texashuntingforum.com logo
Main Menu
Advertisement
Affiliates
Advertisement
Newest Members
hpnuge, Final Rise Outfitters, Ctaylor90, McKay817, BobOso
72069 Registered Users
Top Posters(All Time)
dogcatcher 110,797
bill oxner 91,416
SnakeWrangler 65,533
stxranchman 60,296
Gravytrain 46,950
RKHarm24 44,585
rifleman 44,461
Stub 43,960
Forum Statistics
Forums46
Topics538,119
Posts9,733,192
Members87,069
Most Online25,604
Feb 12th, 2024
Print Thread
Page 2 of 2 1 2
Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: caprocker] #357448 05/12/08 01:47 PM
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 16,474
Crazyhorse Offline
THF Celebrity
Offline
THF Celebrity
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 16,474
Lonesome Dove are not, hogs will eat any snake they can catch no matter the species.


Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: Crazyhorse] #357449 05/12/08 01:53 PM
Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 178
E
epj Offline
Woodsman
Offline
Woodsman
E
Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 178
Story from the "Wheatfield" at Gettysburg. Hogs were busy after the battle.....

http://enterthestrangeways.blogspot.com/2005/10/horror-story-of-gettysburg.html



...smelled like, victory.
Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: epj] #357450 05/12/08 02:10 PM
Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 280
D
DuctTape Offline
Bird Dog
Offline
Bird Dog
D
Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 280
I just did not know fawns were dropping right now


Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: DuctTape] #357451 05/12/08 03:02 PM
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 7,290
B
BenBob Online Content
THF Trophy Hunter
Online Content
THF Trophy Hunter
B
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 7,290
Quote:

I just did not know fawns were dropping right now




5 month gestation period, so does bred in November could have started having babies in April.


Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: BenBob] #357452 05/12/08 03:38 PM
Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 476
H
hsuhunter Offline
Bird Dog
Offline
Bird Dog
H
Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 476
i have watched a big boar eat piglets as they were coming out of a sow. If a hog were to eat a fawn i think it would be during the actual birth or just after.



I don't live in Dallas...... Amen
Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: hsuhunter] #357453 05/13/08 02:07 AM
Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 9,548
T
TXBowhunter1 Offline
THF Trophy Hunter
Offline
THF Trophy Hunter
T
Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 9,548
i know someone that shot a doe, waited 30 minutes to go get it and the hogs were eating on it when they got to it. on a different note a friend of mine shot a doe with his bow and when he got to it a turkey buzzard had eaten the eye out of it.


Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: TXBowhunter1] #357454 05/13/08 02:59 AM
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 1,258
L
Letsgo Offline
Pro Tracker
Offline
Pro Tracker
L
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 1,258
The typical fawn will not move when approached for roughly the first 3 days of being born. After the 3 days, it will let you get close but run when you get right on it.


Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: elliscountyhog] #357455 05/13/08 05:32 PM
Joined: Oct 2007
Posts: 3,056
R
rstewlandman Offline
Veteran Tracker
Offline
Veteran Tracker
R
Joined: Oct 2007
Posts: 3,056
i was wondering how they knew.....did the pigs swallow the fawns whole? that sounds a little wak to me, although it is not would not be a shock for a hog to eat a faw, we know they eat meat....as for them getting me if i fall out of a treestand....pack a pistol and dont worry about being the first person to be eaten by a hog because you fell out of the stand...come on people....I would question if a pig had that kind of nerve to approach a live human without other provication



the man at the top of the mountain didn't fall up it
Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: rstewlandman] #357456 05/13/08 06:18 PM
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 16,474
Crazyhorse Offline
THF Celebrity
Offline
THF Celebrity
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 16,474
Your running under the A$$umption, that if you fell out of a tree stand or off a tripod, that you will be conscious AFTER the impact.

That don't always work out that way. People have died upon impact from falling from elevated stands in the past few years.

It is just one of those nagging little things that a person should keep somewhere in the back of their mind, hogs are pretty muchily all over the state, and I for one would not want to be the test case to see if they would attack an unconscious human. JMO.


Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: rstewlandman] #357457 05/13/08 06:43 PM
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 7,290
B
BenBob Online Content
THF Trophy Hunter
Online Content
THF Trophy Hunter
B
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 7,290
Quote:

i was wondering how they knew.....did the pigs swallow the fawns whole? that sounds a little wak to me, although it is not would not be a shock for a hog to eat a faw, we know they eat meat....as for them getting me if i fall out of a treestand....pack a pistol and dont worry about being the first person to be eaten by a hog because you fell out of the stand...come on people....I would question if a pig had that kind of nerve to approach a live human without other provication




If the hogs had a deer colored hide in their stomach and 4 hooves, that is a pretty good indication that they ate a fawn, whether it was dead before, during, or after an attack by a pig. I know some people that have a big hog that they feed roadkilled rabbits to and he never slows down on anything that you throw in the pen for him to eat. You better not accidently fall in there with him either.

In regard to the approach by a pig, isn't the only nerve the pig would need would be the smell of blood? I do not really want to take a chance of laying on the ground under a treestand unconscious with a bad cut and be unable to move. Maybe they would be as scared of me as I would be of them, but I think they might be a little ruthless if the situation presented itself.


Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: BenBob] #357458 05/13/08 11:05 PM
Joined: Feb 2008
Posts: 3,251
C
cibolo Offline
Veteran Tracker
Offline
Veteran Tracker
C
Joined: Feb 2008
Posts: 3,251
i've seen them eat the remains of cattle,wich is meat of course but they always leave the skull and the hooves. i guess if it is somthing they can't crush they just pull the meat off of it.



"Error of Opinion may be tolerated where Reason is left free to combat it." - Thomas Jefferson
"If we ever forget that we're one nation under GOD, then we will be a nation gone under." - Ronald Reagan
Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: cibolo] #357459 01/16/09 07:40 PM
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 1,281
T
tattooedtexan Offline
Pro Tracker
Offline
Pro Tracker
T
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 1,281
My friend and I were deer hunting in Maverick Co. He arrowed a deer on the evening hunt and was not 100% pleased with his shot placement. He made the decision to let the deer lay and we would go back and look in 4-5 hrs. Long story short: we ran the hogs off of the deer, and by the time we got to it they had eaten thru the stomach and guts and were into the backstraps. This was a large deer (about 200# on the hoof) and the hogs had eaten a significant amount in that period of time. It made me re-think those bastards. I used to find them to be a novelty and I would let alot of them go. I try to kill everyone I see now.



NRA Life member. Join the NRA! Texas State Rifle Assoc. Life member. Join TSRA!!! "An armed society is a polite society."
Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: tattooedtexan] #357460 01/16/09 07:47 PM
Joined: Sep 2004
Posts: 11,669
C
cody Offline OP
THF Celebrity
OP Offline
THF Celebrity
C
Joined: Sep 2004
Posts: 11,669
Wow...talk about a bump from the stoneages!


Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: cody] #357461 01/16/09 07:56 PM
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 37,484
Big Orn Offline
great white gorilla
Offline
great white gorilla
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 37,484
I have witnessed hogs eating snakes and fish. The snakes were alive and running free, but the fish were trapped in a hole in a creek after the water went down. They ate the fish, mud and all. Mostly mudcat and jackfish.

I've also seen what was left of a deer that one hog was trotting off through the woods with in this mouth like a dog. The deer was full grown, but doubt that the hog killed it.

And hogs can smell the afterbirth when a fawn is born. If they get there quick enough they can get the doe and fawn both.

They are predators.


Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: cody] #357462 01/16/09 07:59 PM
Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 7,304
Big Tony Offline
THF Trophy Hunter
Offline
THF Trophy Hunter
Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 7,304
A few weeks ago, my wife and I were going down the last paved road to our lease. There was a dead deer in the road and it had about 20 hogs on it. When I went into the oncoming lane to go around 'em, THE HOGS DIDN'T QUIT KNAWING ON THE DEER. We didn't even know what they were eating until we drove back the next morning.




"A hunt based only on trophies taken, falls far short of what the ultimate goal should be." -Fred Bear
Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: epj] #357463 01/16/09 07:59 PM
Joined: Feb 2008
Posts: 240
E
El_Numero_Uno Offline
Woodsman
Offline
Woodsman
E
Joined: Feb 2008
Posts: 240
It is recorded that on the first night at the Battle of Shiloh that hogs were eating the dead and wounded left on the battlefield.
I have no doubt that hogs will kill and eat young fawns if they can catch them.



El Numero Uno
"I do Ruger No.1 rifles"
www.classicsportingarms.com
Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: elliscountyhog] #357464 01/16/09 08:48 PM
Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 9,051
M
MaggieMTx Offline
THF Trophy Hunter
Offline
THF Trophy Hunter
M
Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 9,051
Pigs WILL kill & eat snakes with no prob. They will raid ground laying bird nest & eat the eggs as well as any live young...baby rabbits as well. Its been seen here that when we have A LOT of hogs, we DON'T have the rattle snakes but this past summer we DIDN'T have hardly any hogs & I had tons of rattlers around. A new baby fawn is merely a snack to hogs when they are hungry, they don't care.

Its been a while back but there was a show on one of the hunting channels & a guy was hunting hogs, he was in the swamp & came across a big ole boar & he had killed a smaller one & was guarding it & eating it in his wallow when they hunter went to kill him.


Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: mrbigtexan] #357465 01/16/09 10:25 PM
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 259
C
CRF4JEFF Offline
Bird Dog
Offline
Bird Dog
C
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 259
Quote:

when i was a kid i can barely remember a movie called "razorback" i think. does anyone remember this?




HAHAHAHAHAHAHA

Here you go

Clicky

Plot summary for
Razorback (1984) More at IMDbPro »
advertisementA wild, vicious pig terrorizes the Australian outback. The first victim is a small child who is killed. The child's granddad is brought to trial for killing the child but aquitted. The next victim is an American TV-journalist. Her husband Carl gets there and starts to search for the truth. The local inhabitants won't really help him, but he is joined by a hunter and a female farmer to find the beast.


Last edited by CRF4JEFF; 01/16/09 10:25 PM.

Members of Congress should be compelled to wear uniforms like NASCAR drivers so we could identify their corporate sponsors.


My 12 steps are from my workbench to the garage fridge.
Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: CRF4JEFF] #357466 01/17/09 01:29 AM
Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 5,044
E
Eland Slayer Offline
THF Trophy Hunter
Offline
THF Trophy Hunter
E
Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 5,044
There was an article in one of my older issues of Boar Hunter Magazine about this very subject. They did a study on a ranch in South Texas a couple years back. They took a helicopter out during fawning season and shot 20 hogs over 200 lbs. Out of the 20 hogs, 18 had fawn skins in their stomachs. That's 90%!! I'm sure a few of those fawns died from other causes, but you can bet your butt that some were definitely killed by the hogs.



Hunt Report - South Africa 2022

Wade Abadie - Wild Shot Photography
Website | Facebook | Instagram
Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: Eland Slayer] #357467 01/17/09 01:45 AM
Joined: May 2008
Posts: 7,992
B
B-swit Offline
THF Trophy Hunter
Offline
THF Trophy Hunter
B
Joined: May 2008
Posts: 7,992
we have a big problem with this on my lease


Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: elliscountyhog] #357468 01/17/09 03:51 AM
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 1,141
campcook Offline
Pro Tracker
Offline
Pro Tracker
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 1,141
Another movie reference:

At the beginning of the 1939 Wizard of Oz movie with Judy Garland, she is walking along the top rail of the pig pen. She slips and falls in, and scares the 3 helpers. I can tell you that they are not afraid of her injuring herself; they are afraid that the HOGS will hurt her. And these are "domesticated" hogs (or as close as pigs get to being domesticated, anyway).

Let them run loose for a couple of generations, and interbreed with the Russian boar, and you can fill in the blanks with the result.

Hogs are the fire ant of the mammal world.

Kill all you can, UP TO AND INCLUDING BABIES SO YOUNG THEY HAVE STRIPES!!! Then cook and eat if they are young enough.

Lora


Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: cody] #357469 01/17/09 07:56 AM
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 608
S
Skinner0_2 Offline
Tracker
Offline
Tracker
S
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 608
Quote:

Has anyone heard of this happening? A guy here in the office said that some buddies killed 12 hogs up around aspermont last weekend. 8 of them had fawns in there bellies. If this is indeed taking place we'll be deerless in a couple of years.




Where does he hunt that there are fawns in January? Fawns drop in June. Wonder if they where actually new born piglets. Skinner



Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: Skinner0_2] #357470 01/17/09 08:11 AM
Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 19,161
Mr. Clean Offline
THF Celebrity
Offline
THF Celebrity
Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 19,161
A LOT of piglets will have the "fawn" pattern on their backs until they get older, spots and stripes & such. I have seen large BOARS eating Carrion, dead deer and a dead cow once but Fawns are not dropping this time of year....they are still in gestation like Skinner said. FYI.


Re: Pigs eating fawns!? [Re: Mr. Clean] #357471 01/17/09 08:38 AM
Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 9,051
M
MaggieMTx Offline
THF Trophy Hunter
Offline
THF Trophy Hunter
M
Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 9,051
If you check the date "05/09/08"...that's when he meant/typed it not this month


Page 2 of 2 1 2
Previous Thread
Index
Next Thread

© 2004-2024 OUTDOOR SITES NETWORK all rights reserved USA and Worldwide
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.3