Rifles > Bolt-Action

African Big-Game Hunting Rifles

African big game requires big-bore rifles.

7/9/2010

African rifles fall into two categories, those for plains game and those for big game. The two are inversely related between their lure and their utility. A big-game rifle, which will be used sparingly, is far more appealing and mystifying with its romance of big Nitro Express calibers and double-barreled Holland & Hollands stalking though the long grass after huge Cape buffalo. The plains-game rifle, on the other hand, is far less captivating, but you’ll shoot it 20 or 50 times more on kudu, impala, zebra and bushbuck than you ever will buffalo or elephant with your big-game rifle.

But what do we dream about? Big-bore doubles! Nitro Express calibers! Stopping rifles! That’s because Africa is alive in our imaginations thanks to the wonderful legacy of gifted writers like Ruark, Hemingway, Capstick, Hunter and dozens of others who have bequeathed the richest body of hunting literature in the world. I don’t get goosebumps thinking about a .30-‘06, but my eyes gloss over and I sink into blissful reverie as I imagine going after elephant with a Westley Richards drop-lock double rifle in .475 Nitro Express.

Traditionally, “big game” in Africa means three animals: elephant, rhino and buffalo. Personally, I would add hippo (on dry land) to that trio. Big game is, by definition, heavily boned, thick-skinned and dangerous. Novices might wonder why Africa’s most fearsome predator, the lion, is not included with “big game,” but the reason is that a lion is not all that hard to kill. He’s soft-skinned, thinly-boned and goes down easily when hit in the heart-lung area. The fact that an animal is dangerous does not necessarily make him big game, as we see in the case of leopard, hyena, bushbuck or roan (when wounded) and possibly the most vicious animal in Africa pound-for-pound, the honey badger.

Big game requires a big gun. The minimum legal caliber in almost all of Africa for elephant, buffalo, rhino (and lion) is .375 H&H Mag. Most professional hunters (PHs) and experienced clients prefer calibers that start with a “4” such as the .404 Jeffery, .416 Rigby, .416 Rem., .458 Win. Mag. or .470 Nitro Express.

Traditionally, a big game rifle would be a double. However, as Africa opened up and Game Departments came into being, it was economically impossible to equip wardens, rangers and scouts with London’s best. Mauser’s bolt-action model of 1898 was more than up to the task of “control work” in terms of strength and reliability, and you could buy 10 or 20 Mausers for the price of one double of even the most pedestrian sort.

Accordingly, England’s gunmaking houses introduced a number of superb cartridges made for bolt-action rifles (i.e., featuring rimless bottle-neck cases) with the .404 Jeffery emerging as the runaway favorite. Jeffery made thousands of .404s compared to about 150 rifles made in .416 Rigby. (It’s one of those ironies that the .416 Rigby became far more famous than the .404 Jeffery—largely because of Ruark writing about Harry Selby’s .416—but the Jeffery was the workhorse of Africa.)

Of course Holland’s .375 Belted Rimless Nitro Express—better known as the .375 H&H—was and remains the most versatile and forgiving of all the bolt-action cartridges ever developed for big game. The .375 H&H came upon the scene in 1912 as part of the wave of new calibers that the gunmaking houses were feverishly introducing as proprietary calibers. Others, like the .425 Westley Richards and .505 Gibbs, fell by the wayside, but Holland’s .375 attained immortality.

Double Vs. Bolt-Action
Side-by-side rifles were, are and will always be expensive. Even the so-called “affordable” doubles introduced in the past few years by Heym, Kreighoff and Merkel either touch or come close to five-digits. Debating the merits of a double versus a bolt-action is therefore a bit like comparing the merits of private jets with commercial airlines— it just isn’t relevant to most of us.

Look, there’s no denying that any African hunter would pick a classic English double over any bolt-action if told he could have his choice, free and for nothing. If you won the Safari Lottery and you could pick a William Evans sidelock .500 Nitro Express or a Winchester Super Grade Model 70 in .458 Win. Mag., honestly, would you even hesitate?

To reiterate what we’ve all read before on this well-worn topic, a double offers two guaranteed shots, handles and points like a shotgun, carries comfortably due to its wonderful balance and positively reeks with aesthetic pleasure. A bolt-action is accurate, more affordable by a long shot, takes a variety of scopes readily, comes in far more calibers and delivers the third and fourth rounds faster than a double.

Most PHs carry a bolt-action, but almost all of them would opt for a double if the cost wasn’t such an obstacle. My very good friend Michel Mantheakis from Miombo Safaris is an exception. He carries a Dakota Arms bolt-action in .450 Dakota (a souped-up .458 Win. Mag.) and does so by choice. He’s used a double and doesn’t care for them. His Dakota is fitted with a ghost-ring peep sight, which, Michel says, is both more accurate and faster than a double’s V-notch express sights.

Another good friend, Andrew Dawson of Chifuti Safaris, would sooner sell his soul than his William Evans .470 Nitro Express. He literally lives by his double, having stopped more than one very close elephant charge at his feet.

Former PH and Zimbabwe Parks Department control officer Richard Harland used a .458 Win. Mag. with a five-round magazine during most of his career and he swears that he wouldn’t be among us today if he had been armed with a double. Those six rounds of capacity saved his skin more than once when tangled up with panicked elephants in heavy cover.

Looking back at some of the great PHs of the halcyon days of safari hunting, you have more double men by far. John Hunter strongly championed the double and used a Boswell .500 Nitro to shoot more rhino than any one past or present. Philip Percival, “Pops” on Hemingway’s safaris, was a double man as well. Harry Selby was a notable exception with his famous-beyond-reason .416 Rigby. (As noted, Rigby only made about 150 .416s in total; it just wasn’t all that notable “back in the day.”)

The point here is simply this: Yes, a double would be lovely, but if you have a bolt-action in a suitable caliber, you’re more than good to go for big game.

Caliber Considerations
Again we can keep this simple: The best big game cartridge for the average client is the .375 H&H Magnum. The recoil is manageable, excellent factory ammunition is available and virtually every brand of rifle you could possibly want chambers for the .375.

The best thing about the .375 is that it can serve double duty as a plains game rifle. It’s possible to use a bigger caliber for plains game, but unless you’ve developed a tolerance for recoil—which is to say, you’ve learned to focus so intently on sight picture and trigger squeeze that you literally don’t even feel the kick— then you’re better off reserving your “heavy” for big game and taking a second rifle for plains game.

Other than the first-choice .375, I like any of what John Taylor called the “large-medium bores” such as the .416 and .423. Far more .416 Rigbys have been made by Ruger than were ever made by Rigby, and CZ makes an excellent bolt-action as well for the big .416. Remington’s modernized .416 Rem. is a great choice as well.

I’ve long had a warm spot for the .423 caliber, which is known in English circles as the .404, while over on the Continent they refer to it metrically as the 10.75 mm. The most famous .423 is the .404 Jeffery, but there have been modernized versions such as my wildcat, the .425 Express and Dakota’s wildcat, the .423 Dakota.

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6 Responses to African Big-Game Hunting Rifles

Joe Chatterjee wrote:
May 27, 2013

Excellent article. The Indian angle is missing though. You can't not mention India and talk Big Game. Till the early 70s India was the destination for Elly, Bison, Himalayan Black Bear and we have - rather HAD - Tiger. I started out with a 12 bore double barrel. Enough gun for the beginer. I also bagged my first 'stripes' with that. Eventually I gradueted to a 450/400 Nitro Express. I still have it but hunting has stopped by law. Only the occasional Rouge Elly and/or Maneater Tiger/Leopard declared by the govt. invites pros to take it down and take home the spoils.

cesar wrote:
November 11, 2012

Indeed, the 375 H&H is the ideal gun to take to an African Safari but if you find yourself within 25 yards from an upset Cape Buffalo, make sure your shot placement is excellent....you may not have a second chance.

greg wrote:
May 19, 2012

be better article if you added example pics

Garth wrote:
January 24, 2012

Waiting to recieve my licence for my 470 Ne . This article has been very interesting reading for me.I just hope that in the years to come my rifle will have the luxury of hunted a few of the dangerous game.

Satchel wrote:
January 10, 2012

An excellent article. Very well written, informative. No problem with the 100 yards statement at all. Took buff at 80 yards this past year. Closee as I could get, but a magnificent animal and " what a rush". After shooting many calibers, I have settled on a favorite: .375 H&H magnum. Not for everyone, and not for every situation I realize, but I love every moment with it.

Rafe wrote:
March 08, 2011

Well Cameron, old boy, while you don't understand shooting a buffalo at 100 yards, sometimes you have to take what you get. I don't think it helps for writers such as yourself by making judgement statements like, ""I don't understand for the life of me what motivates a person to shoot a Cape buffalo at 100 yards. You might as well take a pot shot at Elsie the cow at that distance. A buffalo at 100 yards is not in the least bit dangerous." You can't imagine every hunting situation and the guy going after his first buff may only get his chance at 100 yards. For him it may be the hunt of a lifetime even if he's not fearing for his life while doing it. Otherwise a decent article even though you didn't mention the .458 Lott which beats the .458 Winchester Magnum.