35 remington vs Hog

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Todd1700

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Pine Hill Alabama
Hog loses.

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I went down to some of our land to put out a few game cameras. I knew there was a good chance of seeing a hog in one place I was going so I took the recently acquired 336 Marlin in 35 rem along. The middle field as we call the place is actually a series of long narrow fields divided by long narrow lanes of trees. I spotted this hog as I was driving in to the place at the far end of one of the fields. It was about 400 yards away rooting the plowed ground so vigorously that it literally had a dust cloud stirred up. I drove on past the end of that field until I passed the end of the next lane of trees and was out of sight. Then I parked; grabbed the Marlin; and headed down the backside of this line of trees to-wards the other end of the field. When I made it to the end I eased around to see if the hog was still out in the field. It wasn't but I heard it grunting out in the narrow lane of trees dividing the two fields. As I stood there it came out of the trees about 75 yards back up the path I had just walked along. She turned and started walking away from at an angle to my left giving me a quartering away shot. I put the cross hairs just behind the last rib on her left side and squeezed off the shot. She was so covered in dust from rooting that it looked like you hung a filthy rug over a clothes line and hit it with bat. That big 200 grain bullet eat her up and came out behind her right shoulder. She made it about 10 yards. We have a shoot on sight policy with hogs. We have killed 28 in this one spot in the last 4 months.
 
Nice good for you I also have a 336 in 35 rem going to use it for deer season I can't wait either :D
 
Nice shot Todd. The ole 35 is more than capable on pigs. I fear with having killed 28 in 4 months that you have a pretty bad problem. If this is your private land you might have better luck getting rid of them (at least for a little while) by trapping them. You can get whole sounders in one trap if you do it right and get a little lucky. SOS is a great policy, but you aren't really accomplishing much with that many hogs.
 
I live in Alabama and I have never even seen a hog in the wild. I'm sorry to hear that you have such a problem with hogs. A SOS policy is a great policy to have. I'd be happy to help with that policy if you would like...LOL
 
Todd,
I think eradication might as well be erased from your vocabulary as far as hogs are concerned. It's not a fight you can really feasibly win once you have them. But it's a good excuse to get out of the house and have some fun with friends and family. And wild hog is a great excuse to have a BBQ. But 28 in 4 months would be a lot of pork to eat and a lot of wood to burn.

CarJunkie, they are coming if they aren't already there. People think it's SOOO awesome to have hogs. And honestly it is fun. But when you see your deer populations diminished from the hogs competing for acorns (the hogs win this fight everytime btw) and other food sources, and the land torn to shreds, you will realize how destructive they really are.
 
I'm about 15 min away from the Tennessee state line and I've heard of a few people see hogs in the woods but its only one or two and they feed them a lead pill right then and there. 28 pigs in 4 months is alot you definitely have a problem. I know several with hundreds of acres of cow pasture and their only problem has been coyotes. Like already mentioned if we don't have them yet we will soon.

Its funny you mention fields look like they were hit by missles my backyard looks like that but it isn't hogs its armadillos. A .22lr does wonders on those things.
 
Good Job! Kill all you see and eat the best!
Great old chambering the .35Rem. I have a 336 in that caliber, Its one of my favorites!
 
CarJunkie,
Armadillos can look like single hogs rooting around. But you get 10 hogs and it's astonishing how much they can tear up in one night. 28 in 4 months isn't really that many compared to some places. We just had a hog round up not to far from here. A friend of mine entered it. He said it was absolutely amazing how many hogs there were. I didn't hear the total, but it was in the hundreds. When hogs get established, that's it. They are there. Trap and shoot all you want. You might get lucky and put a dent in the population for a few months. The problem is when they leave or get pushed out, more will take their place. My hog gun is a Marlin 1895 45-70. More than enough gun for the even biggest hogs. But I have always been fascinated with the 35 Rem. There's just something about that cartridge I love. In truth, it's plenty for even the biggest hogs. Maybe it's just the fact it's a lever cartridge I love so much.

Todd, really hope you can at least get somewhat of a handle on that problem. That 35 will certainly put a few on the ground. After deer season, I plan on going out and filling my two deep freezers with ferrel swine. Come spring my smoker is gonna be busy.
 
The 35 Rem appears impressive.

I don't have a 35 Remington rifle, but acquired a bulk of new in box 35 Remington ammo in a recent estate sale. I've been considering getting a 35 Remington but have also listed the ammo for sale.

How are the ballistics of the 35 Rem vs. the 3030?
 
Lead,
The 30-30 and 35 are pretty close ballistics wise. You get a little heavier bullet and a little more diameter with the 35. But you also pay more for ammo. Unless you reload the 35 really isn't a major improvement over the 30-30. I would compare it as a difference between 308 and 30-06. Yes there is a difference as the '06 can take heavier bullets. But apples to apples they are very close. A deer, hog or black bear isn't going to say "Oh I got shot with a 35 and not a 30-30? I guess I need to die faster."

I think most that have a 35 have it because it's different. And that's a good reason in my book.
 
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