Dixie Flinter said:
I know that getting a shot angled in from behind the shoulder is best on large hogs because the vitals are forward compared to a deer. However, due to less-than-perfect situations when hunting at night, this is my very specific question: What size caliber (roundball) would it take to break through the shoulder of a 300 lb boar at 25 to 50 yards?
Your assumption on the internal vitals is not correct as you have described, just the opposite. Go to www.texas
boar.com for a pictorial.
A 50 works fine.
There are not many honest 300 lb hogs in the woods who are alive, it’s called ground shrink when they are dead.
Red light at night, they cannot see a red light, go to night vision scopes at night.
“Mat, 75 cal, any thing smaller and you couldnt be sure!” If a 54 is fine for elk and moose, why is a 75 cal needed for a 200 lb hog? We stopped the cross breeding between Cape Buffalo and hogs in Texas, too hard to them in barb wire fences.
The much debated shield can be penetrated, it is not ball/bullet proof, 4 bores are not needed. If you castrate a boar, the shield is gone in 2 months.
We trap most of the year except when it’s too hot to save them from dying due to the heat and not water. A live 300 lb. in the trap and delivered for sale means a trip to town to eat on Saturday night, not many honest live 300 lbs hogs in the woods.
They can be killed and do not need be feared, you can survive, we do it each day.