doccherry

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A friend's boss lives up in the jungle above our house and he has 3 wild donkeys on his property. He also has some nice landscaping that abuts up against some gnarly jungle. He told my friend that pigs come out of the jungle and eat the food he puts out for the donkeys and then the pigs go after the landscaping. My friend suggested I call him, which I did. I went up yesterday evening and he gave me a tour of the property and I got the lay of the land. He went back inside and I set up an ambush. 5 minutes later, a smallish pig, maybe 60 pounds, shows up 30 yards away and begins feeding. I shoot and the arrow is low. I saw sparks from where the arrowhead hit a piece of lava. Piggie disappears. Another pig shows up but spots me and begins to trot away. No time for a shot. Now it's too dark so I call it a day.

This morning I went back at sunrise and began to walk slowly around the lower part of his property. I saw the first pig feeding in the jungle and shot. The hit looked good and the arrow passed through. I retrieved it and cleaned it off. The arrowhead was in fair condition. I waited 10 minutes and followed the blood trail. The pig got up and ran down the hill and into some brush. Just then I saw another pig 20 yards away and shot. The arrow lodged in the chest cavity and the pig took off into the thick jungle stuff. I saw it stop so I shot again and the second arrow lodged in the chest cavity. The pig took a couple of steps and dropped. I then concentrated my attention on the first pig and got to within 30 yards of it and shot. The arrow lodged in its chest back a bit behind the lungs. The pig went under the fence and wobbled and then staggered and then fell down a steep hillside into a ravine. I tried to retrieve it but the vines and mud [lots of rain last night] made retrieval impossible. It was simply too dangerous to deal with that steep hillside. I went back to retrieve the second pig and by now I only have 1 arrow remaining of my original 4 and that arrow is not in the best shape. Another pig scoots out from some brush and I have a good shot although the pig is trotting in some heavy cover. I shoot and can't tell whether I hit or not. I went in to see and my arrow is stuck in a giant fern and from the looks of it I didn't hit anything other than the fern.

So I went back to the second pig, a 130 pound sow, and it's down for keeps. I'm preparing kalua pork right now so my wife and I can have some carnitas tonight.

What is interesting about all this is that the property I hunted is only 2 acres. It was like the OK Corral this morning and I've never experienced anything like it before.

Glad to see some other JHO's are coming over to sample the Big Island. I get more quality hunting in a two-week period over here than I did in my best year in California.

By the way, Speck, I had grilled ono for lunch today, taken last week from my 15' skiff [along with mahimahi and a tuna].

Aloha for now.
 

BDB

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Sounds like you are into them big time over their. I wish I could say I wasn't jealous !!!!!! Congrats on the pig. Too bad the other one couldn't be recovered.
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Lurediver

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Doc 4 arrows?

Dude go by a hip quiver and fill it with at least a dozen or so!

Great job buddy!
 

EvBouret

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33 days, I've been counting down for about 3 monthes now. Somehow I have to scrape together some cash for a new bowstring first...goats and piggys better start finding good hiding spots now
 

THE ROMAN ARCHER

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doccherry, they should have THE BIG ISLAND PIGORAMA, im in
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great story doc........tra
 

larrysogla

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Awesome!!! Fantabulous!!!! 'Da Best!!!! Keep those stories coming Docc'. We are truly salivating with your exciting, fun filled game running all over the place and hunting just a few blocks from home for hogs and turkeys and goats in the hills and fresh big game fish in the surf and sea. WOW!!! Thanks Docc for the amazing, adrenaline filled stories. God Bless.
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larrysogla

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SpeckM,
Too bad Southwest Airlines doesn't have a flight to Hawaii. $99 one way, that would be too tempting not to hop on a jet and go up in the hills and harvest some fat, fruit fed porky. Oh My, what a tug and pull on the heartstrings.

EvBouret,
You shou'da been enrolled and studying in the University of Hawaii and harvesting those delicious, fruit fed porkies on spring break or sumpin'. 'Nuff said.
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EvBouret

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How about after school? My friend goes to UH Hilo, doesn't have a car so straps his recurve to his one speed bmx bike and rides up in the hills behind his house a few miles. Hes gets one every couple weeks. He always calls me from up there and tells me the whole story, usually before he tracked it, sat down and called me up. Makes me so jealous every time. We got some good trips planned this summer, will be sure to take pics and leave a post for you guys to read.

One of them starts off on the east side of the island, you walk through an underground tunnel filled with knee deep water for a few miles and come out at the back of Hanalei Valley for pigs. Spend two nights up there, one if we score the first day or second morning. Best part is the trail ends in my front yard. There are trails all the way to my house. Cool looking terrain, all terraced rock wall ancient gardens and stuff. Big guava and mango stands, rose apple, mountain apple, thimble berrys, and various fruit trees planted by the chinese as well, oh and bananas, lots of bananas. The tunnel was built by the Chinese to bring water from the wet Hanalei Valley to the drier East Side for sugar cane and other crops. It's an amazing piece of work, perfectly straight the entire time, you can see the light at the end the whole time. Probably should choose a dry couple days to do it.
 

Freedivr2

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Docherry, you're livin right! Congrats on the pig and the ono.....drag burnin' little boogers, aren't they (the Ono)?? Nice to hear you're enjoying life big time over there!!
 

Cabowhntr

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I wanna be doccherry when I grow up! Great stories...Keep em comin!
 

doccherry

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The guy who owns the property where I shot the pigs was so happy that 2 of the pests are gone that he mentioned my success to the lady at the tackle shop where he buys his lures and fishing gear. The lady told him that she is having a terrible problem with hogs tearing up her yard and asked if he'd give me her card, which he did. I'll be going up there in a couple of days to check out the situation.

I went back to the guy's house early this AM and went into the thick jungly stuff looking for pigs. I found their den back beneath a few large rotting trees that had toppled over years ago and had created a cave that goes back in 15 feet or so. It was thick with pig sign and I imagine many pigs had been conceived and littered back in its dark recesses. I crawled in with my headlight on and a really big pig, which I assume was a mature boar, exploded and went out a tunnel on the side. He was really moving and making a "wooshing" noise as he ran. Glad he ran off to the side. I didn't see him again. While I was sitting there trying to calm down I heard two gunshots from about 400 yards away, probably a homeowner trying to protect their property from another pig or pigs.

Then something interesting happened. Two wild turkeys ran out and began a real fuss, flapping their wings and making little false charges at something. Pig, I figured, so I got ready for a shot. Then a male Kalij pheasant popped out and began to carry on, making all sorts of racket. Then the culprit, a mongoose, scooted out and ran up to me, teeth exposed in what I assume was an attempt to frighten me. They weigh about 1/2 what a California ground squirrel weighs, so even a fraidy cat like me isn't too intimidated. What was happening was the mongoose was trying to steal the eggs from the turkey nest and from the pheasant nest, undoubtedly located unseen only a few feet away. So I shot the mongoose and ate it raw right there on the spot [just kidding].

Here's the dilemma: Ethically, I should tell the guy to hire someone to chainsaw the fallen trees and drag them away, maybe costing a thousand bucks or so. His resident pig problem will disappear overnight, althought transient hogs will continue to visit. On the other hand, if I say nothing, I've got a built-in, slam-dunk hunting paradise for as long as I have the power to draw back my bow. That den will be the home of countless groups of pigs in the years to come.

Problem is that I'm aging quickly and if I want to make it into the Happy Hunting Grounds, I'd better start collecting Brownie points right now. Think I'll show him the den and tell him to have it destroyed.

Any thoughts?

Mahalo and aloha.

PS: This sounds like a hunting paradise, and it certainly is, but you guys know what? I really miss the rolling hills of CA and the oak trees and the chamise and the vineyards. Weird how a guy can have it all and still think of what he left behind. The hunting here is so easy compared to CA that I actually miss the challenge. I don't miss the freeway drives to get to the hunting and I don't miss the clowns who look down their noses at me when I tell them I hunt [heck, in Hawaii, everybody hunts], but I do miss the vineyards and the dry, brown grass and the dry heat of an October pig hunt. When my shooting eye begins to fade and my muscles rebel and can no longer pull back a bowstring and when my knees wobble and can no longer navigate through fields of lava boulders, my wife and I will head back to the mainland and begin the next chapter in our lives, whatever that may be. Hope it's a while, though.

Take care all.
 

THE ROMAN ARCHER

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save the guy some money and do him the favor
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and keep your freezer full
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.......tra
p.s. when you miss ca. just click your heels together 3 times and repeat....... theirs no place like home.......theirs no place like home........
 

Uncle Ji

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<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (doccherry @ May 11 2006, 06:57 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div>
Here's the dilemma: Ethically, I should tell the guy to hire someone to chainsaw the fallen trees and drag them away, maybe costing a thousand bucks or so. His resident pig problem will disappear overnight, althought transient hogs will continue to visit. On the other hand, if I say nothing, I've got a built-in, slam-dunk hunting paradise for as long as I have the power to draw back my bow. That den will be the home of countless groups of pigs in the years to come.

Problem is that I'm aging quickly and if I want to make it into the Happy Hunting Grounds, I'd better start collecting Brownie points right now. Think I'll show him the den and tell him to have it destroyed.

Any thoughts?[/b]

DON'T DO IT UNTIL AFTER I GET THERE! I'm still wearing this stinkin' metal back brace and limited to lifting 5 pounds until the bone fuses around the titanium pins in 3 vertibrae ARGH so still out of commision but your adventures are getting me all riled up to go hunting. At least I have my Lucille to keep me company as I heal. I guess no need drive Laupahoehoe anymore if get pigs in your own backyard. How do the Kona pigs taste in comparison to the fruit feed Laupahoehoe ones? When I lived in Honalo we had pigs in the coffee orchards but the pigs feed mainly of herby vegetation like hapuu ferms so taste was gamey. Wonder if further north they taste better. MY buddy on Big Island keeps on calling me inviting me for a handgun hunt as soon as I heal, and my itchy trigger finger and 44 mag can't wait.

My LUCILLE is growing up pretty quick!
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Backcountry

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A trip to Hawaii next year is definately in the works for me... our plans are to attend a friend's wedding on Maui for a few days, then go stay with our cousins on Kauai for a few more days. I definately want to try to hunt both islands with my bow...

Great pork stories... great job and keep 'em coming!

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Backcountry
 

THE ROMAN ARCHER

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wish you speedy recovery uncle ji, and is that designer shirt your lucille is wearing?
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larrysogla

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That tight pink dress is a hottie. What a Lucille, eh. Hmmmn, I'll bet that Lucille is eating sacks of feed every week/days and just munching and munching. Do they grow tusks(cutters) even when they are domesticated???? Uncle Ji, watch your food budget when that Lucille hits 300 lbs. of pork. 'Nuff said.
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Uncle Ji

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<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (larrysogla @ May 12 2006, 04:55 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div>
That tight pink dress is a hottie. What a Lucille, eh. Hmmmn, I'll bet that Lucille is eating sacks of feed every week/days and just munching and munching. Do they grow tusks(cutters) even when they are domesticated???? Uncle Ji, watch your food budget when that Lucille hits 300 lbs. of pork. 'Nuff said.
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Aloha Larry, Lucille being the pretty pettite wahine she is will grow just short cutters like other wild females. She will max out at about 125 lbs. if she keeps out of the avocados which is difficult just because there are so many fruitful trees on my property. A friend in high school his dad raised 2 sows and a boar from infancy and the big male had very impressive cutters, and was the best watch dog keeping strangers out but behaving like a big puppy to owner and family (herd) members. Lucille has already been in heat 3 times so far and I was debating the ethics of tying her to a tree when she is in heat then wait and pop the first horny boar that tries to violate her chastity. I'd most likely do it with a bow & arrow or maybe my spear.
 
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