@deeangeo , it depends on what you want to do. Trophy hunt, management hunt or a bit of both. My last trip last year was only 45 minutes from the airport. We’d been out two months before up near Grootfontein, 6 hours drive after 18 hours traveling so 45 minutes was fine. The place was very nice, I can’t fault it.
Nice rooms, great food and the hunting was very good. It was very apparent the animals weren’t over hunted. Last year farmers were very keen, owing to the drought, to reduce wildlife levels. There’s been a reasonable amount of rain lately so wildlife levels should bounce back quickly. Still, having said that there was no lack of them.
Getting firearms in and out of Namibia is a doddle, ten minutes, no baksheesh and you’re on your way. Silencers, moderators, whatever are permitted.
I fly with Ethiopian airlines. No charge for firearms within your baggage limit. That they are still flying 35 flights a week in and out of China is making me think twice about this year. Sadly I’m beginning to edge towards the vulnerable age group. Jeez ! Never thought I’d be there !
I have been to farms where hunting is a side business of the farm rather than the mainstay. Ok, there’s fences and fields but the “fields” can be 8-900 hectares in size ! It was a great sensation to stand on a kopje one morning and look at the 12,000 hectares, give or take a few hundred as the owner had never got to the edge of one boundary in the hills. The fences are only 2 strands of bull wire to keep the cattle in. The browsers, kudu etc go over the fence and the grazers, oryx, go under. The fence is no hindrance to game moving freely.
The Namibian tourism website has a portal to hunting ranches and farms. There’s lots of them. but ask your questions, do your research and ask for references before parting with your cash. Above all, enjoy it.