Where I live there is a wooded creek, with a flood bottom, 100 yards wide on each side of the creek. And everywhere else is highland pastures.
The wooded creek bottom is divided from the uplands, by a thickly wooded slope, 60-70 yards wide. This wooded slope is where Mr. Hog likes to hang out during the day. When Hog first appeared on my creek, two or three years ago, I was out on the trapline and saw what amounted to a big double litter of 10-12 Hog. They were just being Hogs, and as long as I walked along behind them at a respectable range, not staring at them or being sneaky, they were not bothered by the human following.
I was just studying them, had my .22 but was just watching them. Seeing what they were into, what they liked to eat, and how they moved.
The better to build a good trap and catch a bunch of them, as they are about the best meat there is. Allways remember to wear gloves when you do any Hog butchering. Blood and guts of the Hog are full of evil little critters that will soak through your skin, and it will make you real sick, so... gloves.
Anyway, I was following about where 20-30% of the herd was visible at any one time. When I could see 30% I stopped and just stood. When I could see 20% of the herd I moved forwards. This way I had a Hog watching party for an hour and a half, when it happened!
I was just easing along. A wooded flood plain to my right, and a wooded slope to my left. I was walking along the bottom of the slope, where it joined the bottom, headed north west.
A faint trail went along right where I was intending to go, right at the bottom of the wooded slope. And a clump of big trees was spitting distance to the right of the trail 30 yards ahead. I would have walked right past the clump, and was saved by my not following too close, or to fast.
I was paitient in my stalk, I was just watching and of course was in no hurry, I was just watching and learning.
I was just 'eeeasing' along when from behind the clump of big trees...
Her back was to me, and suddenly she turned her head around to the left.
There she was...! looking right at me at 30 yards, the biggest Hog there ever was. It was the moment of truth. This Hog was obviously the Old Queen Grandmother Spirit Hog ... of all time.
It was the most intelligent glance I had ever seen, this old Hog.
The other 160Lb -180 Lb hogs had an eye level of below my knees.
But the Hogzilla I was looking at had an eye level of 5' off the ground, and mines 5'5'', as I'm 6'2''!
I saw profound intelligence in those eyes.
As she looked me right in the eyes, like she was reading my mind. She knew how much money I had in the bank, and how good of a shot I was. She knew how fast I could run, and how much I could eat.
I imagined she was thinking :
"Well, hmmm I can leave one young boar, and two sows, and yes, they will have enough space here."
This old Hog was so scary that...
... in my memory it is not scary.
In my memory there is no fear.
I knew not to show fear. I just knew it in an instant.
No fear, and do not show aggression either. I mean are you kidding!
Just stand and look, take a step back and just stand, gun over my left bent elbow. No threat, and no fear, no threa/////
I was so programed to not showing fear, as I write this 2 years after it happened, I can honestly say that: 'I had no fear.' I don't have a memory of being scared, because I snapped into the 'do not show fear, and do not show aggression. That it was automatic, I remember no fear, because I did not have any time to think any thing but, 'no fear and no aggression'
'Just think about something else.'
She would have jumped out of behind that clump of trees and ate my head before I could have said hi. if she had of wanted to.
Me and my .22 .
She was waiting for me to walk past that clump of big trees.
She knew I was coming and could not figure out why I was going so slowly. I just was too patient for her, and it saved my life.
'Jack" my Dad said, "your grandfather was 5-6 years old back at the turn of the century."
"Everybody liveds on a farm back then, and one day while everybody was out working, this old Sow what had pigs attacked your grandad,
and went to feeding on his leg."
They heard him screamming and got him out of there, but his leg was hurt pretty bad. That old cane you have in your truck, that one I saw in there today! Is your old grandads, my father, and that is how his leg came to be hurt.
And when he got old, and got dibeadease and lost his leg, that was the leg he lost!
"Be careful with them Hog!"
J. Knife