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Day #1 - Wild Hog Bowhunt at the Texas S Bowhunting Ranch ARRIVAL DAY - We arrived at Texas-S a little before 6:00pm on Sunday and visited with the owner Merle Smith and guide Jason Browning about what the hogs were doing lately. Jason and I went to 4 areas that he felt were current high traffic locations. We saw plenty of tracks, well traveled trails and mud wallows .. and several groups of wild hogs rooting or walking in the thick brush. We kept a low profile so we wouldn't spook them. I hung a Locon treestand on the edge of the swamp in the SE Corner and put a North Starr ladder stand behind me for Jim Autrey (Texas Deer Hunter TV Show) to video from. There are lots of trails and Jason said this is one of the most traveled routes on the ranch. It definitely looks a promising. Then I put a Double Bull at a crossing on a Creek in a draw that I hunted before. There immediate area has several very large fallen trees and they all have hog beds under them. So, we are set up and ready to go tomorrow morning. (Morning Hunt) A little after sunrise
Jim Autrey and I went to our treestands in the SE Corner. (here's Jim
in the ladderstand, and me
in my Treestand). No pigs came into our area and we got down at 8:30
and started working some of the mud wallows and brush piles in the areas
where I've seen hogs before. We saw one group of small ones, quite a few
deer and rams, but no adult hogs. We returned to camp at 10:30. A little
while later we drove into town and ate a pretty good lunch at Tracy's Cafe.
I had a tire going flat so we dealt with that. By the time we returned
to Texas-S my bud Rick Philippi was there.
Next, Rick went to the dam, a productive area for him in the past. It is full of vines and brush -- and wild hog trails. Rick selected a wide, well worn trail in the middle of the dam. Carefully, he moved toward the ridge of the dam. Just short of the top he saw black, wild hog ears, on the opposite side of the dam, the hog was apparently standing in the trail Rick was on, waiting to see what was coming. Rick signaled Jim Autrey and Jim eased up on a
nearby trail and turned on the video camera. Rick saw the hog's ears turn
to a more broadside angle and he drew his bow and took one step uphill.
The hog stood broadside, frozen. Other hogs were also in the brush, but
Rick's total attention was locked in on the black hogs vital area. His
arrow hit perfectly and the hog burst out the opposite side of the hill
and rolled to a stop in the open. "I got it," Jim Autrey said.
Ricky Philippi, man we wish you could've made it, and just for you, here is a wallpaper sized pic of your dad with this big boar. Learning New Tricks ...
To digress a moment, I began hog hunting with some Junior High buddies in Florida when I was 14 -- so I'm not a new hog hunter. Our most productive method was to find water holes and small ponds that had a lot of brush around them. We divided up and snuck along the hog trails with the intention of jumping a hog. Sometimes a hog would stand up and look at you long enough for a shot, but more often it would run, which sometimes gave one of us a shot. The hogs did not normally run far and we fanned out and looked for them. If we located the hogs we pulled stalks on them. Another method was to walk and look for them traveling, feeding or rooting and then stalk them. And in areas with heavy hog populations, stand hunting was productive. So, that pretty much summed up my wild hog technique -- until I went out with Jason Browning. Jason and I started by working a large pond. Nothing. We then worked the nearby section of woods, checking pine tree blow downs. A few blow downs into the deal Jason nodded toward a brush pile 25 yards ahead of us and whispered, "There is a hog." I didn't see any hog. "Where?" I whispered. Jason pointed and I made out the top side of the body of a tan hog laying flat on it's side, sound asleep. With the hog identified I slowly closed the distance. But, it turned out to be a young hog and we backed away. We turned up 6 more hogs in blow downs, brush piles and mud bogs and in short order I got a handle on the what to look for and began spotting the hogs myself. Two big hogs made me before I got into position for a shot and the other hogs were young ones. I didn't take any shots but it was a thrilling and highly productive afternoon for me. Next Day... Day 1 | Day #2 - Morning hunt | Day #2 Afternoon hunt | Day 3 | Web site www.Texas-SBowhunting or email hunt@texas-Sbowhunting.com The Texas-S Bowhunts in 2000
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