I have a Winchester Trapper carbine in .44 magnum, would that be a good hog gun? It's short and light, should have a pretty good punch for a pig, I'd think.
I'm living part-time, full-time will have to wait a few more years, near Trinidad in the southern end of the state on the eastern side of the Rockies. I haven't seen or heard anything about hogs there, but until I saw this thread I had never expected that I'd see them.
In middle Tennessee where I currently live if I drive an hour or so to the east they're everywhere. It's really not too hard to find them over 500 pounds. A friend of mine got one that was about 800 pounds just a few years ago.
800 lbs?
Now that sounds like an amazing hunt and some good eating.
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very interesting!
It seems I am reviving a dead thread but does anybody have any new information relevant to the thread? I have not lived here long And would really like to go after some hogs with my bow. Anyone know someone with property or guided hunts or ranches that I can get the info on?
Arizona and Texas - that's where my friends go to shoot hogs. If you need further information on locations in those states, let me know and I'll get it.
LOL we are originally from FL and I have whacked em with a bow, a shotgun, .45 and finally a .22
the .22 is the best weapon I know to get your pig. just hang in the brush make pig grunts have a tree handy for jumping into and when they run under you pop em in the ear, Pork Chops..
you only want 120# or so for eating cause any big ones taste like shit.
800#'er NO WAY, terrible meat.
Take it from a guy that has prolly killed and BBQ'ed well over 100+ pigs.
Took me a minute to find the photos... My father with one and a good friend with another... kinda crappy pictures, I don't have the originals handy.
With a traditional bow...
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