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Old 04-18-2018, 11:27 AM
southernman southernman is offline
 
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Location: Fort Mc Murray/ Bell Block New Zealand.
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Default A big wild boar.

Ive just got back from 5 weeks holidays in new Zealand,
S***house luck, the gift of the gab and right place right time, meant away for a pig hunt, kiwi style, in the back blocks of Taranaki, with a farmer id just meet, he pulled up, while I was taking photos of a wild sow (pig) and her piglets.

Several days of rain, wind had blown out the rivers, stirred up the sea, so id decided to go for an explore, looking for a new pig or goat hunting spot, biffed the knife, day pack and cooper 6x45 in the SUV, and headed off in the hamming rain, Id been leaning over a fence, trying to get a photo of wild pigs, when two fellows pulled up, and the old one, asked me if I was poaching, "yea with binos and a I-phone" ,"you local" , 'Yep", "good" out with the 1-50000 grid map of the area, questions asked, answer given, land owner ship figgered out, access right-o-ways sorted, after bull****ting for 15min, a car finally came down the backcountry road, as we were blocking the road, a vehicle had to be moved,
The old farmer, said, follow us up to the farmhouse, come for a hunt, the dogs need a run, and id intending to go out this afternoon,
Hour latter, his mate had showed up, and before heading out the Farmer had decided to have a look at the cooper rifle, " nice rifle, but **** the action is noisy" why you buy something that noisy, " didn't know when I bought it" got a suppressor? no, ok lock it in the wagon, to hard on the dogs ears, unless suppressed.
A 300 blackout, single shot was bought out, 4 dogs rounded up (hunterways, or hunterway cross dogs, breed of NZ stock dogs) and the three of us were off, out the back of the Farm on quads, A few pigs were spotted in the distance,
and myself and Conrad, were to work our way up the creek, with three dogs with the Peter the farmer and his finder to stay on the ridge above, nothing for the first hour, and then the dogs disappeared, the sound of pig squealing and dogs barking, in the gut 300m below, the others took quads down the track to the creek, I elected to run (slipping and sliding)down the ridge, arriving at the dogs at the same time, this turned out to be a sow, in milk, so she had piglets, so after booting the dogs off, that were hanging on her ears, she was let go.
30 minutes later, we crossed over into another gully, and Peter was up ahead, I bailed of the quad, Conrad was negating a nasty little creek crossing, when the three dogs with us start spronging up in the air, trying to get a look, into the steep little creek, 15m away, then all in usion they off, wasn't 30 seconds latter the barking started,
Both myself and Conrad, raced in, trying to find the pig, and dogs in tight low scrub, 10m short we both stop and looked at each other, the boar, was chopping its jaws in anger, and the sound of tusks, being sharped, buy grinding against the top ivory, was unmistakable, and made the hairs on the back of my neck stand up, I started to point to a old fence, a few meters above, as Conrad said, "we better go up by the post, and check it out",
Buy standing on an old post I was able to get a look over the scrub, to see the dogs onto a very big cream colour boar, think we better get the rifle,
Peters dog showed up just as we, were deciding who was to go find him with the quad, and 5 minutes later Peter was there, with the 300 Blackout,
So far no dogs had been ripped, but they weren't game, to go in and grab him, so he could be stuck with the knife, we crept down the gut, with Conrad with 300 Blackout in the front, a bit of a wait, while peter and I tried to get enough of the dogs, out of the fight to ensure a clear shot without dogs, likely to jump in to the firing line, a muffled pop, and it was over,
I let the dog I was holding go, we half rolled the pig over and Conrad vertical slit the throat and stabbed down into the heart, we dragged it out a bit and Conrad passed me the knife, and said stick it again I didn't get it propley, I pushed the knife back down into the chest and a river of blood pored out of the throat, we dragged pig to face head down and gave it 5 minutes to bleed out, give the dogs a pat and check them for cuts and slashes.
with much difficulty, the three of us dragged the pig up out of the creek to were it could be gutted, and loaded onto the quad.
Took all three of us to load onto the back of the quad, the liver was feed to the dogs on the spot, and kidneys taken to feed other farm dogs.
Back at the farm kill shed, the pig pulled the scales down to 225lbs gutted, or 105kg,


I was asked if I wanted the Jaw, and said yes, but only if you guys don't, your dogs, your jaw, Conrad decided to get the jaw mounted, it was a very good pig with a deceit jaw. hooks a bit over 2 1/4 "out of the gums.
We had a couple beers, yarned for a bit, and then I headed out, over muddy gravel roads for home.
I went back in, a few days later, and dropped of a couple dozen beer, and a few feed's of Snapper and smoked marlin, Gave Peter a hand to feed out, for a couple hours, and he offered me a smaller boar (better eating) that he had just seen, I declined, as was leaving for Canada in two days,
Ok, come see us when your back, we go get another, perfect.
I been on a pig hunt and got a very big boar, A fellow be lucky to get another as big, in a lifetime, with out dogs, and even more valuable, I made a quality contact, in rural, backblocks New Zealand.
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Old 04-18-2018, 11:42 AM
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Red Bullets Red Bullets is offline
 
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Great story, writing and great pictures. Thanks for sharing. good sized boar to start with.
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Old 04-18-2018, 12:56 PM
pitw pitw is offline
 
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Heck of an adventure.

Grreat write up too.
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Old 04-18-2018, 02:06 PM
Drewski Canuck Drewski Canuck is offline
 
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Having been to the North Island a year ago, the place absolutely amazes me.

The variety of fishing available, the terrain, the hot springs, the hospitality....

They truly have a paradise down there.

I contemplated applying as a Meteorological refugee to NZ last January.

Drewski
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Old 04-18-2018, 02:31 PM
Redneck 7 Redneck 7 is offline
 
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That’s how it should be hunting you know, just friendly people enjoying each other’s time and respect is there during and after. Great storie, thanks for sharing. Please keep sharing more like it.
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Old 04-18-2018, 03:06 PM
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Grizzly Adams Grizzly Adams is offline
 
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Those look like domestic pigs gone wild, not the European boar types. Only difference though, pigs are adaptable and do well in the wild, breed doesn't matter.

Grizz
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Old 04-18-2018, 05:09 PM
trigger7mm trigger7mm is offline
 
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Default A big wild boar

That's a cool story. What a neat experiance. I've met a few guys that turned out to be good friends, by stopping on a backroad somewhere, and just shooting the breeze with them for a while.
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  #8  
Old 04-18-2018, 07:34 PM
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58thecat 58thecat is offline
 
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Hmmmmm pork chops anyone?
Beauty pig eh!
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Old 04-18-2018, 08:58 PM
southernman southernman is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Grizzly Adams View Post
Those look like domestic pigs gone wild, not the European boar types. Only difference though, pigs are adaptable and do well in the wild, breed doesn't matter.

Grizz
We had a chat about that, the boar is most defiantly, wild captain cooker blood line, ( Captain James Cook, introduced the European wild boar on his first voyage to New Zealand 1769)
simplest way to tell is the rear haunch, is much smaller than the shoulders, domestic pigs are bread for meat and are not as tapered in the body, with much bigger rear hams,
Sum of the other pigs, the farmer had been feeding, all thought wild stock, he is getting reject cheese and butter from the dairy factory, and chucking it down the bank in a few easy to access areas, and they are capturing the wiener piglets and selling them at the sale yards, good little side business, on very hard/poor quality farm land, with low stocking rates.
Incidentally the main reason, he had so many pigs about has much to do with the butter and cheese being high in salt, killing back the internal worms, and parasites, meaning very high piglet survival threw winter,
Could there be domestic blood lines, likely yes,
I seen a large number of pigs, over three days, in this area, likely over 200, including a high number of coloured pigs, white, ginger and combos of.
this farmer and his neighbours, have a massive area of native bush, backing onto there large farms, and an endless supply of pigs drifting in, esp over winter, when the bush is damp, cold and the fringe farm land is softened up with winter rains.
It was a good day,
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Old 04-18-2018, 09:46 PM
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Cool story and pic Southernman , sounds like you had a great trip back home
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Old 04-19-2018, 04:57 AM
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Nice Hog you shot there, Partner!
You came back just in time got the nice weather!
Cat
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Old 04-19-2018, 05:55 AM
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58thecat 58thecat is offline
 
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I got an area that holds pigs, we visited it last year and will again once the snow melts, they feel comfortable in this area and hopefully returned after our hunt last year, it's a bit of a hump to get to but it's a blast!!! This time it's the 590 with slugs
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Old 04-19-2018, 07:13 AM
DEAD ON DEAD ON is offline
 
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Awesome story!!!!
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Old 04-19-2018, 06:41 PM
Pony Pony is offline
 
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Cool that’s a big boar
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Old 04-19-2018, 09:57 PM
Smokinyotes Smokinyotes is offline
 
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Well done. Really enjoy your stories and hunts.
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Old 04-21-2018, 06:18 PM
roper1 roper1 is offline
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Really appreciate you taking the time to write it up, pics included!! Looks like a blast. Thank you!
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