Tag Archives: wild hogs

The Strange Origins Of Feral Hogs

For all practical purposes, the feral hogs we hunt are Sus scrofa (Eurasian boar) but there are several regional variations that some people are adamant are a different species entirely.

In a column I wrote for Texas Fish & Game, I addressed this and talked about the “Pineywoods rooter,” for example, which is simply the genetic variation of feral hog most common in East Texas. The snouts are typically long and thin and they are typically black in color.

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These, as with all hogs in the United States, are not native to this country but there are many hunters who say the rooter is the “original wild hog” and they are native to the region. They might have been here for hundreds of years, but they are not native as whitetails and even black bears are. They are imports.

“Russian boars” are the original Sus scrofa and thus the genetic roadmap for all hogs. There are very few true “Russians” in the United States with the only pedigreed specimens living on small high-fenced ranches.

There are however a good number of hogs particularly in areas of Central and south-Central Texas that have a lot of characteristics of Russians with some looking almost as if they were captured in the Black Forest of Germany.

According to officials with the Georgia Department of Natural Resources, “This hog usually has longer legs, a larger head and a longer, flatter snout. Eurasian piglets are reddish brown with black longitudinal stripes. As the animals mature, the stripes disappear and their color changes to gray grizzled or black. Eurasian hogs generally have longer guard hair and a more distinct mane of guard hair running from the neck to the base of the tail than the domestic hog.”

The appearance of hogs in different regions has much to do with the kinds of domestic hogs allowed to roam freely in the region years ago and the sources still entering the woods.

Near Deweyville about 15 years ago, people were dumping off potbelly pigs along one road for a year. For several years people thought they were excellent pets but when they realized the animals got much bigger than expected they would release them into the woods.

Well, this road which led to a county dump became the place to release potbellies. I had to take this road to one of the hunting clubs I was on and would frequently see a new batch of potbellies. 

It did not take long for these animals to breed with the ferals there and create some interesting looking pigs with a fat face and the classic pot belly.  I will never forget seeing a 200-pound sow that walked in front of my game camera, with the snout of a “Piney Woods rooter” and the belly and coloration of a potbelly.

I saw a straight up potbelly roaming a pasture behind a Buc-ee’s location here in our great state in more recent years.

Some hunters report killing “mule-footed hogs” which have one big hoof instead of being split like a typical pig. These animals have reached legendary status in the hog hunting community and are considered trophies. What they are killing are feral descendants of a super rare domestic breed.

According to researchers with Oklahoma State University, “The most distinctive feature of the American Mulefoot hog is the solid hoof which resembles that of a mule. Pigs with solid hooves (also called syndactylism) have attracted the interest of many writers over the centuries, including Aristotle and Darwin.

Yet of all the mule footed hogs described, the American Mulefoot is the only documented population with a breed standard and a long history of agricultural use. This breed is unique to the United States and is critically rare. Recent events, however, have led to more optimism regarding its survival.”

Mulefoot hogs are mainly black, with occasional animals having white points; medium flop ears; and a soft hair coat. The hogs were of gentle disposition, fattened quite easily, and weighed from 400-600 pounds at two years of age. They were considered the highest quality ‘ham hogs’ and were fed to great weights before slaughter.”

Despite all these potential variations the animals are legally known as “feral hogs” and therefore are considered varmints under law which means hunters in Texas can take them any time of year with no bag limit and by virtually any means whether they are red and spotted or black with a low-swinging pot belly.

Still, knowing their origins is quite interesting.

Chester Moore

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Dealing With Giant Feral Hogs In Cities

The smell of southern fried seafood hit my nostrils as I opened the door of my truck.

When I walked over to open the door for my girlfriend (now wife) Lisa, a huge mud-covered animal emerged from the marsh on the edge of the seafood restaurant’s parking lot.

At first, in the dim light, I thought it was a young steer as cattle are common in any pasture, wood lot or marsh in the area.

But it was no steer.

This was a hog, one that weighed well beyond 500 pounds. It was white and covered in mud.

It grunted heavily when it saw us (we were only 10 steps away) and then went on about its business of rooting up the ground.

The area the animal came from from marsh next to a large refinery facility. This is bordered by a large chip channel and a whole bunch of industrial buildings and homes.

Obviously that huge hog, perhaps a domestic set free to graze years ago as that used to be common in Southeast Texas. It does not take hogs long to go back to their wild origins and integrate into any purely feral hog populations.

This was not the only time I came across evidence of monster hogs in the area.

Early in my writing career a man told me had located a really big black boar in a wood lot behind the Vidor, TX Wal Mart and wanted to know if I wanted to tag along with he and his dogs to catch it.

I declined.

Two weeks later a letter arrives in the mail with a photo of the hog they killed, all 400 pounds of it. I later drove by the area to inspect and saw the 20 acre wood lot the beast had lived in amongst a city of 10,000.

Both of the aforementioned hogs were boars and large, solitary ones that can find enough woods to hang out during the day and vacant field, cattle pastures (common in southern cities) right of ways along highlines and drainage canals can thrive

Throw in the aforementioned practice of allowing domestic hog breeds like Yorkshires and Durocs feed on open range with cattle and you have an even bigger chance of huge hogs showing up. Hogs show little regard for fencing and also need no help from man to survive beyond captivity.

Hogs can get huge without hunting pressure in cities.

As hogs push deeper into urban territory, certain individuals will find these sanctuary areas that will allow them to grow to epic proportions.

Animal control offices throughout the South (and as far north as New Jersey) are contending with hogs now on a daily basis but monsters like these are unlikely to participate in any trapping program they initiate.

Listen to an episode of Dark Outdoors about hog attacks here.

Without the gun as an option in these urban sanctuaries, those hogs with the genetic code to grow huge will, dethroning the coyote as the apex of city-dwelling wildlife.

Young pigs will provide coyotes food but the ones I am writing might just decide to make coyote their food.They are able and in some cases totally willing.

Right now there are sizable feral hog populations in Beaumont, Dallas-Forth Worth and Houston, in in my home state of Texas and also around Baton Rouge, La. and a number of sizable metro areas in Florida such as Tampa.

I believe what we are about to see is cities harboring some absolutely monster-sized hogs.

A 150-pound boar captured on a trail camera near a popular Southeast Texas fishing hole.

There is adequate habitat, food and cover  and large boars in particular which tend to be solitary are great at remaining hidden. They may in fact possess more “intelligence” than any wild animal in North America.

Hogs are popular with hunters and in fact, have superseded whitetail deer as the most harvested animal in Texas with a whopping 750,000 new killed annually according to Texas AgriLife.  Louisiana and Florida also support a huge hog hunting culture.

The fact that firing guns in city limits is a no-no will give hogs with monster genes the opportunity to live to maximum potential.

This is where it will get interesting.

Sightings will be elusive but these creatures will be seen perhaps in schoolyards near children or eating Fifi” the poodle as granny takes it for a stroll in the park.

How will the public react to seeing a boar just shy of average grizzly proportions (600 pounds) strolling down main street?

The one I saw as a teen coming out to sniff the seafood is a reminder this phenomenon did not start over the last decade. But hog numbers have exploded and their push into the cities has increased dramatically.

People need to be aware of their existence and while hogs are not out to get people, the killing of a woman in a yard in Anahuac, TX reminds us they are a legitimate danger.

Chester Moore

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