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|  ? About wild hog meat
 #8320190 01/21/25 11:19 PM
01/21/25 11:19 PM
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| Joined:  Jun 2007 Illinois 
foxkidd44
  OP trapper
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|  OP trapper
 
 Joined:  Jun 2007
 Illinois
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For you guys that have eaten wild hog,,, is the meat extremely strong , gamey??  Or does it just depend upon where they are harvested??Always was curious,,, never had the opportunity to hunt them,, let alone eat some of the meat.
 
 Stand by your principles, Stand by your guns, and victory complete and permanent is sure at last.
 Abraham Lincoln
 
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|  Re: ? About wild hog meat
[Re: foxkidd44]
 #8320214 01/21/25 11:45 PM
01/21/25 11:45 PM
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| Joined:  Jul 2013 Amite county Mississippi
Wolfdog91
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 Joined:  Jul 2013
 Amite county Mississippi
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All depends . Main things are  gender , age and how it's killed Big trophy board are usually pretty nasty and musky...I've taken back straps but that's it..and even those needed some work.  Sows of most sizes have been pretty good and anything under 50lbs or so is usually pretty good off the rip without much extra work .
 
 Main deal is how much they stress out before death. Please please please if you have the time to pick a shot just do a CNS shot and drop them DRT. Try and shoot em like a deer and don't hit em just right they run and get all hyped up and the meat just not as good and you gotta do all tho other crap to make it taste better. It's not a hard shot to make  at all you get better quality meat and best part...your not tracking a wounded pig...been there don't that not a fan
 
 YouTube expert
 "The bird of Hermes is my name , eating my wings to keep me tame"
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|  Re: ? About wild hog meat
[Re: foxkidd44]
 #8320216 01/21/25 11:46 PM
01/21/25 11:46 PM
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| Joined:  Dec 2009 The Hill Country of Texas
Leftlane
   "HOSS"
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|   "HOSS"
 
 Joined:  Dec 2009
 The Hill Country of Texas
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Young hogs are just like domestic pork but somewhere north of 100#s they are not as good. I've butchered some gilts that were pretty big and still good. I leave the board for the buzzards. 
 What"s good for me may not be good for the weak minded.
 Captain Gus McCrae- Texas Rangers
 
 
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|  Re: ? About wild hog meat
[Re: foxkidd44]
 #8320225 01/21/25 11:54 PM
01/21/25 11:54 PM
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| Joined:  Dec 2006 Goldsboro, North Carolina
Paul Dobbins
   "Trapperman custodian"
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|   "Trapperman custodian"
 
 Joined:  Dec 2006
 Goldsboro, North Carolina
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I shot a 300 pound sow in the Tarsus forest in Turkey, and it was the nastiest meat I've ever tasted. 
 
John 14:6 Jesus answered, "I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me. " ![[Linked Image]](http://www.trapperman.com/forumpics/USAflag1.gif)  |  |  |  
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|  Re: ? About wild hog meat
[Re: foxkidd44]
 #8320248 01/22/25 12:19 AM
01/22/25 12:19 AM
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| Joined:  Dec 2019 Iowa
CTRAPS
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|   trapper
 
 Joined:  Dec 2019
 Iowa
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We bowhunted and killed some in Florida, and I thought they were good eating. My buddy (who owned the property) said they'd trap some hogs and then castrate the young boars, dock their tails, and lop off part of an ear. Then they'd turn them loose and kill them when they got bigger. He called them bar hogs. The ones we killed were probably 125-150 pounds. 
 Life Member: ITA, IBA, MTA & NRA. Member of SA, FTA & NTA
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|  Re: ? About wild hog meat
[Re: Paul Dobbins]
 #8320304 01/22/25 02:42 AM
01/22/25 02:42 AM
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| Joined:  Sep 2020 Missouri
Osagan
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|   trapper
 
 Joined:  Sep 2020
 Missouri
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I shot a 300 pound sow in the Tarsus forest in Turkey, and it was the nastiest meat I've ever tasted. Are you Paul of Tarsus?  If you are, I've read your books.   |  |  |  
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|  Re: ? About wild hog meat
[Re: Osagan]
 #8320310 01/22/25 03:11 AM
01/22/25 03:11 AM
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| Joined:  May 2009 Champaign County, Ohio.
KeithC
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 Joined:  May 2009
 Champaign County, Ohio.
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I shot a 300 pound sow in the Tarsus forest in Turkey, and it was the nastiest meat I've ever tasted. Are you Paul of Tarsus?  If you are, I've read your books.  That would make Paul very old. It would also mean he rose from the dead after being decapitated in 64 or 65, while Nero was Emperor of Rome.  Keith |  |  |  
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|  Re: ? About wild hog meat
[Re: foxkidd44]
 #8320362 01/22/25 07:48 AM
01/22/25 07:48 AM
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| Joined:  Aug 2023 Wisconsin 
Mediocre Trapper
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 Joined:  Aug 2023
 Wisconsin
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I have eaten one but never again my neighbor is a hog farmer he sells whole hogs for $180 not worth eating a wild one imo 
 Don’t waste the day
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|  Re: ? About wild hog meat
[Re: foxkidd44]
 #8320382 01/22/25 08:09 AM
01/22/25 08:09 AM
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| Joined:  Apr 2009 South Ga - Almost Florida
Swamp Wolf
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|   trapper
 
 Joined:  Apr 2009
 South Ga - Almost Florida
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Put the meat (if you really want to skin & eat one of them nasty rooters) in a cooler. Pour a couple liters of Sprite (soft drink) in with the meat. Cover with ice. Drain in a day or 2 and add more Sprite and ice. After another day or 2 you're good to go. 
 Thank God For Your Blessings!
 Never Half-Arse Anything!
 
 Resource Protection Service
 
 
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|  Re: ? About wild hog meat
[Re: foxkidd44]
 #8320546 01/22/25 10:40 AM
01/22/25 10:40 AM
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| Joined:  Mar 2018 Missouri
HayDay
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 Joined:  Mar 2018
 Missouri
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Never killed one, so never butchered or eaten one, but it may help to draw some info from how domestic hogs are butchered. Boars......what few of them there are, are said to be used to make pepperoni and that is it. Too rank for anything else. When you see "whole hog sausage", it is or was........the whole sow. 
 There used to be a thing called PSS (porcine stress syndrome)  and that leads to PSE (pale soft and exudative) meat. Texture and flavor not good. So as noted, a stressed out, worked up hog is not a good thing. Better to drop them where they are standing.
 
 In a kill plant, hogs are stunned, bled, then scalded and scraped of all hair, then carcass is split, then hung and chilled before being broken down. All that is directly related to quality, so closest you can get to that process, better off you are. Domestic hogs also fed corn and soy meal diet that fattens them up, and they are all grown indoors on concrete. Almost zero chance of being exposed to trichinosis worms. Wild hogs.......assume they all have it.
 
 So......go for the young gilts rooting around minding their own business.......and good luck getting one bled out.
 
 All the rest..........send them to Sheriff Joe to make the bologna to feed the prisoners wearing pink underwear and living in a tent in the desert. It's not supposed to be fun. Or leave them for the scavengers.
 
 Easy to vote your way into socialism, but impossible to vote your way out of it.
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|  Re: ? About wild hog meat
[Re: foxkidd44]
 #8320622 01/22/25 11:58 AM
01/22/25 11:58 AM
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| Joined:  Jan 2007 mo.
nate
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 Joined:  Jan 2007
 mo.
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I shot a couple gilts in NE Texas, I've always told people if you put enough mushroom soup on them there not to bad. Sausage and biscuits wasn't bad but I added lard to get enough gravy. 
Last edited by nate; 01/22/25 11:59 AM.
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