British hunter killed by buffalo he was trying to shoot

British hunter killed by buffalo he was trying to shoot

http://www.telegraph.co.uk

A British man working as a professional hunter on a private game reserve in 
Zimbabwe has been killed by a wounded buffalo he was trying to shoot.

By Peta Thornycroft, Aislinn Laing in Johannesburg

2:45PM BST 11 Jun 2012

Owain Lewis, 67, had been tracking the animal for three days to finish it 
off after it was shot and injured by a visiting American hunter he was 
escorting.

Paul Smith, the owner of Chifuti Safaris in the lower Zambezi Valley, said 
Mr Lewis was “very tough and experienced” but had been caught unawares when 
the buffalo charged from the undergrowth and tossed him in the air.

“It turned on him and attacked him and unfortunately the apprentice hunter 
with him could not shoot the animal as Owen’s body was in the way,” he said.

“It was a very tough fight. Owain’s neck was broken but the apprentice did 
manage to kill the buffalo.

“We are very shocked. This is the first time we have had an incident like 
this.

“We have had so many messages of support from people who hunted with Owen.

It is a tragedy.”

One of the people who hunted with Mr Lewis, Alan Bunn, posted on a message 
board that he was “a man who had probably forgotten more about Africa and 
hunting than any of the younger professional hunters will ever learn”.

“He was a kind soul who worked hard and always carried with him the very 
best of attitudes,” he wrote.

Mr Lewis is understood to have adult children, who were travelling to 
Zimbabwe from their homes in the United States and New Zealand for a funeral 
on Friday.

He previously ran his own ranch in the Chegutu district of central Zimbabwe 
but it was seized by Zanu PF supporters in 2001.

The Cape Buffalo is one of African safaris’ prized Big Five and one of the 
most dangerous animals in the world, also known as “The Widow-maker”. It can 
grow up to 1.7 metres in height and 3.4 metres in length, and weigh as much 
as 910kg.

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