War Hawk said:
Supercracker said:
USMA65 said:
I am in E TN right next to the Smoky Mountain NP. There are some huge hogs around here, and a lot of them. The surprising thing is that the TN Dept of Wildlife Resources has decided that hog hunting is no longer legal in TN, except in certain areas of the Cherokee NF and on private land with owner approval. Their theory is that hunters are causing the spread of the hogs...you read that correctly. They believe hunters are responsible for the hog numbers skyrocketing due to release of domestic swine. I intend to give it a try. How does the taste compare to domestic hog?
Ohhhhh that'll be really good if you can find them. From what I've seen, up there, in the more mountainous areas, you'll have less hogs and they'll be harder to hunt, but it gets cold enough to kill off the ones with more domestic traits. So you have better ;looking, thicker coated, more muscular, shorter and stockier pigs.
I'm very jealous. I've been trying to get up to the mountain WMAs in Ga for a hog hunt for a while but can never get away.
If they can live in southern B.C., why would they freeze to death in northern Tennesse? :idunno:
No, that's not really what I meant. I didn't say that all pigs could not survive. They'll just tend to be built differently. Hell, there's pigs in Siberia. Here in Fl and in S Ga you see pigs with very thin coats of hair and not very stocky. Don't get me wrong, you can see the stocky, thick furred ones too, but not as often. Once you get far enough north that it actually gets cold, as opposed to a couple of weeks of 50 degrees like we have here, you tend to not see those skinny, thin coated pigs as often because they have a harder time surviving to adulthood. Evolution at work. Some of the pig's I've seen people pulling out of N Ga and the Carolinas would look right at home in Eastern Europe.
I've seen some of those "preserves" up north raising purebred Russians. They have some very very nice looking pigs. Not really my kind of hunting, but nice pigs none the less. And you can bet your bottom dollar that some of them escape. Pigs are crazy smart and if there's a way to get out they'll find it. As was mentioned, hunters will also turn them loose trying to get a population. But if you don't have enough population (yet) for them to breed regularly then you're not really going to see them.
A sow will go into heat every 3 months, 3 weeks, and 3 days, have a litter of 6-12, then get bred again almost immediately. By the time she's having her third litter the sows from the first litter are pregnant. As soon as you hit the population density where a wild sow will get bred every time she goes into season then you have a problem. That's when your population curve will go vertical. That's also when I'll be taking trips up there to look for them. If you ever do mess around up there and get good huntable populations (as opposed to an occasional pig here and there)you're going to have some REALLY nice pigs.