sufficient frailty it could work. I would love to try hunting off horseback in Africa as depicted in Teddy Roosevelt’s Game Trails across Africa. That would be about the ideal. Horsemen tell me they can shoot from any horse’s back . . . once! Actually, a horses shifting, breathing, and twitching makes them a very poor shooting platform and it tends to make them deafer than most horses already are. Regardless, there is plenty of opportunity to stalk all African game on foot after it has been spotted. We many times would stop the vehicle ½ km short of a pan then sneak and crawl to its border to glass. That is how I killed a beautiful Springbok (different story).

Njoxlau Kashe, one of very few remaining master trackers of the Kalahari; a hunter and researcher assistant

We had set aside all of Thursday to hunt Kudu while remaining open to pursue a Springbok or Common Duiker (Sylvicapra grimmia) if one crossed our path.

The typical method of hunting desert Kudu and Leopard (Panthera pardus) is not unlike following a snow track for Mountain Lion (Felis concolor) in the Western US; one finds very fresh tracks in the desert sand of a large male and follows them until a shot presents itself. Our trackers were as visually attached and solid on a track line as any hound. In the last few years this camp has taken their Leopard allotment (1 or 2 per one million acres) this way and the trackers told some animated stories of those encounters. Track, track, track — bump the leopard- track, track, track- bump the leopard. About four of these bumps and some cats gets cranky and turn to battle the trackers and hunter.

Mysteriously to me, tracker Jahnie always wore a heavy tattered army surplus coat in the Kalahari heat. It turns out it was the lucky coat was shredded by a leopard’s claws and teeth that got him just as he dived for cover. The hunter used his rifle butt to smack the cat (he couldn’t shoot for fear of hitting the tracker) then they killed the cat as it departed. Exciting stuff. They figure 1/3 of their Leopard kills involved a charging animal after long tracking session on foot. Some PHs actually do use a shotgun with buckshot as a Leopard hunt backup weapon behind their hunters.

I would have welcomed a Kudu standing, fleeing or charging but that is not what I got. Before we could even get on a good Kudu track something gray dashed out of the bush and streaked off. The trackers got as animated and excited as I had seen them all week and we all hit the ground running — Duiker Duiker!!. The PH (professional hunter), a black Botswanan named Robert Ramajarak, carefully told me with a rolling R sound “Rrruunning shot?!”. OK, turn the scope down to 3-power and stay at port arms ready to shoot. An hour later, still walking fast, the rifle is slung over my shoulder and I was marveling at the tracker’s skill, admittedly, after crossing a rock-hard and grassy pan, and circling several dunes, I wondered if they were pulling my leg. The only serious excitement came when we bumped an occasional Steenbok or pushed a group of Eland (Taurotragus oryx) out ahead of us.

Can’t make soup out of springbok tracks

The real beauty of hunting Africa’s dry tropics is the abundant bird life, interesting reptiles, vegetation patterns, and big dynamic wildlife that materializes in context as you walk. Few nature tourists get the immersion in that context that is obtained by an armed hunter. No Jeep, trails, or known habituated animals. Above I only mention that Robert is a Black Botswanan PH because there are only a few of them persisting after the country-wide attempt to integrate the White-dominated PH industry. His quiet humble demeanor, knowledge of farming and mastery of five local languages that inculcated a trust of the trackers were all welcomed PH dimensions.

We had gone about 300 yards when the strangest thing happened. With no discernible change in the track pattern, Jahnie slowed crouched, raised two fingers and waggled them and panned the brush as if to say “Somewhere in here, be ready” so I inched forward as if I was approaching a covey-rise of quail and 40 yards away a chunky gray-brown animal that came up to my mid-thigh appeared at full speed from under a fallen acacia. He was going flat out away presenting a 25 mph target dashing through brush. I was taken aback and there were some chuckles and head-shaking amongst the trackers and PH. The word “running” did not do him justice, he was Rrruunning! Well, they had warned me. Damn! I should have been carrying a shotgun with #2 buckshot as this was more like rabbit hunting for 40 lb rabbits at 30 yards.

One cannot discuss such a hunt without discussing the trackers. I tried to pay as much attention to what they were doing as possible but it was clearly a higher level of interpretation than I have undertaken in the gumbo mud of my native Louisiana, USA, or my snow-tracking in Alberta, Canada where my hunting now takes place. The 50?-year old (? because he didn’t know either) Jahnie would occasionally trade off with the 20-year old Matutsi as they strolled, trotted, or pondered the track line.

There was only one quiet conversation for hours on end while tracking and that was Jahnie softly talking to the tracks. He was in a zone and was carrying on animated but very quiet exchanges with the track and possibly the animal, I could not tell. It did seem almost trance-like and as I watched his eyes, he was taking in the landscape, I’m guessing to predict where he would go if he were a Duiker, where the distant track line went, and what the tracks in front of him were saying. In the easy spots he was looking 30 yards out, in the tough spots he was looking six feet ahead to the closest tracks. When walking he would run his hand along above the line as he walked just to the left of the tracks. This provided me, Robert and Matutsi a view of the track line and would allow him to quickly set up the shooting sticks in his right hand or to make a quick departure from the firing line of a right-hand shooter if things happened fast. It is worth while thinking through the hunter’s obligation to shoot safely when there is a tracker out front, bearing in mind also the risk of hearing-damage from muzzle-blast even if the firing line is clear. As in our group hunting in North America, only the gun in front comes into play on game.

Duiker run like a pig in what has been described a head-down diving motion, hence the Afrakaan name for “diver” is duiker. Both front feet strike the ground together sending sand plumes rocketing. They run head-down like a fullback and I sense that the trackers love them because they are so linear in their direction, leave such a distinctive two-footed track, and because they tend to stay in the sandy portions of the range. While running, they seemed to make big, predictable sweeping curves. I learned later that when they slow, it is a precursor to meandering off their travel line to bed or hide. Here is where one gets ready because the hunters are probably within 50 meters of them.

Duiker only have two speeds — flat-out, or stationary. Interestingly, when we first started tracking it was not clear if this was a male or a female. Only the males have horns and those are small. The world record horns are around 7 inches long. I had asked Robert to call shoot/no shoot based on horn presence as I was willing to try for any Duiker with visible horns. Turns out, this guy was a biggie; 5+ inches estimated. Running shots with a rifle are generally a no-no for me, but in this case I was trusting the tracking ability and the ballistic/systemic havoc that a big rifle (7mm Mag., 160 gr. Nosler Partition) would cause with any hit on a 40 lb animal. I felt confident if I could even slow him down a bit I would kill him. It was early in the day and we would follow him for 2 more hours. At one point the Duiker made a dramatic and un-duiker-like 90 degree right hand turn that threw us. Even after Jahni had relocated the track he would not leave the turning animal’s track until he understood why. The reason was that the Duiker had run right up to a walking pride of lions in his way. We were only 20 minutes behind a similar meeting.

Someone’s photo of a duiker demonstrating one of their only two speeds.

We were back on his trail for another hour and ½ when the exact same scenario played out, Jahni slowed, gave the scan signal, a bush shook and the brown streak was flying away, Robert said “Take him!” so I shot . . . twice. There was hair in the scope both times but who knows where the crosshairs might have been Jahnie smiled broadly and said “Good shot. . . but you missed” Classic San optimism! His assessment was corroborated by glimpses of our quarry going over a distant dune in a flashing unbroken gait. I think I saw a faint blue streak in his wake. Then the trackers found the powdery silver depressions in the sand where each of the bullets had struck — they don’t miss a thing. Six inches left of the track line then 8 inches to the right.

All accuracy aside, it always surprises me how quickly I can shoot a bolt action. As a kid I would spend hours mock-shooting my dad’s old military 06 Springfield, working the bolt fast as I could to kill the next imaginary enemy or trophy moose. That practice comes back I guess, but as mentioned, the accuracy on such shots is another thing entirely. In hindsight, I should have spent more time on a single well-placed shot but based on the first two flushes, I estimated there was a 2.5 second window of shooting time on each.

The morning that had started for Kudu, the prince of the spiral-horned antelope was totally occupied with Duiker, a diminutive primitive antelope with small headgear and I was completely immersed in and enjoying this very active hunting. I came to call Duiker “poor man’s leopard” because of the tracking style hunt. After 3 ½ hours of fast walking in soft sand we were all flagging out a bit. Jahnie seriously did not want to give up the track but Robert and I were tired, hot, and thirsty, it was past lunchtime, and it was 3 miles back to the truck where we had left Naomi alone.

The Duiker had clearly and utterly won this contest and I tipped my hat to my quarry. I was satisfied with awarding him his respite and remembered how important it is that we hunt as hard as we can and that we are not always successful. Apparently only 20% or so of Lion (Pantera leo) stalks culminate in a kill, thus, we remain in good company. It had been a great and memorable morning. It is an amazing privilege to have 3.2 million acres available to just 2 hunting parties to wander around in, go where we want, and use the wildlife resource.

Also interesting is that there are two local villages and no fences in the 8 million acre complex of hunting districts and National Parks of the Southern Kalahari. The local people keep a few goats and cattle but those stay within a couple of km of the village where water troughs are filled and cat-proof bomas are erected for night time protection. They have willingly kept livestock out of the game range because the receipt of dollars from hunters exceeds livestock income. We paid the tribal councils $4,500 USD each for our week of hunting. That is badly needed money in a region with one of the highest HIV incidences in the world and where daily average income is $4 per day. Hunting this way is also a highly sustainable activity that removes a tiny fraction of the animals on the land each year -approximately 70 male animals taken annually from the thousands inhabiting the region, though some doe culls also occur for local meat supplies. Hunting here helps ensure the future of an intact, socially valued ecosystem. Even my non-hunting wife, the environmental sociologist who focuses on international development issues found a great deal of merit in this cultural/ecological arrangement.

Naomi’s hand in a lion print; she actually does have 5 fingers, unlike me.

It had been a long morning of circuitous walking in terrain that all looked pretty similar. Now it was time to go back to Naomi and the truck. The trackers internal GPS pointed them straight toward the vehicle (amazing again) and we trudged out of the bush over many Cheetah (Acinomyx jubatus) and Black-backed Jackal (Canis mesomelas) tracks suggesting we were near a kill site not of our own. When the truck finally came into view, Naomi was not in it. It seems bees had found a leaky water jug and were swarming the truck so Na had stretched out under a nearby Acacia to do some reading.

Hmmm . . . what if that nearby pride of lions had wandered past where she sat! Desert hunting is always a thrill!

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Lee Foote

Southerner by birth, Northerner by choice, Casual person by nature.