The Accurate Reloading Forums
Mystery Critter Trail Cam picture
06 January 2013, 19:14
CarolinasmanMystery Critter Trail Cam picture
Was cleaning up some memory cards and had this picture from ealier in the year. Area is Southeastern Virginia, no one has ever seen a feral hog in this area, even though I'm not sure it's a hog to begin with....thoughts?

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06 January 2013, 19:17
Carolinasman
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06 January 2013, 19:22
CarolinasmanApologies, copied the wrong link...
06 January 2013, 19:23
Carolinasman
06 January 2013, 19:25
Todd WilliamsInteresting! Looks a bit like a black bear but the legs aren't correct.
06 January 2013, 19:32
graybirdAt first glance, I thought it was a black bear cub. However, the feet and lower legs look to have hooves. Therefore, I'm going with feral pig.
Graybird
"Make no mistake, it's not revenge he's after ... it's the reckoning."
06 January 2013, 19:34
OLBIKERHawg
06 January 2013, 19:58
Mike_DettorreFront legs look way too long for a feral pig> the front legs appear to be as long as the height of the chest cavity.
MikeLegistine actu quod scripsi?
Never under estimate the internet community's ability to reply to your post with their personal rant about their tangentially related, single occurrence issue.
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06 January 2013, 20:11
FjoldChupacabra!
or young pig.
Frank
"I don't know what there is about buffalo that frightens me so.....He looks like he hates you personally. He looks like you owe him money."
- Robert Ruark, Horn of the Hunter, 1953
NRA Life, SAF Life, CRPA Life, DRSS lite
06 January 2013, 21:34
BigBHoney Boo Boo
06 January 2013, 21:40
Carolinasmanquote:
Originally posted by BigB:
Honey Boo Boo

damn...I'm still laughing
This one is a bit of a stumper, I've compared it to similar sized (or close) pics of hogs from google image pics and it just doesn't look right....of course the weed is conviently blocking it's head.
06 January 2013, 23:51
wasbeemancoon
Aim for the exit hole
07 January 2013, 02:17
Pirate's Lifequote:
Originally posted by wasbeeman:
coon
I agree. Coon with a missing tail.
07 January 2013, 02:47
Aspen Hill AdventuresI agree with coon.
~Ann
07 January 2013, 03:13
Biggs300I know it is the wrong area of the country but, it sure looks like to a javelina
Start young, hunt hard, and enjoy God's bounty.
07 January 2013, 03:32
crabyx78I say it's a Coon,tail missing or wrap to the side
right rear leg looks as tho he may be scratching?
07 January 2013, 08:53
Jon Beutlerquote:
Originally posted by Fjold:
Chupacabra!

quote:
Originally posted by Carolinasman:
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SI VIS PACEM PARA BELLUM
***********
07 January 2013, 11:54
meteCapybara [sp?] of course .You can cut brush in front of the trailcam !!

thanks,forgot to name that critter
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SI VIS PACEM PARA BELLUM
***********
07 January 2013, 16:12
CrazyhorseconsultingNot knowing the distance from trail cam to the animal, and with nothing to give an actual idea of size, I go along with coon , either with no tail or tail held over to its right side. Capybara's are South American animals so unless someone had one that got loose, it would be doubtful. Javelina don't have that pronounced a dip in its back between head and highest part of back.
Even the rocks don't last forever.
07 January 2013, 17:07
Nortonquote:
Originally posted by graybird:
At first glance, I thought it was a black bear cub. However, the feet and lower legs look to have hooves. Therefore, I'm going with feral pig.
100%
07 January 2013, 17:46
Carolinasmanquote:
Originally posted by mete:
Capybara [sp?] of course .You can cut brush in front of the trailcam !!
Picture was a few days after a hurricane.....
07 January 2013, 18:19
specneedsIt looks more like a javelina than a capybara to me but coon would seem more logical.
However people are fascinated by exotic animals and they do seem to let them loose regularly (pythons in the everglades, pigs everywhere & Chinese ringneck pheasants come to mind) My son saw a cerval cat here in rural San Diego County and who knows where that came from. It seems like the folks keeping lions and wolves and every other exotic would rather free them than euthanize them. A black leopard was spotted several times in my area......but could have been a normally resident cougar with a strange color mutatation. We live only a few miles from the zoo safari park so the possibility of an escape is there. Maybe I shouldn't keep my 375 H&H handy.
07 January 2013, 20:11
NortonRemind me the last time you saw a raccoon that looked like that.....or the last coon you saw with hooves. If it's a peccary it is waaaaay lost....and if it's a capybara, well then it probably flew in with a flock of javelina (you know...when pigs fly).

07 January 2013, 20:16
OLBIKERDoes not look like any coon I have ever seen.Coons have much longer hair,legs are not tapered down to hooves.Hawg or Nuetra.
07 January 2013, 20:41
ldkierCapybara Hydrochoerus Hydrochaeris
"The lady doth protest too much, methinks"
Hamlet III/ii
07 January 2013, 21:02
CrazyhorseconsultingYou guys must have a clearer picture than the one I am seeing, because I cannot see the feet well enough to see if they end in hooves.
I have seen enough javelin over the years to be pretty sure it is not one of them. The reason I am sure of this, there is NO white collar going up toward the top of the back behind the front leg, hence the proper name of the animal, Collared Peccary. Unless this is some real strange color mutation, with no collar and not being dark enough, normal javelinas/collared peccaries are almost black, I am going to stick with it being a coon.
Even the rocks don't last forever.
07 January 2013, 21:34
larrysIt is known that Capybara reside in several Florida parks and wetlands. I would not put it past one or more to have moved north. That would be my vote.
North Florida Capybara
Larry
"Peace is that brief glorious moment in history, when everybody stands around reloading" -- Thomas Jefferson
07 January 2013, 22:08
Carolinasmanquote:
Originally posted by Norton:
Remind me the last time you saw a raccoon that looked like that.....or the last coon you saw with hooves. If it's a peccary it is waaaaay lost....and if it's a capybara, well then it probably flew in with a flock of javelina (you know...when pigs fly).
Domestic pigs, yes... Feral pigs, none ever seen in this area
07 January 2013, 22:27
Skinner.It's a coon.
07 January 2013, 22:50
JTEXquote:
Originally posted by Skinner.:
It's a coon.

07 January 2013, 23:19
thecanadianNutria with its tail out of view
"though the will of the majority is in all cases to prevail, that will to be rightful must be reasonable; that the minority possess their equal rights, which equal law must protect, and to violate would be oppression."
---Thomas Jefferson
08 January 2013, 00:37
DomGotta go with Coon, though I have to admit it is a "funny" looking coon

Nothing else fits, legs too long for Nutria, not a pig, legs not right. How about a raccub, maybe a coon and black bear got together, I tell ya, ya just never know nowadays.
-------- There are those who only reload so they can shoot, and then there are those who only shoot so they can reload. I belong to the first group. Dom ---------
08 January 2013, 00:57
CarolinasmanA buddy of mine swears its Bigfoot's dog.....
But I'm skeptical......
08 January 2013, 02:37
Skinner.quote:
though I have to admit it is a "funny" looking coon
It's just the angle, but it's a coon, the body and legs are right for a young one, I can see the 'coon butt' and his stance is pretty typical when they go on alert (like right when the spotlight hits em' and you shoot em').
I've trapped a couple thousand of em', shot a bunch more.
Always liked coons, they were incidental to catching gray fox and bobcats but their pelts paid for fuel and they're pretty good eating.
Coons were right there with the Colonials in the Revolutionary War, they fed and clothed the troops and their fat lubed the musket balls that won us our independence.
Always thought there should be a coon on our flag, since they're uniquely American, even in attitude.
Some fools introduced them into parts of Europe and Japan and the coons have been raising Hell there ever since. The ultimate in ugly American tourists.

08 January 2013, 04:07
p dog shooterCoon was my first thought.
08 January 2013, 23:50
CarolinasmanI guess it's a coon, didn't hit me until you all suggested I guess without the head and tail it looks a bit different. Oh well, confirms the fun can have with trail cams!
09 January 2013, 01:04
Skinner.quote:
Oh well, confirms the fun can have with trail cams!
Trail cams are a Hell of a tool in wildlife work, but some of the most interesting images that get captured are of the people wandering around the woods.
It's shocking how many people hike naked, some dancing or skipping down the trail as we've seen on video cam traps. Day and night.
And other images where there were people walking down a trail, with an image taken seconds later of a mountain lion or black bear following them.
14 January 2013, 12:19
oupaDefinately a coon in an alert / agressive posture. Tail is held to his right side, so invisable in the photo. There is something to the left / in front of the coon that he is scared of.
An old man sleeps with his conscience, a young man sleeps with his dreams.