The revolution of game capture methods

Jan Oelofse pioneered a game capture technique that transformed the practice of antelope capture.

The revolution of game capture methods
Jan Oelofse worked for the Natal Parks Board (now Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife) as a game ranger from 1964 to 1972.
Photo: Courtesy of Annette Oelofse
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“In game capture terms he was a genius. His contribution deserves the highest praise because he is the one who developed the unique mass capture method that enabled us to go from a handful of captured game animals in a month to several hundred. He will go down in history as one of the greatest animal capturers ever.”

This is how Dr Ian Player, distinguished South African wildlife conservationist, describes Jan Oelofse, who worked with him at the Natal Parks Board (now Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife).

Late last year, aged 79, Jan died of heart failure on his wildlife ranch in Namibia. But his name lives on in a recently published book Capture to be Free, written by his wife Annette Oelofse.

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It’s an essentially African story of wild adventures in then Tanganyika, of Hollywood movies with John Wayne, of life and work in the Natal Parks Board, and of the Oelofse Method Jan developed in 1968, which is still the recognised method used for mass game capture.

Ian Player’s tribute to Jan is fitting, because together they paved the way for the growth of game ranching in South Africa. Ian pioneered the capture and translocation of rhino and Jan pioneered the capture and translocation of large numbers of antelope.

Today there are an estimated 10 000 private game ranches covering 15 million hectares of land in South Africa, excluding national parks and provincial nature reserves.

READ: Regulations for transporting game

According to the Wildlife Translocation Association, there are between 80 and 100 wildlife capture operators in SA that move over 300 000 head of game per year. Without the Oelofse Method, this would not have been possible.

Breakthrough in game capture

Jan joined the Natal Parks Board as a game ranger in 1964. He worked hard at improving existing game capture techniques in the Umfolozi and Hluhluwe reserves where game was intensively culled to deal with population pressure.

Rudimentary game capture methods for game translocation were used as an alternative to culling, but they were clumsy and ineffective.

“We would chase the herds on horseback and try to catch them with nooses and nets, but too many animals got injured,” explained Jan in an interview after he received the Audi Terra Nova Environmental Innovation Award for the Oelofse Method some years ago.

Affected by the many deaths and injuries that took place, he threw himself into refining game capture methods.

Then, in 1968, he came up with the plastic sheeting method in which animals were herded into a funnel-shaped capture boma, enclosed with plastic sheeting.

“They couldn’t see through the plastic so they didn’t try to charge through it,” he explained.

The antelope saw the plastic as an impenetrable barrier. This breakthrough made it possible for a capture team to capture large numbers of animals in a relatively short time, herd them onto trucks and translocate them with minimal trauma.

Red letter day

Jan describes his breakthrough in a quarterly report to the Hluhluwe Game Reserve in 1968: “On 4 September I was in a position to carry out an experiment which I had been planning in regard to eliminating the animals from running into the nets. The plastic ‘wall’ was so effective that even when the animals were chased they could not be forced to run into it.”

At the same time he formulated another idea of building a wooden pen onto the capture boma, which led directly to the transport lorry via a ramp.

“Game was successfully transferred to large wooden boxes positioned on the lorry without having to be handled. Ten animals at a time could be loaded. It was a red letter day in my game capture career; something I had always hoped to achieve.”

Jan had not only revolutionised game capture, he had revolutionised wildlife conservation, aided by a handful of men who worked closely with him on the ground, including John Clark, Begifa Mhlongo, Drummond Densham and Charles Tinley and the courageous capture back-up team of mainly Zulu men, mounted and on foot.

Oelofse’s method opened the way for animals to be moved to existing game parks and to new wildlife areas.

Simple and effective

“I was very fortunate to join Jan’s capture team in 1969 at a very exciting and experimental stage of capture,” recalls Drummond Densham, who first read about Jan in a feature in Farmer’s Weekly in the mid-1960s.

“He was an incredible man who would think things through thoroughly. When he said, ‘I’ve thought about this’, you knew he had, down to the finest detail. He was one of those characters who inspired exceptional team spirit. The Zulu capture team loved him and called him Intshebe, meaning the one with the beard. They saw how he expected everyone to get stuck in and get the job done together.”

The perfection of Jan’s game capture method was in its simplicity. But it required guts and determination to persevere and convince the many detractors who scoffed at his efforts and ideas.

Fortunately, he was encouraged and supported by Ian Player, then the chief conservator of Zululand, and Nick Steele, warden of Hluhluwe.

These men shielded Jan daily from the bureaucratic processes and barriers which he could never understand and which he characteristically bucked.

In his book Bush Life of a Game Warden, published in 1979, Nick Steele described Jan as: “A typical Afrikaans-speaking South African, tall, with noticeably broad shoulders, he wears a small beard and despite thinning hair is a ruggedly handsome man of the veld, highly individualistic, an outstanding horseman and wild animal handler. His versatility made one understand why the English needed three years and half a million troops to conquer his forebears in the Anglo-Boer War.”

Namibia

Jan worked for the Natal Parks Board until 1972 when he decided to go it alone, starting the first private capture business in South Africa. Later, with R700 in his pocket, he moved to the Mount Etjo region of Namibia.

READ: How hunting helped this livestock farmer survive drought

He had grown up on a cattle farm close to Etosha National Park, where game moved freely through their land, and to which he had always wanted to return.

He met and married Annette Diekmann who had grown up on a 60 000ha cattle farm in the Otjiwarongo district and shared his love of wildlife.

“Jan’s plan was to buy land where he could set up a base for his capture business, but he didn’t have the money so he leased 5 000ha, built capture bomas and pens and established a game capture operation called Oelofse Wild,” says Annette.

After a few years of translocating game between South Africa and Namibia, Jan was able to buy the land.

“We faced some really tough times when we were almost down and out financially, but we managed to pick ourselves up, move forward and buy more land. During the 28 years of our marriage, we bought 30 000ha,” she continues.

The Oelofses worked tirelessly to achieve their dream of developing a wildlife sanctuary.

Diversifying

To supplement their income from the capture business, they pioneered trophy hunting in Namibia.

“Most of the buyers wanted breeding herds, so we were left with many male animals, which we released onto the land for trophy hunting and launched Jan Oelofse Hunting Safaris,” recalls Annette.

“Hunting and killing wild animals went against our grain but we had to make ends meet. We kept trophy hunting to a minimum, only taking out the old males, and adding a wildlife safari component with a comfortable lodge,” she explains.

There are four of the Big Five species, excluding buffalo, and more than 30 different species of antelope on their farm. Hunting and safari clients come mostly from the US. Their son Alex ranches with Annette.

READ: How to start farming high-value game species

“He’s now 27 and studied mechanical engineering at Stellenbosch. After graduation he decided this was the life he wanted,” says Annette.

Before he died, Jan told Annette how happy he was to have achieved what they have achieved.

“It was a rare moment of contentment as he was always striving towards a goal.”

Jan is buried on the koppie in the centre of their sanctuary. All the game can be seen from there and the couple often went there together.

“It is where his soul wants to be,” says Annette.

Translocation of game in SA

According to the vice-chairperson of the Wildlife Translocation Association (WTA), Kester Vickery, between 80 and 100 wildlife capture operators, moving 300 000 head of game annually, are active in South Africa.

Capture operators must be registered with the provincial nature conservation authorities, which issue permits for capture and relocation. WTA is a voluntary association for game capturers.

For more information phone Kester Vickery on 082 892 6761.

To purchase Capture to be Free, contact Annette Oelofse on 00264 67 290 175 or email [email protected].

This article was originally published in the 05 April 2013 issue of Farmer’s Weekly.