Then this O’l boy off the net. 875# hog?
WB
[subject]
Thursday, November 28, 2024, 09:48 (6 days ago)
Looks like he used a .45 Colt Anaconda? Based on size of a cow, I can believe the weight!
Good grief
Greg
[subject]
Thursday, November 28, 2024, 16:10 (6 days ago) @ WB
Looks like it's been drinking water downstream from the nuclear power plant.
Those big hogs like that are covered with so much fat that
Gary Reeder
[subject]
Friday, November 29, 2024, 10:52 (5 days ago) @ WB
they are almost non edible. On one of our HHC hunts a young man shot a 720 LB hog in the cornfield and his Dad on the next HHC said that hog was nothing but fat and stunk up the whole house when they tried to cook it.Here is the hog.
The kid shot it several times with a 357 Marlin
Gary Reeder
[subject]
Friday, November 29, 2024, 11:08 (5 days ago) @ Gary Reeder
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A .357 is pretty good but without solid cast
WB
[subject]
Friday, November 29, 2024, 14:18 (5 days ago) @ Gary Reeder
bullets it has a touch time reaching the vitals or internal cavity on a hog. Many times the bullets will expand on the gristle plate or muscles and just stop. It's just shot of being enough. IMO.
On one of my hunts in Alaska we hunted for big bears
Gary Reeder
[subject]
Saturday, November 30, 2024, 13:34 (4 days ago) @ WB
and used a load that good friend Larry Kovach (who was loading all the GNR ammo at the time) loaded up for the hunt. He loaded 450 grain hard cast lead bullets for the 510 GNR. I designed the 510 GNR for bullets in the 350 grain range so these were an experiment to see how the 510 GNR worked on the big bears.
I was on the video camera looking over his shoulder when Larry took a shot at a large bear about 30 feet from him in a stream looking for salmon. The video showed the big bullet hit the bear behind the left front leg, go all the way thru and hit the water on the other side. The bear ran and kept going. We looked for the bear for a full day but never found him or a blood trail.
George Faerber was our guide and he said this had happened a few times before when hunters were using the big heavy lead bullets. He said the big flat nose bullet simply pushed a column of air thru the bear ahead of the bullet, pushing the vitals out of the way, rather than destroying them as it went thru. Later he banned those large heavy lead bullets from his bear hunting camps.
I shot a big bear on that trip that took a lot of killing. Using my 510 GNR revolver one shot was at about 2 feet rolling the bear at my feet. The second shot was at the same range but at the other side of the bear. I had blown 2 big heavy bullets completely thru the bear making an X wound channel. The bear rolled over and came up running. He went off into the alders wounded. That meant I had to go in to finish him off. I wasn't really looking forward to that walk thru the dense alder thicket looking for a wounded bear but the bear saved by bacon by dying before I got to him. I was using that same heavy lead bullet and this time it did the job by putting a hole in both lungs. When we got back to camp I unloaded my 510 GNR and I had 2 blood covered pieces of brass and my scope front lens was covered by blood. Both of these were from the first shot blood spray at the 2 foot point blank shot.
Since then I have danced with 3 other bears but thankfully came out on top.
I don';t know what bullet the kid was using but several
Gary Reeder
[subject]
Saturday, November 30, 2024, 13:45 (4 days ago) @ WB
shots with the 357 Magnum didn't do much but piss the hog off. Thankfully the hog was so big and fat it couldn't move quickly. The first several shots did not much at all to the hog as it had to go thru a thick hide, then thru 3 or 4 inches of hard packed fat before even reaching any vitals. A head shot finally finished the game. The kid was lucky that the hog couldn't motivate quickly enough to get a bite of the kid's leg.