03 April 2016, 21:46
hogfarmerBackyard hog
Yesterday evening I was weeding my garden near my house. Hearing hogs approach, I decided my hoe was insufficient for the task at hand. I carefully left my garden, eased into my house and picked up the closest rifle. It was a Ruger No. 1 243 Win, not my first choice for hogs but I've been having problems with coyotes lately and that rifle works well for coyotes. Luckily along with the 55 grain NBTs I had added a few 100 grain Sierra soft points.
As quietly as possible I worked my way to the hogs. They were in thick underbrush and hard to see. They got wind of me and started to run, this young sow moved into a narrow window in the brush as she ran off. I hit her a little further back than I meant to, but she never moved after the shot other than a few kicks.
03 April 2016, 22:06
scottfromdallasNice. Hogs seem to be all over the place right now. All I saw on my trail cam last season was hogs and very few deer.
04 April 2016, 03:14
hogfarmerquote:
Originally posted by scottfromdallas:
Nice. Hogs seem to be all over the place right now. All I saw on my trail cam last season was hogs and very few deer.
I didn't see an actual decrease in deer population, but with the adequate rainfall we had and the mild winter, I expected an increase. Definitely an increase in hogs this last year or so.
I like to think that for every hog I eliminate, another fawn will make it to adulthood. Probably too simplistic of a theory, but I like it nonetheless.
04 April 2016, 08:38
georgeldYou nailed a couple hundred pigs with that shot.
Good deal, enjoy the eats.
George
22 June 2016, 02:00
hogfarmerSame scenario as before, just a smaller sow and a bigger cartridge. Used a 35 Whelen built on a commercial Mauser. The 200 grain Hornady spire point handload hit behind the ear. Other than falling downhill she didn't move much.
22 June 2016, 07:31
CrazyhorseconsultingGreat report. Congratulations.
27 June 2016, 06:57
juanpozzinice meat hog ,delicious .....
