I wouldn't touch the disease ridden, $hit piles when they are dead let alone alive, one ever bites you, you might just as well put the gun to your head, be quicker than a lingering death, from the $hit those disease ridden vermin carry!!!
+1
See my earlier post about hogs eating hog carcasses. I knew they carried diseases, so we always wore rubber gloves when cleaning them.
After seeing evidence of hog canabilism, it sorta quenched my appetite for feral hogs as table fare.
I wouldn't touch the disease ridden, $hit piles when they are dead let alone alive, one ever bites you, you might just as well put the gun to your head, be quicker than a lingering death, from the $hit those disease ridden vermin carry!!!
+1
See my earlier post about hogs eating hog carcasses. I knew they carried diseases, so we always wore rubber gloves when cleaning them.
After seeing evidence of hog canabilism, it sorta quenched my appetite for feral hogs as table fare.
Some will disagree and that's OK.
But, if they saw the trail cam footage I saw...
DF
I've come upon where they have eaten a deer we are trailing. They eat gut piles all the time. I've eaten wild pigs since a youth, and its never bothered me one bit. YMMV as we all say.
Domestic hogs will eat whatever gets in the pen too, FWIW. Chickens beware for sure. And they hate snakes...
We can keep Larry Root and all his idiotic blabber and user names on here, but we can't get Ralph back..... Whiskey Tango Foxtrot, over....
I wouldn't touch the disease ridden, $hit piles when they are dead let alone alive, one ever bites you, you might just as well put the gun to your head, be quicker than a lingering death, from the $hit those disease ridden vermin carry!!!
Well, I was bitten, most of the tip of one thumb and nail off many years ago. Had to run rabies shots just in case, as after the fact I managed to shoot that one in the head with my 44, after he bit me while we were trying to tie him up.
I never got any kind of disease, certainly not one bad enough to be foul mouthed either. Although I can see folks getting a disease enough to be foul mouthed and just slobber on.
We can keep Larry Root and all his idiotic blabber and user names on here, but we can't get Ralph back..... Whiskey Tango Foxtrot, over....
I wouldn't touch the disease ridden, $hit piles when they are dead let alone alive, one ever bites you, you might just as well put the gun to your head, be quicker than a lingering death, from the $hit those disease ridden vermin carry!!!
Plus, the nasty bastrds got fleas all over them. Then the damn fleas get on you. I didn't want to touch'em if I could help it. They've got to be the dirtiest animals I've ever touched.
"Government is not the solution to our problem, government is the problem." Ronald Reagan
It's fun to kill pigs even if they are in a barrel. We don't eat them, damn sure don't touch without gloves. Buzzards and coyotes have to make a living too!!
It's fun to kill pigs even if they are in a barrel. We don't eat them, damn sure don't touch without gloves. Buzzards and coyotes have to make a living too!!
I have friends over quite often and haven't served anything except wild ferrel hog for 6-7 years. When asked what the meal is I call it free range organic pork. I haven't had anyone dislike it yet.
You just need to handle it properly, gloves and eye protection when you process. Otherwise its all good.
I have friends over quite often and haven't served anything except wild ferrel hog for 6-7 years. When asked what the meal is I call it free range organic pork. I haven't had anyone dislike it yet.
It wouldn't be prudent to show'em my trail cam photos...
Dang, I need to get my feral hog hams & backstraps out of the deep freeze and cook them up. All from smaller, young-ish hogs and marinaded in cranberry juice.
And, yes, I have eaten yardbird. From my own yard. I like to think of yardbird as recycled ticks, roaches, spiders, worms, and bitty snakes transformed into tasty meat. I miss them nowadays, when the roaches start coming out. Kept my back yard bug-free, the grass de-thatched & fertilized. They were not "free range," but more like "free yard."
Regards,
deadlift_dude “The very first essential for success is a perpetually constant and regular employment of violence.” ----Fred Rogers
I have just used a wonderful aid in night time hog hunting. It is sold by Elusive Wildlife Technologies and is called BLIND SIDE-R. It is a motion activated green light powered by 4 D-cell batteries. Very simple (and inexpensive) to use. Just put the light and a camera watching a pile of bait. When you find out what time the hogs are coming just wait downwind and watch for the light. The light is not terribly bright but plenty bright enough for target identification and acquisition. With a proper scope you will be able to see your cross hairs and will know for sure it is a hog. Killed 3 out of 5 on my first try. A big sow and 2 yearlings. That was with 2 shots, the 2 smaller ones were standing side by side and the same bullet got both. Green light does not seem to excite them.
Patriotism (and religion) is the last refuge of a scoundrel.
if a pig is looking at me, i favor the 'between the nostrils' shot
"Not in an open forum, where truth has less value than opinions, where all opinions are equally welcome regardless of their origins, rationale, inanity, or truth, where opinions are neither of equal value nor decisive." Ken Howell
I've been hunting with a core group of guys that are related by blood, marriage or chasin' tail, since 1999. This was the occasion where all the male members of three of my lease buddy's were at our deer camp for a "reunion" of sorts. One of the guys was an Army Ranger and Captain of an Artillary unit in Iraq. He still luvs blowing schitt up. So we had gallons of Tannerite. Skeet shooting, shooting 1 cup bottles of tannerite at 400 yds, bar-b-que and adult beverages and men/boy behaving badly! They brought the section of 16' inch pipe with a 3" square hole burned out of the base and made a plywood wad to cover the 2 lb. coffee can full of tannerite. The shot was at 200 yds off a sandbag on the bed-rail of a truck. What you don't see is that about a minute after sending the hoglet into near earth orbit, the guy who was an Army Ranger Captain is holstering his Springfield XD in 45 acp and leaves his finger on the trigger while he is holstering it. He shoots himself. Luckily its a hardball round and goes in about 3" above the nee cap and travels straight downward and exits just above the ankle. He starts hopping around yelling "I'm shot, I'm shot". We're giving him jazz till the blood starts squirting. So we grab him, apply a tourniquet, call 911 and drive him the 7 miles to the road to meet the ambulance. While moving my ATV out of the way, my camera gets run over and the lens crushed. The sandisk survived. Talk about a guy that was embarrassed. He did two tours in Iraq and comes back to Texas and shoot his own self. We'd never had a firearms related accident before.