I was cleaning out my hunting gear cupboard making room for my reloading gear and found this photo of a solid pig I shot over the Easter long weekend in 2005 . Excuse the poor quality , as a photographer I make a good billiards player .
The property is around 900 kilometres Sth West of Brisbane and at this time was into it's 10th year of drought . There had been some rain that gave the country a flush of colour over that time but not enough to make any real differance . The saving grace as far as water goes is bore drains which had been dug by hand at the turn of the 20th century and channeled artesian water across the 48 000 acre property . It's a great hunting property despite the hard country and drought which thankfully late last year was finally broken buy months of good rain and floods .
My hunting mate and I where walking along the scrub line 30 yards off a bore drain with the wind blowing across us right to left approaching a 3 day old sheep carcass hoping to bust a Boar feeding on it . Sure enough we spotted a small mob of pigs being chased off the carcass buy a solid looking pig with a high shoulder line and sloping hindquarters , very typical profile of a Boar in this district .
It was my shot so I circled around put the wind in my face and closed in on the pigs , at 30 yards I ran out of cover and as the mob of smaller pigs was shuffling about and quarreling between me and the largest pig in the mob I had no choice but to take the shot from there . I waited , appalled at the stink trying not to be distracted with the foul meal of sheep intestines the pig was slurping down like spaghetti . After a few minutes the pig presented a broadside shot , all I remember is focusing on a tiny spot literally picking out a hair and watching my home made arrow smack that hair dead centre .
The pig ran around in circles for a bit , staggered 20 yards and fell into the boredrain . We gave it a few minutes , shared a drink of water and wandered over to check out the pig hoping it had decent tusks as I had not had a clear veiw of the pigs head due to the carcass . We where a little disappointed as we gragged the 60 odd kilogram pig from the bore drain to discover it was a sow - but hey a pigs a pigs a pig when it comes to bowhunting .
regards Jacko