Nic Barca
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- May 19, 2006
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I would bet money that if somebody had his arrow stopped dead on a pig's pad, that the arrow probably hit the shoulder blade and that is why it stopped. Other possibilities: 1. Angle; a one inch pad at too steep an angle becomes a three inch pad. 2. dull broadheads, or improper broadhead selection. 3. Exceptionally thick pad capable of stopping an arrow which cannot be proven easily.
I'm gonna have to disagree with kingwouldbe's classification system, even though I really liked it. There is no direct correlation between age, weight, tusk size, and pad thickness. Or at least none that I have seen and I've been there for some 100 or more pigs killed in the last 4 years, most of which we judged age by molars. Seems to me like feral pigs have such high genetic variation that it just become a great hog-podge of traits.
I'm gonna have to disagree with kingwouldbe's classification system, even though I really liked it. There is no direct correlation between age, weight, tusk size, and pad thickness. Or at least none that I have seen and I've been there for some 100 or more pigs killed in the last 4 years, most of which we judged age by molars. Seems to me like feral pigs have such high genetic variation that it just become a great hog-podge of traits.