These are Red Stags.
Special price is $7500

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This is Karl Bowers with

his 10 point Whitetail Deer.

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This one of our magnificent

Schmitar Horned Oryx.

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This is Donna with her

HUGE 8 point Whitetail Deer.

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This is one of our typical

10 point Whitetail Deer.

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One of our many

Axis Deer in the wild.

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This is Jared Robbins

with his #3 SCI Addax.

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This is Tyler Robbins with

his Gold Medal Texas Doll.

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This is one of our

beautiful Trophy Bongo Bulls.

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Another one of our

Big 8 point Whitetail Deer.

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Kafue Lechwe

kafue lechwe

Kafue Lechwe

(Kodus leche) Found naturally in an open savannah wetland area of Zambia, along a portion of the Zambia River, called the Kafue Flats.

ID
The Kafue lechwe is a medium sized, reddish brown antelope with a white underside.  The under parts, neck, chin, mouth and lips are white.  They have distinctive black markings on the face and front legs.  Males generally grow darker with age.  The hind legs are somewhat longer in proportion than in other antelopes, to ease long-distance running in marshy soil.  Their hooves are long, soft  and splayed which enables them to move easily on marshy ground and in wetland habitats.  They stand 2.75 feet to 3.6 feet at the shoulder and weigh between 130-290lb. Males have long horns which are thin and ringed for most of their length.  Horns are back-slanted with tips that curve slightly upward.  Lyre shaped, these horns can reach 3 feet in length.  Females do not possess horns.

Behavior
Kafue lechwe live marshy habitats and prefer swamps and wetlands.  They are excellent swimmers, but prefer wading in shallow water and walking on boggy ground.  Kafue lechwe are comfortable standing and feeding in water up to 2.5 feet.  When frightened, lechwe completely submerge leaving only their nostrils exposed.  Like most antelope species, lechwe have peak activity periods during morning and late afternoon.  There is no strict social structure in lechwe because of their natural nomadic behavior – following rains and floodplains in Africa.  Females do, however, often exhibit ‘lekking’ or defending small patches within a common area.  Kafue lechwe give a snorting-cough as an alert signal and during mating displays.

Food Habits
Subsist on a diet of grasses and water plants.

Breeding
Females have a gestation period of 7-8 months and give birth to a single young.  The majority of births occur from July-October, although breeding has been noted throughout the year.  The young lie up for several weeks after birth before joining their mothers. Young are weaned at around 4 months.  Females mature sexually quicker than males (1.5 years vs. 2.5 years).

Life Span
Can generally survive up to 15 years.

Kafue Lechwe Hunting
Expect to pay around $5,000 for a Kafue lechwe in the U.S.

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