Author Topic: African Elephant War Bow Questions  (Read 22099 times)

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Offline Ian.

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Re: African Elephant War Bow Questions
« Reply #15 on: July 06, 2011, 08:16:20 pm »
If he was the guy with the mullet then ignore it it was total rubbish. There are 170s being shot today the record stands at 200lb
ALways happy to help anyone get into heavy weight archery: https://www.facebook.com/bostonwarbowsbows/

Offline stickbender

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Re: African Elephant War Bow Questions
« Reply #16 on: July 06, 2011, 11:36:29 pm »

     Can't remember if he had a mullet, or not.  It was in an archery Magazine quite a few years ago, I can't remember if it was 200# or 220, for sure, but I believe it was 200#.  It showed him shooting the bow, and the arrow was like a 1/2 inch thick.  I just took it for what the article said.  All I know is  that he was supposed to be a Native American.  I have no idea what particular tribe.
     But none the less 200#, is a hell of a bow!  Can you imagine if that thing exploded?!!! :o :o

                                                                          Wayne

Offline JW_Halverson

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Re: African Elephant War Bow Questions
« Reply #17 on: July 08, 2011, 12:39:07 am »
I read the bit about the woman hunting the elephant with a bow and wanted to get some more information.  So I googled her name.  Mistake.  Bad mistake. 

There are dozens of websites dedicated to (and I am not exaggerating) threatening her life, limb, and safety.  The threats are such that they are sufficient to expose the persons who have posted to legal ramifications up to and including felonious prosecution.  Those that are content to not threaten her are using the most vile and abusive language towards her.  Women spewing the "c" word they themselves consider to be the unspeakable word rolls off their keyboards with practiced ease.  Vicious is the word that best describes these people and their violent ravings. 

I have never heard the level of malevolent evil from the gun-wackies/kill-em-n-grill-'em crowd and they are supposed to be the  blood thirsty murderous ones!!!  I guess now more than ever we hunters need to hold our tempers in check, bite our tongues for a moment to regain calm, and speak rationally and calmly, supporting our arguements with facts and relevant research.  We'll never win over the radical nuts, but the battle is for the Middle Ground.  Act civil, speak with facts, and refrain from name calling and threats....let the middle ground decide which side sounds most reasonable and sane. 

Ok, getting off my soapbox now.

As for my choice in bow for hunting elephants...I dunno.  Not that it makes a lot of difference because whatever I chose it wouldn't help because by the time I got 12 yds from a bull elephant I would be reduced to a quivering, sobbing, whimpering pile of goo because I have read plenty about what one of these things can do when only mildly peeved, must less actually angry.  I've read of elephants spending several days carrying around a human corpse just so they can beat the crap outa it again when they feel like it!!! 
Guns have triggers. Bicycles have wheels. Trees and bows have wooden limbs.

Offline stickbender

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Re: African Elephant War Bow Questions
« Reply #18 on: July 08, 2011, 01:53:01 am »

     Yepher, DE crazies is out there.  And they will be the first ones to scream if you were to use the same language, and tirades that they use, on a subject they feel near and dear to.  Ah, more chemicals, and GMO for our food please. :P Who knows, with all the crap in the food, the crazies will be the norm, and the norm will be the crazies.  I am with you, I don't think I could get anywhere near that close, to an adult Elephant, and even a teen aged one.  They can be more devilish than the adults! >:D
     Yeah, the power, and speed, and intelligence they possess, is phenomenal to say the least.  I read of an account of an African hunter who was hired to cull a rogue Bull Elephant, and he said it was quite smart, and very deadly.  They can sneak up on you without making a sound.  They are incredibly stealthy when they want to be.  The pads of their feet are like huge sneakers..... ::)  Sneak, ....sneakers...... ::) ;D  Ok, yeah, I would not be a good candidate to cull one of those things, first of all it would be able to smell me quite a distance off.  Even the natives would leave me.  I would  have to have some awful dependable depends! :o ;D :P :P   Sounds like the Phenomenally Emotional Tangent Association is at it again, fomenting violence, by spewing their delusional rantings as intelligent discussion.  Maybe we could talk a bunch of them into forming a human shield around the Elephants that are to be culled...... ;) 8) 8)  Like the Idiot that ran into the bull ring, and got between the bull and the Matador, and the bull, thought, ok, this guy is closer, and took him out, and then went on with the bull fight.  The Gene Pool got a little cleaner in the shallow end that day. ;) Or the woman who tried to stop the running of the bulls, and got ripped a new one by a bull.  They want peace and harmony among our little animal friends, but will be the first in line to kill a human who actually likes to hunt and fish.  It must be the chemicals and GMO's in the food supply..... ::) ;D ;D  Must be ;).......it is affecting peoples ability to think rationally, in addition to the other health risks. ;) ;D  Or they could just be plain nuts! ;) ::)   Anyway, I applaud the the woman for her feat.  I sure couldn't do it.  If I had the strength to pull that heavy draw bow back, then I have the strength, to carry a .458 Winchester, or .464 A&M magnum, .416 Rigby, etc. ! ;)  Then I don't want to shoot an Elephant with one of those either.  Not that I have anything against culling an Elephant, I have gotten wimpy in my older years.  I don't like shooting my 45-70 at the range either.  A shot or two at game, ok, but not much more than that .  But one of the big boys, I don't have any desire to shoot, unless I had to. ;)  I have shot a 375 H&H mag a few times when I was younger, and it got all the desire to shoot a really big gun out of my system.  But to get within 12 yds. of a full grown bull Elephant, and stick it with an arrow!. :o :o  I think I would take my chances on smacking a water buffalo in the rear, with a rolled wet towel!! ::)

                                                             Wayne

Offline CraigMBeckett

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Re: African Elephant War Bow Questions
« Reply #19 on: July 08, 2011, 09:35:24 pm »
Howard Hill used a 115# bow. ad the arrows were 41" long.

You may be correct but I doubt it, if you take a look at the video  again and concentrate at about 3 minutes 11 seconds, when HH has just walked up to the kill he has both a the bow and and arrow in this hand, compare the arrow length to the bow. I would suggest the arrow is more like 30 inches than 40.

stickbender,

Quote
Buuuuutttt.....the arrow was not a normal length, arrow......it stated it pierced 31 inches, into the heart, and there was still almost half of the length left sticking out. Though it did not look quite that long in the pictures.  Still not six feet.  Could be Artistic license on the part of the narrator.

Its possible that they were talking of an arrow that did penetrate that far which was not necesarily the one you could see protruding from the kill, think of the number of shots HH made and how many shafts you saw in the animal.

Craig.



Offline Prarie Bowyer

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Re: African Elephant War Bow Questions
« Reply #20 on: August 20, 2011, 05:13:43 am »
From Howard Hill Archery catalogue. 

Howard shot 3 elephants.  One was a rogue or "Tembo".  on Feb 27,1950 Howard became teh first WHITE MAN to ever kill an elephant with a bow and arrow.  "Tembo" is a 3 lam bamboo bow  modeled after the the famous "Gran-Ma" bow that he used to kill all three elephants.  It sells for $525.00.  I'm guessing that the actual was closer to the Wesley Special.  Hill was famous for heavy draw weight bows.  He is quoted as saying his favorite hunting weight is 80-90# but can draw 100# easily.  It was his physical conditioning.  At 65 he was shooting a 75lb bow with "ease and comfort".  He shot such a bow for 30-90 min three times a week.  Shooting was his exercise.

Most Hill bows are 4 laminations except the "Wesley Special"  which is 5 laminations of tempered bamboo and Tembo, a 3 lam bow.  His bows can be requested at any weight up to 200 lbs and 32" draw in lengths between 60-70".  They all contain fiberglass.  Hill was quite quick to adopt fiberglass in his designs as some of his actual early bows are galss backed and some are glass bellied.

http://www.howardhillarchery.com/robin-hood-limited-edition.html
the current special edition is looks bamboo backed and glass bellied.

Offline Loki

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Re: African Elephant War Bow Questions
« Reply #21 on: August 20, 2011, 08:52:29 am »
Bit of topic but here's a thread about Chief AJ's Longbow record.
https://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php?topic=2910.0
Durham,England

Offline CraigMBeckett

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Re: African Elephant War Bow Questions
« Reply #22 on: August 21, 2011, 11:35:45 pm »
Bit of topic but here's a thread about Chief AJ's Longbow record.
https://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php?topic=2910.0

I would suggest the correct way of referring to this is undocumented, unproven claim.

Craig.

Offline bow-toxo

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Re: African Elephant War Bow Questions
« Reply #23 on: September 01, 2011, 08:30:48 pm »

  I wouldn't hunt an Elephant, but I would dearly love to have some tusks, and an Elephant foot umbrella stand.  Saw a matching pair of tusks in the home of a very wealthy man years ago.  They were at least six feet tall and very thick.  I remember seeing an Elephant leg umbrella stand, in an antique shop when I was a young boy.

                                                                        Wayne

I would have hoped that killing intelligent beautiful animals and making orphans of their young for these kinds of questionable and trivial purposes was in the past. Unfortunately it is not.
If you kill it, eat it.

Offline JW_Halverson

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Re: African Elephant War Bow Questions
« Reply #24 on: September 01, 2011, 10:44:05 pm »

I would have hoped that killing intelligent beautiful animals and making orphans of their young for these kinds of questionable and trivial purposes was in the past. Unfortunately it is not.
If you kill it, eat it.

I would agree if I could overlook the fact that in some parts of Africa the elephant population  has exceeded the carrying capacity of the land they inhabit.  Good conservation methods would dictate removing a number of bulls, but also a critical number of females without calves.  The usual clientele that's well heeled enough to afford paying for an elephant hunt is going to be able to absorb the added cost of the requisite game manager/guide that can point him towards the correct animals, avoiding the unnecessary orphaning of young.   

The other choice in areas where elephants are overpopulated is to try teaching them abstinence and/or safe sex practices.  I don't know if they are ready for that yet. 

I spoke with a local gentleman here that has hunted elephant with his wife in Africa.  He states in both cases the carcass was stripped of ALL usable meat in under three hours by teams of 4 trained bushmen.  All bushmeat is distributed thru the area to various agencies/tribal governments, no waste.  Cripes, it takes me all of that much time to skin, quarter, cut, and wrap a 100 lb deer!

Guns have triggers. Bicycles have wheels. Trees and bows have wooden limbs.

Offline bow-toxo

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Re: African Elephant War Bow Questions
« Reply #25 on: September 02, 2011, 02:07:12 pm »
JW Halverson.   Good and informed points. Unfortunately the "carrying capacity of the land they inhabit" is continually rreduced by irresponsible human overpopulation, a high number of children coupled with environmental destruction by natives and foreigners alike [ 90% rain forest destruction in Cameroon.in 30 years ] which makes it easy for elephants to exceed the "carrying capacity". Teaching the human population abstinence would be a better idea, but perhaps more difficult.

Offline JW_Halverson

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Re: African Elephant War Bow Questions
« Reply #26 on: September 03, 2011, 01:48:00 am »
kinda sad to think the elephants probably are more likely to learn to limit their population.
Guns have triggers. Bicycles have wheels. Trees and bows have wooden limbs.

Offline iowabow

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Re: African Elephant War Bow Questions
« Reply #27 on: September 03, 2011, 10:53:09 am »
Watched the video that is one POWERRFUL BOW! 
The arrow length might work for me, I am 6'6" and weigh  about 316 pounds.
Geeeee! 6.6 and 316 you don't need a bow you could just punch it in the face. 
(:::.) The ABO path is a new frontier to the past!

Offline Prarie Bowyer

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Re: African Elephant War Bow Questions
« Reply #28 on: September 09, 2011, 03:14:36 am »
I forget that areas now because elephant will never be on my list of "stuff to shoot" but the safari hunts have made a comeback becasue of a combination of good government and a rare occasion when well structured market incentives worked out.  It's not so much that the habitat is reduced and thus carrying capicity is reduced, at least in the regions I'm thinking of.

Hunting and eco-safari are big business for them with little else to market or trade on the world market.  Too keep the money coming in then the resource needs to be optimaly mnaged.

Side point "Naked Economics" has an interesting if depressing bit on the market for Rhino horn.  Poor buggers are probably doomed. 

I didn't know you could eat elephant.  Well I guess "bush meat" is just that.  Primeaval slabs of chewy meat from which to extract protien.  There are some elegant and tasty "deer looking" animals there I'd love to sink an arrow into.

Offline bow-toxo

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Re: African Elephant War Bow Questions
« Reply #29 on: September 11, 2011, 02:25:47 am »
I didn't know you could eat elephant.  Well I guess "bush meat" is just that.  Primeaval slabs of chewy meat from which to extract protien.  There are some elegant and tasty "deer looking" animals there I'd love to sink an arrow into.

Habitat is definitely reduced in Africa by population increase with too many kids. I can't imagine what regions you are thinking of. Even in the arctic polar bear habitat is reduced by higher temperatures that some people outside of Texas call "global warming".

It's possible to eat elephant. Elephants culled in South Africa are turned into "biltong" which is elephant jerky. Of course poachers don't bother. We have "bush meat too", deer, moose, wild boar, wild turkey, rabbit.