The next day , louis and i were seeing alot of game. Kudu bulls were coming to the waterhole. There was one bull mature enough to shoot but he stayed back and never did come in. There were many large bulls that haven't yet reached maturity.
A few will defiantely hit 55"plus in a year or two. Louis informed me that it takes 9 years for a kudu to reach his potential and nothing but time and genetics will change his horns.
The third day found us back at the waterhole waiting for kudu. The cows and calves are the first to arrive. Later in the morning, the mature bull decides to come to water. I draw and release, and watch my arrow drop underneath the kudu. He ran a short distance. Ten minutes later he returned and i got another shot.
Not wanting to shoot low , i over compensate and strike the kudu in the spine. Shooting from a blind has really messed with my depth perception. I promptly put a few more arrows into him.
Even with arrows in his chest , it took a few minutes for him to expire.
African game are extemely tough with amazing will to survive. In my trophy photo, there's no smile. I was saddened that i didn't kill him quickly.
Kudu are magnificient . Their markings are truly unique. The kudu was the one plains game i wanted the most and there he was on the ground.
I was impressed with the penetration of the tuffhead. It fully penetrated the spine to the point that we couldn't see it. I was shooting a 55lbs schafer with goldtip arrows . I used three types of broadheads. Vpa, tuffheads, and abowyer. They all performed.