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Georgia Hog Hunt Pics
Hillbilly:
OK, I'm back from lounging on the beach. Here are a few pics from The Great Redneck Hog Hunt.
Here's a few shots of the woods and country. Obviously, the woods are too thick to do more than crawl on your belly through in most places, so most of the hunting is spot-and-stalk in the food plots or bushhogged trails. The higher ground is a tangle of brush, dwarf palmetto, and briars. The lower ground is cypress-tupelo sloughs complete with Spanish moss, gators and other swamp critters.
There is all kinds of cool wildlife and birds on the place, wish I had taken my camera out with me more. There were loads of rabbits, deer, a few armadillos, turtles and gopher tortoises, flocks of ibis and waterfowl flying overhead. I enjoyed just being out in and seeing all the plants and animals of a totally different environment. The Deep-South lowcountry is awesome. Here is a swallow-tailed kite-a big, rare bird of prey that I haven't had a chance to see before. There were several of them patrolling the place.
Hillbilly:
Ohyeah, there were lots of hogs there, too. :) Most of them I saw were black, but there are also brown/red ones, red ones with black spots, dirty-tan colored ones, and blue-gray colored hogs. They're easier to get in camera range of than bow range-I was a bit more accurate with the camera than I was with the stick and string. ;D Here's a spotted hog and a big, black boar:
Here's what happens when the wind swirls while you're stalking a group of hogs and after a half-hour of crawling, you're suddenly looking at a stampede of fast-moving pig butts:
Here's some cute little fellers I found out in an oat patch-they're about the size of rabbits, and I snuck up to within a few feet downwind of them. I just needed me a fish net.......
Hillbilly:
And here's what happens when everything goes right and you don't miss-so I've been told ;D -
Here's why you don't want an arrow stuck between your eyes:
The End. :)
We had a great time and I'll fer sure be going back. I'll be practicing my long-range shooting a bit before then, though. >:( :)
huntertrapper:
nice pics sir...some meat made too, i bet its some hard huntin in the south with the land and foliage the way it is.... ;)
mullet:
Nice pictures Steve, I wish I took my camera with me more too. I love watching those Swallowtail kites, It was unusual for them to be that far north. The normal migration range from Brazil is Central Florida from what we learned from a biologist Charlie and I met one year doing a study on them. I started to grab those two little orphan pigs when Charlie and I saw them. But it was too hot to start all that running. David Tiller wants to go next year.
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