Selous
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I was watching the Discovery series Lone Target/Manhunt and was reminded about my own tracking experiences in the veld in South Africa. I decided to create this thread in order to discuss tracking (both human and animal) and counter tracking. Please share tips, techniques and stories. Does Pakistan have a dedicated tracking unit or school ? How good are the people who live in rural areas at tracking ?
I will begin by sharing a story of my own. In South Africa we have the San people (Bushmen) who are known for their phenomenal tracking abilities. However it is not only the San who can track. Almost all the Africans who grow up in rural areas can track to some degree but some tribes are better at it than others due to lifestyle differences. Some of the best trackers come from the Griqua people. I was hunting with my family on a farm outside the town of Kimberley. My tracker was a Griqua man. The size of the land we were hunting on was about 27 thousand hectares so it was a huge place. Anyway one of the members of my party shot and wounded (it was just a graze above the shoulder) a blesbok. The animal ran away and since we were on foot we could not follow very quick. The tracker decided that we would come back the next day to look for the animal since it was not seriously wounded and in about half an hour the sun would go down. At the spot where the animal was standing was just one drop of blood on a blade of grass. The next day this tracker found that same drop of blood on the blade of grass in a sea of grass...I mean there was grass as far as the eye could see with some trees here and there. He then proceeded to track that animal for the next 8 hours over some of the worst terrain that I have ever hunted in (the grass eventually gave way to rocky land) until he found the animal and we shot it dead. I am a decent tracker myself but most of the time I could not even see what this guy was following...especially in the rocky areas...there was no blood, no hoof prints nothing...I had a feeling that he was following by scent. It was unbelievable.
I will begin by sharing a story of my own. In South Africa we have the San people (Bushmen) who are known for their phenomenal tracking abilities. However it is not only the San who can track. Almost all the Africans who grow up in rural areas can track to some degree but some tribes are better at it than others due to lifestyle differences. Some of the best trackers come from the Griqua people. I was hunting with my family on a farm outside the town of Kimberley. My tracker was a Griqua man. The size of the land we were hunting on was about 27 thousand hectares so it was a huge place. Anyway one of the members of my party shot and wounded (it was just a graze above the shoulder) a blesbok. The animal ran away and since we were on foot we could not follow very quick. The tracker decided that we would come back the next day to look for the animal since it was not seriously wounded and in about half an hour the sun would go down. At the spot where the animal was standing was just one drop of blood on a blade of grass. The next day this tracker found that same drop of blood on the blade of grass in a sea of grass...I mean there was grass as far as the eye could see with some trees here and there. He then proceeded to track that animal for the next 8 hours over some of the worst terrain that I have ever hunted in (the grass eventually gave way to rocky land) until he found the animal and we shot it dead. I am a decent tracker myself but most of the time I could not even see what this guy was following...especially in the rocky areas...there was no blood, no hoof prints nothing...I had a feeling that he was following by scent. It was unbelievable.