doubleset
50 Cal.
Ah ... Now that would make a huge difference.The hogs are cornered with dogs.
Ah ... Now that would make a huge difference.The hogs are cornered with dogs.
Well, people are talking here about killing hogs in a variety of (often not very clearly described) circumstances and in weights ranging from 75 lbs. to 400 lbs or more. With those kinds of differences you can expect to see similar variances in the stories about how easily the task was accomplished.I expect it’s the same with hogs.
That about sums it up.I always used the most accurate load and used a rest to fire from when I could. If I felt I could not make a clean kill I did not fire.
I got a 117lb. sow with a .357 Magnum Ruger GP100 at about 15 yards in some heavy brush. I'd set up along a trail that had some relatively fresh looking tracks and dung. I had to wait until she stepped into an opening in the brush, and I couldn't tell exactly where the top of the shoulder was because of the patterning in the fur breaking up the outline of the shoulder and brush obscuring the lower part of the foreleg.Since 2000 i've shot a few hundred wild hogs, mostly using inline guns. However, i've killed about 20 using conventional muzzleloaders: Except for two or three, they were killed using patched round balls.
Hogs are not built like deer. Wild hog anatomy:
View attachment 134182
Shoot a hog standing broadside behind the crook in the front leg-heart shot. A lung shot hog will often run 200 yards. A high shoulder shot with a big round ball is good, it disables the central nervous system.
Be careful of shooting hogs behind the head. Often a hog shot behind the head will go down like poleaxed, lie there awhile, start moving around, get his feet under him and book. Few years ago i hunted with a man who had never hunted hogs, told him not to shoot a hog high behind the head. But he did it anyway, shot a 200 pound boar at about 25 yards. Hog dropped on the spot and soon started crawling. That hog was shot with a 150 grain bullet from a .270 Winchester rifle. Told him to shoot it again
i crawled up and put a round ball from my .50 in this sows ear:
This hog was facing at about 60 yards, Round ball hit his snout:
A few years back I and two other gents flew to Texas to hunt pigs with doubles. Had a good time and got some good meat.My son did some hog hunting in both Texas and Tennesee about 10 years ago. My only comment here would be "A .45 BP rifle for southern hogs?" He took one down with a 30-06 where the first shot was on target, but the hog turned and was charging him when he put the second one into it at very close range. They were both BIG hogs. And they sure tasted good. I'd solicit a lot of advice and accurate stories from BP hog hunters before undertaking that adventure. Maybe think of using a double rifle?
In the bars, it's called "hoggin'," not "hog hunting."Hog hunting. WE TALKIN IN THE WOODS OR BARS ??
Are you talking about shooting them at a distance, or walking up to them and shooting them in the head as part of your domestic hog harvest?... We used a .22 Cal. rifle. Some of the hogs were over 300 pounds and they dropped like an anchor.
When you kill raised hogs on a farm you are right next to them. We put the rifle right behind the ear and they drop in their tracks.Are you talking about shooting them at a distance, or walking up to them and shooting them in the head as part of your domestic hog harvest?
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