45/70 For African Big Game

By Major Van Harl

45/70 For African Big Game
45/70 For African Big Game
Major Van Harl USAF Ret
Major Van Harl USAF Ret

Wisconsin –-(Ammoland.com)- “All writers are agreed as to the hazards of invading the haunts of this savage animal, whose skulking habits, no less than his tremendous strength, render him an object to be greatly dreaded………..he is described to of so irascible a disposition that he will attack his great enemy, man, without the smallest provocation. And should he succeed in destroying his victim, it is his wont to stand over the inanimate corpse, goring and tossing it in vindictive fury with his formidable horns, trampling it under his feet, crushing and mangling it with his knees and stripping off the skin with his rough and prickly tongue; desisting occasionally, but to return again with renewed appetite, as though his revenge might never be glutted!” –Captain William Cornwallis Harris: The Wild Sports of Southern Africa

Hollywood has given us the image of the classic African big game hunter. He must look like Allen Quatermain, a character who originated in H. Rider Haggard’s 1885 book, King Soloman’s Mines.

There has to be the prescribed hunter’s uniform that consisted of khaki pants with lots of pockets, khaki shirts with lots of pockets, a khaki bush jacket with four pockets in the front, ascot if you are English and a slouch hat with the brim hanging down.

The 1890s in-style African hunter also has brown, not black leather everything, meaning brown boots, brown belt and brown pistol holster, brown sling for your rifle and binoculars and brown leather cigarette case. Of course you also had to have a extra man on your safari crew to carry the brown shoe polish and brushes to keep everything brown, brown.

The most important item of all is the double rifle that every Hollywood envisioned African hunter must have, especially when it is time to take photos after a successful kill.

The problem with that is, today’s world of African hunting double rifles are astronomically expensive and when most people see a double rifle in a picture they think it is a shotgun.

A modern double rifle without the big names of Holland & Holland, Westly Richards or even Jeffery can start at $10,000 to $15,000. If you go with one of old classic named rifles you obviously are not sending children through college.

After you adjust your budget to pay for an African big game hunt and no matter how much you spend on your double rifle it is still only a double rifle, and that means it only shoots twice before you have to reload. Now granted the double rifle you would want for dangerous big game should be in cartridges like 500 Jeffery or 600 Nitro, ammo you will never see on the shelf at the local Walmart.

The Allen Quatermain stories has been made into a number of movies over the past sixty plus years with stars like Richard Chamberlain, Sean Connery, Stewart Granger and even Patrick Swayze in the lead role. I can find pictures of the first three actors holding double rifles as they portray Quatermain in their perspective movies. Patrick Swayze is different in his movie version of re-telling the Quatermain story.

Allen Quatermain
Allen Quatermain

Quatermain in the books and movies is English and travels between Africa and England. Swayze’s portrayal of Quatermain has the African hunter as an American who travels between Africa and England. What is more notable about Swayze’s version of Allen Quatermain, is Swayze carries a lever action 1870s American made rifle and wears a ammunition belt (brown) full of big, old black powder, straight walled cartridges. Sometimes we forget that American made lever actions rifles were sold all over (Henry Arms being the first one) the world and not just John Wayne hunted and stopped evil with a lever gun.

Buffalo Bore 45 70 Ammunition
Buffalo Bore 45 70 Ammunition

The 45/70 cartridge has been in continuous use in this country since 1873. It was originally a black powder cartridge that was chambered in rather weak single shot rifles. It could stop anything in North America but because of its low black powder pressure and a 405 grain lead bullet, it was not going to work in Africa against dangerous game.

Times have changed for the 45/70 and changed for the better. First off you do not have to deal with a weak trapped door single shot rifle and weak by African standards ammo. A modern lever action Henry rifle can safely take enhanced 45/70 loads that would blow the trap door off of an old Springfield rifle.

Pete Swanepoel of Denver, Colorado has been guiding African hunts for his family’s business, Safari Bwana ( fortyfiveseventy.com ) in Zambia, most of his adult life. Mr. Swanepoel is a very good writer and I strongly suggest you go to his web site if you are considering hunting in Africa. He is a wealth of knowledge.

I found Mr. Swanepoel while researching hunting in Africa with a 45/70 rifle. He has successfully hunted and written about using the old American post Civil War cartridge to kill dangerous game in Zambia. This was accomplished with a lever action rifle, a brand -X rifle, but a 45/70 chambered lever gun.

Mr. Swanepoel, through real world experience hunting animals that were hunting him at the same time, has become a enthusiastic believer in the 45/70 round of ammunition, within reason that is.

45/70 For African Big Game

The lever action rifle gives you three times the amount of ammo in a loaded firearm, that a $25,000 double rifle will provide you. Sometimes you just need rapid access to more rounds on target, such as when a Cape Buffalo is trying to charge you and rip your intestines out. The real issue for Mr. Swanepoel and using a 45/70 lever gun in Africa is the ammunition.

Standard velocity factory 45/70 ammo will always be loaded to shoot safely in whatever is left of the weak single shot rifles that General Douglas MacArthur’s father was shooting when he was posted with the US Army in frontier Arizona in the 1870s.

Buffalo Bore Ammunition has developed 45/70 ammo that will stop anything on earth, now this is within realistic ballistic capability. If you are trying to shoot one of the big five dangerous game of Africa at 300 yards with a 45/70 you are pushing the envelope way too much. If you are dropping a Hippo or Cape Buffalo at 50-75 yards, one of Mr. Anthony Imperato’s brass Henry lever action rifles, loaded with some of Mr. Tim Sundles’ 45/70 magnum ammunition will get the job done.

Buffalo Bore’s Mr. Sundles’ has two 45/70 magnum loads that will fill the requirement for a deep penetrating round to use on dangerous game. Both the 8D 500 gr Barnes FMJ-FN bullet moving at 1650 FPS and the 8A 430 gr LFN-GC travelling at 1925 FPS will provide approximately five to six feet of penetration on large dangerous animals with practically no expansion of the bullet. Shooting those cartridges will get your attention.

Should you desire something a little easier on the shoulder to practice with I suggest either the 8NBPE with a 500 gr hard cast bullet or the 8MBPE that uses a 440 gr Hard bullet. The second two Buffalo Bore cartridges are black powder equivalent and are safe in any 45/70 rifle to include the old trap door Springfield.

Even so, Mr. Sundles assured me they will stop the thin skinned animals of Africa.

The issue is not the Henry lever action rifle or the venerable old 45/70 with new ammunition getting the job done, the problem is Allen Quatermain, khaki bush jackets, slouch hats and double rifles. International hunters, to include Americans and Canadians, show up in Africa after watching Stewart Granger and Debra Kerr take on the wilds of that continent with nothing, but Khaki and firearms with two barrels. That, is what the first time visitor/hunter to Africa wants to see.

Mr. Swanepoel told me there is a certain amount of fantasy that goes into hunting in Africa and it is not him guiding a party in the bush while wearing a pair of shorts, a Starbucks t-shirt and an Yankees ball cap, because its 100 degrees outside. Where is the khaki and the slouch hat? This fantasy also plays out in the firearm of choice in the need to see the double rifle, not Pete Swanepoel standing there with an American made lever action rifle like its high noon in Tombstone.

However, Mr. Swanepoel likes lever action 45/70 rifles and the truth is, so do most of his fellow professional hunting guides. If you have to go into the thick vegetation of the bush tracking a wounded lion, a 45/70 might be just the item to keep you alive. Over the years he has taken five 45/70 lever action rifles with him to Zambia. He always does the required paperwork to legally import the rifles into Zambia because he knows they are not coming back home to Denver with him.

There will always be a family member who also guides or a fellow professional guide who wants the 45/70. It is again however, about the correct ammunition that will take the dangerous wildlife and keep the hunting party safe.

Henry Arms .45-70 Lever Action Rifles
Henry Arms .45-70 Lever Action Rifles

If you are not going to Africa you still need a Henry brass lever action rifle in 45/70. You acquire the rifle and you acquire some of Mr. Sundles’ Buffalo Bore ammo and there is nothing in North America you cannot hunt with that combination.

Pete Swanepoel will be returning to Zambia this coming summer of 2017 and he will be taking a Henry brass 45/70 lever action rifle with him, along with some Buffalo Bore ammunition. I would suspect the Henry 45/70 will find a new loving home in Zambia.

When you are hunting Africa, Buffalo Bore’s philosophy of “Strictly Business” takes on a more profound understanding.

Mr. Swanepoel is a long time user of Andy Larsson’s, Skinner Sights, aperture /Peep Sight (www.skinnersights.com/henry_rifles_18.html), having successfully hunted in Zambia using the Skinner Sights. He will be installing Skinner Sights on the brass Henry 45/70 rifle he is takes to Africa. You never want to lose sight of what is trying to eat you out on the veldt.

Henry rifles built at the corner of Henry Ave and Quality Ave soon to find that quality in the possession of professional African hunters.

It does not take two barrels on a rifle to get the job down, it only takes the right ammunition, the steady hands of a practiced hunter and one brass Henry lever action rifle in 45/70.

Major Van Harl USAF Ret.
[email protected]

About Major Van Harl USAF Ret.:Major Van E. Harl USAF Ret., a career Police Officer in the U.S. Air Force was born in Burlington, Iowa, USA, in 1955. He was the Deputy Chief of police at two Air Force Bases and the Commander of Law Enforcement Operations at another. He is a graduate of the U.S. Army Infantry School.  A retired Colorado Ranger and currently is an Auxiliary Police Officer with the Cudahy PD in Milwaukee County, WI.  His efforts now are directed at church campus safely and security training.  He believes “evil hates organization.”  [email protected]

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Eaglesnester

I bet the above disgruntled poster is a Lie-beral as well as a commie progressive. They are always ready to restrict, shut up, and react violently to anyone or anything that they dislike or disagree with, sort of like the BLM fools and the snowflakes demonstrating around the nation. It is impossible to have a reasonable discourse with these individuals. His posts make no sense have and have nothing to do with the subject at hand. I have to question his intelligence and sanity

TS

Yes, because you are all about reasonable discourse. If you were just hurting yourselves, I would applaud it. You deserve it. If you don’t get my point, you’re an idiot. Commie? Seems to be that it’s you right wingers who are in bed with the commies these days. Oh, the irony.

Ed

Ah…whats the matter pumpkin? Lose your safety pin??

Wild Bill

@Tiffany Strumpet bent over and bumped it.
Making his living that way,
no education required, until I’m retired
I could do this all day!

You should have let me keep to the Shakespeare, boy.

TS

Replying to a 3 month old thread proves I’ve gotten under your wrinkly emaciated skin. You desperate Old Fart. Go volunteer down at the soup kitchen, you doddery old time waster. Do something productive with your remaining few days.

Wild Bill

@Teen Snot, As you can plainly see, I was responding to Ed, who revealed you to be the delicate, infantile, socialist, snowflake that you truly are. That is why everyone hates you.
Your vanity lead you to believe that I was responding to you. Embarrassingly arrogant.

TS

Sure, Old Rich Bill, you were replying to Ed : / I really must keep you awake at night with all that seething hate boiling inside of your old carcass. Really, take a class or something you two time loser. Maybe you could get a job modeling Depends or something appropriate to your end of life status.

oldshooter

I have always been fascinated with the concept of a “Dangerous Game Rifle,” as one that would put down large aggressive animals, or smaller but more aggressive predators, with one or two shots, at 50 yards or less. Seems a little odd to me. If the game is that dangerous, I think I’d want a rifle that would put it down with one or two shots (and still have a couple more in the magazine!) at 200 yards, not 50 or less! But then I’m neither Ernest Hemingway nor an adrenaline junky, and I probably place too much value on… Read more »

Michael

If the 45-70 is loaded with a 405 grain solid brass bullet at 1900-2000 fps it will penetrate both shoulders on a cape buffalo at 50 meter with out any problem, it will so also penetrate a elephant skull and exit… the 416 Taylor make a 400 gr flying at 2100 fps and have enough reputation to get the job done on dangerous African game, and with that this two calibres are very similar. So I would not hesitate to use a 45-70 on buffalo as long the shooting distance is not more than 100 yards, and buffalo should not… Read more »

TS

Oh, the *@#@#@ ( TOS Violation) “trophy” hunters thread has gone eerily quiet. Seems I interupted the circle jerk. Where are you hiding? What about you Van Harl? Nothing to say when you get called on your bullsh*t?

pop

TS you really are a pathetic little inadequate twinkle toe aren’t you? Did someone violate your safe place cupcake?

TS

Sit down, Pop. Before you hurt yourself. You should know better at your age.

pop

TS, you are a sad little troll.

TS

Just stop talking about the “danger” you asshats. There is NO danger to you. You are just killing something for the FUN of it. Pathetic, small-minded little men with compensation issues.
Get a life, you losers. And, so wild, Bill, good morning! Hope you don’t get trampled by an Elephant today. Sorry, I lied–I hope you do.

Wild Bill

Why TS, what ever makes you think that I am a hunter. I was a soldier, and the people that I killed were on your behalf , and they were well capable of shooting back. So like pops says you really are a poor guesser. Have a nice evening

TS

Firstly, Bill. Thank you for your services. Secondly, screw your entitlement bs attitude. Just because you served does not mean that now your opinion counts more. Are you able to separate war from a stupid safari? No, you can’t. Idiot.

TS

The “great white” African hunter does not look like Allen Quartermain. He resembles a Weasley little coward–a bit like you.

Wild Bill

Really? Not even a “Good morning”, first. You are just going to lead off with an insult. If it is not your intention to be civil, I can only look to other reasons for your rudeness… your personal life, perhaps.

Viscount

No, wait, let me guess: Trump voter, right?

pop

Since Trump Won most decisively I guess you are not the prognosticator you pretend to be eh.

Eaglesnester

I have a 1895 cowboy Remlin. I load 350 gr Hornady bullets. As I am not hunting dangerous game these bullets in that weight will kill anything in Canada with aplomb, with possibly the exception of the great coastal Grizz. For that job I should think that a 400 grain or better solid would be the proper medicine. That rifle will get your attention. The first time I shot it I wore nothing but a t shirt as it were summer time with no limb saver. After 9 rounds I could shoot no more as my shoulder was too sore.… Read more »

pop

My son has a Siamese sp) Mauser in 45-70 and loves it, thinking about getting him a Marlin Guide gun in that caliber also.