Rowland Ward's Records of big game Eighteenth Edition(Africa) 1981
Rowland Ward's Records of big game Eighteenth Edition(Africa) 1981
Hardcover,
Publisher: Rowland Ward Publications, 1981
Used - Very Good+. This book is in very good condition. The DJ has some limited signs of edge wear but the pages are clean, intact and the spine remains undamaged. This book has clearly been well maintained and looked after thus far.
18th edition. Unusual with a dust jacket. The dust jacket is ever so slightly shelf rubbed and edge worn, but remains whole and intact. Likewise for the boards. Internally, the book is clean, the pages are still clean and clear. There are no other markings or inscriptions, and the pages within are neat, crisp and complete. Tightly bound and presents handsomely in cellophane.
The Book, the name by which Rowland Ward’s Records of Big Game is known to all hunters around the world, is the universally accepted standard in the measurement of trophy animals. It is the objective source that establishes what a trophy really is, whether you are hunting in Australia or Austria, Brazil or Botswana, China or Czechoslovakia.
Rowland Ward’s Records of Big Game was established over 130 years ago to record the measurements of game animals taken in fair-chase hunting and to share them as a matter of interest to international sportsmen.It purpose was not and is not to establish records in the sense of “what is the biggest or best,” nor is it to glorify the hunter. The Book celebrates the animal. It does not matter whether the animal’s horns, tusks, or teeth were picked up in the veld from one that had died of natural causes, was killed by a predator, or was shot by a hunter. By establishing the benchmark for what constitutes a trophy, The Book makes a most valuable contribution to conservation. By setting the standards high, The Book ensures that trophy hunters will concentrate on those big, old, lone males that have long since passed on their genes to younger generations.
As an excellent and objective conservation tool, The Book tracks trends in game management. It stands to reason that, where trophy standards have increased over time in a particular region, in all likelihood, sound conservation practices have been followed. The converse is probably also true. This information, in turn, also provides valuable research tools for the hunter in deciding where, when, and with whom he wants to hunt a particular species.
In addition, The Book is a valuable source of knowledge on the distribution of game, and it gives taxonomic features as well as a historical, geographical, and biological record of all game. Few other sources can match Rowland Ward’s Records of Big Game.