Charging Elephant Kruger National Park
Walking guide Sean Carter, 37, watches the herd of female and calf elephants pass by their resting spot in the shade in the wilderness near Pafuri in the Kruger National Park, South Africa. To use any of the text or photos, please contact Jamie Pyatt News Ltd.

Home » Safari Guides’ VERY Close Call with Charging Elephant in Kruger National Park

Safari Guides’ VERY Close Call with Charging Elephant in Kruger National Park

This is the heart-stopping moment when two safari guides held their nerve in front of a charging elephant – and bravely gave it the chance of life. Many in their position would have taken the option of a panicked shot to save their own skins but this pair gave the tusker the benefit of the […]

17-11-22 17:25
Charging Elephant Kruger National Park
Walking guide Sean Carter, 37, watches the herd of female and calf elephants pass by their resting spot in the shade in the wilderness near Pafuri in the Kruger National Park, South Africa. To use any of the text or photos, please contact Jamie Pyatt News Ltd.

This is the heart-stopping moment when two safari guides held their nerve in front of a charging elephant – and bravely gave it the chance of life.

Charging Elephant Kruger National Park
The rear-most elephant catches the scent of the wild trail hikers and moves in on them quickly forcing Sean and guide leader Devon Myers, 38, into protective action raising their high calibre hunting rifles in the direction of the elephant

Many in their position would have taken the option of a panicked shot to save their own skins but this pair gave the tusker the benefit of the doubt.

Charging Elephant Kruger National Park
At just 7 metres away with both Sean and Devon’s fingers having taken up all the slack in the trigger the female elephant reacts to their loud shouting and refusing to run and suddenly breaks off the charge with a fraction of a second to spare.

The enraged THREE-TON elephant was bearing down on Devon Myers, 38, and Sean Carter, 37, at speed and ready to trample them both to death.

Charging Elephant Kruger National Park
Having made its point the enraged elephant stares hard at the armed guides as it raises a cloud of dust and trumpets its anger as it backs off its charge

But the highly experienced off-trail guides shouted at the top of their voices and stood fast to try and convince the elephant to put on the brakes.

Their courage paid off as the rampaging elephant in the wilds of the Pafuri region of the Kruger National Park in South Africa broke off the attack.

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The enraged female elephant is now just 10 metres away in full charges and just seconds away from the point where Sean and Devon will have to take a brain shot to protect themselves and save their hiking party
Charging Elephant Kruger National Park
Field guide Sean Carter watches the elephant rejoin the herd as both he and Devon breath a sigh of relief that they did not have to kill the elephant.

Trumpeting loudly and throwing up a cloud of dust it was just METRES away from Devon and Sean and their 6 guests taking cover beneath a tree.

Devon, of African-Born Safaris which takes clients on private adventures off-the-beaten track in eight countries, said: ”It was a very close call for sure.

“If it had come a fraction of a second closer we would have had no choice.

“There was a herd of female elephants and their young moving quickly as they were being followed by five bull elephants keen to try their luck on them.

“We had picked a place to take a break from the sun in the shade of mahogany trees and it gave us a good view of what was happening all around us.

“The elephant herd was down wind of us and would have smelt us and knew we were there so it was important to stay in cover and not get into the open.

“A few decided to come and check us out but could not see us in the shade which is why we stood up and shouted so they knew where we were.

“But the final female decided to charge and some say you can tell if it is a mock charge or a full charge depending on whether their ears are back or are out.

“I am not so sure myself and I am sure some have paid the price for believing that to be the case and at the end of the day you just can’t take that chance.

“Our fingers had taken up the slack on the triggers and we were shouting to try and divert her and standing still but she just kept on coming and coming.

“When she was 20-feet away which would have been our firing position for a brain shot she finally swerved in a swirl of dust just in the very nick of time.

“We dedicate our lives to the conservation of animals and the wild but if we need to save our lives and those of others we’re not prepared to be martyrs.

“Both of our fingers were on the triggers and ready to fire, and if it had come half a metre further then we would have had to have taken the shot.

“We shouted and shouted and held our ground to show we were not running to try and break its charge and fortunately for us it worked out,” he said.

The female fully grown elephant cow was part of a large herd of females and calves moving quickly in the bush to avoid the attention of young bulls.

Walking guide Devon Myers, 38, who was leading the group that were charged by an enraged elephant in the Pafuri area of the Kruger National Park in South Africa

Devon of Hoedspruit, Limpopo Province, said: ”Some people do question why we are out in the wilderness and “intruding” in the territory of wild animals.

“But that is not the view of the informed as homo-sapiens have been in the African wilderness for thousands of years before the safari industry arrived.

“Elephants, buffalo, lions and zebra in fact all animals are all used to human beings living around them and they know exactly what we are all about.

“What we are doing out on these primitive trail walks is giving people a chance to reconnect with the wilderness in a natural but non-threatening way.

Walking guide Devon Myers, 38, who was leading the group that were charged by an enraged elephant in the Pafuri area of the Kruger National Park in South Africa

“It is not a thrill-seeking activity although spotting an elephant or lion while on foot will certainly raise the pulse but by and large we all get on together.

“By going off the roads used by safari vehicles we are also coming across vital intelligence of poacher activity which we can feed back to game rangers.

“I have been charged a number of times by elephants but fortunately have never had to pull the trigger but this was for sure a very close call indeed.

“The elephant was about 30 years old and she went back to her herd and they carried on quickly moving through the bush ahead of 5 bulls in hot pursuit!”.

The walking safaris are tailor-made for guests but when on Primitive Trails there are no tents and you sleep under the stars and drink out of rivers.

Devon said: “Your water comes from the streams the animals drink from and your food you carry and when you sleep you lay down and you sleep”.

A charging elephant at a South African safari park – not the one that charged Devon Myers hiking group. To use any of the text or photos, please contact Jamie Pyatt News Ltd.

Walking tours in the African wilds can be booked on devon@africanbornsafaris.com

A female fully grown elephant can weigh up to 3.3 tons and stand 8 foot 6 inches at the shoulder and run at up to 25mph so would quickly catch a fleeing human.

The male elephants can weigh up to twice as much and grown to 10 foot 6 inches at the shoulder and between them the herbivores kill up to 500 people a year in the wild.

There are an estimated 415,000 left and are listed as endangered mainly due to poaching and live up to 70 years and are the largest living land animal on earth.

To use any of the text or photos, please contact Jamie Pyatt News Ltd.

WATCH Elephant charges at safari guests in South Africa