Big boar! Wild hog weighing 780

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lgsracer

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Now that is a lot of bacon!

Big boar! Wild hog weighing 780 pounds bagged in north Mobile County

By Jeff Dute
October 30, 2009, 8:18AM

http://blog.al.com/live/2009/10/big_boar_wild_hog_weighing_780.html


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Adam Stagner - hunting Wednesday in north Mobile County with his best friend, Matt Pryor - killed a 780-pound feral hog that apparently is one of the biggest free-ranging hogs ever bagged by a hunter. The massive beast is pictured above in the back of a pickup truck Wednesday night, and its hooves are shown at right. The boar measured 6 feet 11 inches long, had a neck girth of 51 inches, stood an estimated 44 inches tall and had 3.5 inch long cutters (bottom tusks). "It's probably the biggest game animal I'll ever kill," Stagner said.


TURNERVILLE, Ala. - At 300 yards, the dark blotch feeding on the Big Oak Hunting Club's No. 7 food plot Wednesday evening evoked different opinions from the three who were looking at it.

"It's a cow, daddy, a cow," exclaimed Adam Stagner's 3-year-old son, Elliott.

"No, it's a black bear," said Stagner's best friend, Matt Pryor.

For Stagner, 26, the issue wasn't settled until he watched the animal toss its massive head from side to side, sending dirt flying high in its effort to get at the planted crop in the plot in north Mobile County.

It was a wild hog they estimated at between 300 and 400 pounds.

Stagner would later learn that guess was only half right.

They raced back to the house and finally decided a .30-06 would be big enough to handle the job.

The two men returned to No. 7, and about halfway through, Stagner said, things got serious.

"He saw us or winded us about the same time we saw him ... and everything just started happening real fast," Pryor said.

Stagner added, "He started moving off at about 40 yards, and it didn't seem like the first two shots from that ought-6 even fazed him. I started thinkin' I hadn't brought enough gun."


The third shot, which Stagner
and Pryor agreed likely severed the spine, finally knocked the pig down. A close-range fourth shot ended the hunt.

"I just wanted to make sure it was dead, and then my buddy (Matt) starts jumpin' up and down and yellin,' 'State record! State record!'" Stagner said. "There are hogs all around in that swamp, but nothing like this."

The boar was so big, Stagner's 500-horsepower four-wheeler couldn't pull it out of the woods, and they had to use a front-end loader to get it into the back of Pryor's four-wheel-drive truck.

Pryor and Stagner took the pig to Dean Brothers Auto Salvage in Kushla, where it was weighed late Thursday morning at 780 pounds.

The boar measured 6 feet 11 inches long, had a neck girth of 51 inches, stood an estimated 44 inches tall and had 3½-inch long cutters (bottom tusks).

"It's probably the biggest game animal I'll ever kill," Stagner said.

Alabama doesn't have a record book for wild hogs, which are deemed nuisance animals by the state's conservation department, but an Internet search revealed that Wild Boar USA has maintained the Weiser Weight and Tusk record book since 2005.

A search of the book's free-ranging boar category shows the world record with a score of 737. Official scorer Heather Garner of Aliceville said the score includes the weight plus measurements derived from the animal's tusks.

Unfortunately, Pryor and Stagner cut the tusks out and tried to salvage as much meat as possible before burying the rest.

Even though Stagner's boar scored higher than the existing world record without any tusk measurements, Garner said in order to qualify as a record, it must be possible to get all of the measurements with the hog in a whole condition.

"That's too bad, because if that weight is correct, it sounds like it would have been up there," Garner said.
 
Not really wild but a run away bacon hog hang'n with the wrong crowd it would seem, a run away from some farm more than likely but i would be tickled to have him in my truck. Some goooood bbq on them hams..
 
Judgin' by the teeth, he's been in the wild a while. He looks a bit light in color, though, and not quite the razorback hogs we have down here. So, he's probably first generation I'm betting, I mean, if Snopes doesn't debunk him like so many other "hogzilla" stories.

The hogs where my place is haven't seen a pin in lord knows how many generations. They all have that razorback look to 'em, lean and mean, but probably rarely see 400 lbs. I've never seen one over 350. Rumor has it that a local big ranch here imported European wild boar back in the 70s and that's the cause of our evil looking pigs. I don't know, do know they have a lot of Axis on that ranch. I also know that all our pigs are black, not a one I've ever seen or caught looked like a Duroc. A 300 lb Texas coastal pig is one mean SOB. :D When they get that big, though, they're a bit gamey.
 
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The boar was so big, Stagner's 500-horsepower four-wheeler couldn't pull it out of the woods, and they had to use a front-end loader to get it into the back of Pryor's four-wheel-drive truck.

i wanna know where he got a 500 horse quad!

wait, you mean it was only 500cc?

Oops. someone made a mistake. Thats a big ole hog. I don't understand why you would NOT contact someone over a pig that size before you started hacking on it.
 
These hogzilla type claims are getting tired. That pig is about as wild as my Cocker Spaniel. Sure, it may have been running free for the past several months, but that doesn't make it a wild boar in my book. The upside is that it should taste far better than a true wild porker.:D
 
Judgin' by the teeth, he's been in the wild a while. He looks a bit light in color, though, and not quite the razorback hogs we have down here. So, he's probably first generation

I agree with the first generation part. My guess is that he has been in the wild about 2 years. Durocs can grow really fast. It looks like the hogs here in eastern NC, but he is definitely huge
 
countertop said:
He looks like a heat checker to me
I love the obscure reference. Our boars never quite got that big before getting sent to the pepperoni factory...

Speedo66 said:
From what I've read hogs go feral very quickly, including growing tusks.
The tusks are always growing, but in today's indoor facilities they break off on the steel crating.
 
Not a Courier

I know both of these guys and the truck is a full size F-150. The hog looks big in the above photos, but you should have seen the pics that he had with him last night.

To put it as delicately as possible... All things being proportionally sized, that porker looked as though he had 2 hard hats hung on his rump.
 
Unfortunately, Pryor and Stagner cut the tusks out and tried to salvage as much meat as possible before burying the rest.

I have to ask why do people bury them? When they shoot a rabbit, a deer, a racoon do they bury them?

Something smells here and it's certainly not pork :barf:


That thing looks about as wild as a basset hound :neener:
 
Something smells

Yep, It is pork. What happened as I understand it is the beast went down in the late afternoon and it spent all night in the truck so all those interested in such things can ooh and ahh over it. When it finally made it to the wrecking yard ( biggest scales available ) it had already been dead 15 hours and now rapidly becoming foul. Remember this is South Mobile County and the low temps that night was about 72 degrees. It doesn't take that 15 hours and the next several hours by the time you get such a conquest strung up to butcher until it is way too late.

I'm fairly sure that none of you would leave a nice pack of pork chops on the porch for about 20 hours and feed them to your family/

So, yes something smells here. It was the pork.
 
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