Recently I got hold of a German WWI military 7.9x57JS Mauser. The rifle is still in its original condition, made at Spandau in 1916, thus giving it a provenance of almost 110 years ago. From what I could deduce, it saw war service in East Africa, probably issued to one of Colonel Von Lettow-Vorbeck’s askaris. Its barrel bore looked good when viewed against the light, with no evidence of rust or pitting. I tested the rifle with Czech-made military ammunition dating from the early 1950s, which I obtained in an original ammunition crate from Rosenthal Guns in Windhoek. The rifle kicked like a mule, and made a lot of noise, but with proper ear protection and some shoulder desensitisation I got used to it. After a few adjustments to the sights, it zeroed spot-on at the shooting range on my farm, with a bullet grouping of only five centimetres from a hundred yards.
My quest for old things also led me to a post-WWII Willys Jeep, of the so-called flat-fender type, which I found in a backyard at Rehoboth. The Willys needed some tender love and care, but after rewelding its drive shaft, stripping it of some unnecessary extras, replacing its engine oil seals, and some adjustment to the steering, it runs as new. Although the Willys is ideal for climbing the rocky terrain on my farm, looking for game, it has no proper loading space for anything bigger than a warthog. From a scrap yard at a neighbouring farm, recently sold to a new owner from Europe, I retrieved a broken-down donkey cart, which we slowly got back onto its wheels again. This I adapted for use as a flatbed trailer at the back of the Willys. At a Windhoek-based arms dealer I got hold of a packet of modern Sellier & Bellot ammunition for the Mauser, which I tested on the range and got even better results than with the military ammo. Now we were ready for a hunt.
The rocky hills at the northern end of my farm are an ideal habitat for kudu. I often find cows with accompanying young ones of up to fifteen in a group. Now and then, a single breeding bull would join them. Especially in the winter months, during the rut, the single bulls come out of the mountains where they spent time resting and eating browse, in order to herd together the cows for mating. Also in this area, I sometimes find older bulls singly or in a bachelor group. I generally do not shoot kudu bulls, as I have a standing agreement with my neighbour to leave these at an inflated price to his trophy hunting clients. But, with rifle and jalopy ready to rumble, I decided that this was too good an opportunity to let go. I made sure that the Willys’ battery was fully charged and the fuel tank filled up. With my trusted companion Mannetjie /Uirab as lookout and tracker, we set out to look for an animal to hunt.
The terrain is rocky, strewn with quartzite for most parts, with small outcrops of granite spaced throughout the landscape. Trees are scarce. Only here and there some lone wait-a-bit thorn, raisin bush or Shepherd’s tree dots the landscape. Kudu bulls like resting in the shade of these trees, where they are difficult to see, during the heat of the day. Therefore we waited for later in the afternoon before we set out from the homestead. I needed to shift into low range at two places, when we crossed the thick sand in the bed of the Gaub River coming down from the Gamsberg and from the Hakos Mountains, but the Willys took it in its stride.
Just as we rounded the first prominent rocky outcrop, Mannetjie tapped me on the shoulder: “I think I saw the horns of some animal flashing in the sunlight, just behind those rocks over there”, he said. I gave him the binoculars, and indeed, after some focusing of the lenses, he came out with a crisp: “Kudu bull!”