Thanks, those 2 Sables in that pic are a Common Sable from South Africa and a Roosevelt Sable from Mozambique.
Before I shot those Sables, I was on another hunt in South Africa and while we were tracking a Bontebok that I had shot, he stopped under a tree where a Sable bull was standing. I joked to my PH that I hoped that I wouldn't miss the Bontebok and hit the Sable, and my PH replied "that would be a very expensive miss." I hit the Bontebok.
My first hunt in Mozambique was for a Leopard and a Sable. The Outfitter put me with a young PH as his first client. We were lucky and got my Leopard the second night and then concentrated on a Sable. At that time I thought that the female Sables were brown and that the males were black.
One day we spotted a lone black Sable in a field, and my PH said that he was a good one, so I shot it. When I walked up to it I immediately saw that it was a she, and I felt terrible. Again, I was very lucky as when we brought this cow Sable back to camp, the Outfitter said that he had an agreement with the local school to provide them with animals to feed the children, and that this Sable would go to the school and I would not be charged for it. That's when I learned that mature Sable cows could also be black.
I did not kill a bull Sable on that hunt, but we did see and I could not get a shot at what my PH said was a "monster" bull.
The next winter I kept thinking about that "monster" bull, so I called the Outfitter and asked if another client had killed him. He said no, so I booked a hunt for the first week of the next season. With the Outfitter's 690,000 acre consession, we never did see that "monster" bull again, but early in the hunt we were driving through an open area and the head tracker stopped the truck and said a young sable in a gin trap had crossed in front of us.
A gin trap in a homemade leg trap made out of vehicle leaf springs, much like the old grizzly bear traps of 100+ years ago. We followed the trail and found the young bull with his front leg in the trap. The trap had broken his lower front leg bone in half. My Outfitter/PH asked if I would shoot him and we then had excellent tasting young sable camp meat.
Later that week we were able to find this beautiful 41" bull that is in the picture that I posted earlier.