doccherry

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It's been a long while since my last post, but my wife and I have been busy getting settled into our new home in Kona, Hawaii, on the Big Island. One thing I've found out is that this is really the frontier. Kona has about 35,000 people but the surrounding 4000 square miles or so are largely wilderness. I went on my first hunt on Friday, mainly a scouting trip, just to see how things work on public land here. I had no idea what to expect and wasn't too excited, based upon my hunts on public land in CA.

Friday, it turns out, was a public holiday and therefore is a bird hunting only day on Mauna Kea, the 13,700 foot mountain about 30 miles from my home, so I brought my bird hunting stuff and went. During the morning, I jumped coveys of CA quail, chukar, 2 ringnecks, Erkel's francolin [a bit smaller than a pheasant, like a large grouse], and 2 coveys of Rio Grande turkeys, each about 20 birds. Never saw anything like it. I ended up with 2 quail and 2 francolin since I don't have a dog and I really shot quite poorly.

This is where the boar comes in. I found a hillside away from the other hunters, about 12 miles back in on a really bad jeep trail, up at around 8500 feet. There were deep ravines with small springs at the bottom and that's where I began finding the birds. No sign of any hunters every having been there and lots of pig sign. I stopped to rest along a ravine and on the other side, maybe 100 yards away, was a jet-black, thick-bodied boar, maybe 200 pounds or so, just feeding on the grass and digging around. Perfect broadside shot only my weapon was a Ruger Red Label with low-base 7 1/2's. It was about noon, which is an odd time to see a pig, but there are no predators whatsoever on the island and from the looks of things, no hunters in this area.

Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday are big game days so you know where I'll be.

And how's this for an odd hunt: Not far from where I was hunting, over on the Northeast slopes of Mauna Kea, is a large cattle ranch. Over the years, about 100 head of cattle have broken through the ranch fence and taken up residence in the state forest. They are really tearing the place up so, the state has declared several weekends as feral cattle hunt days, with a limit of 2 per hunter. Can you imagine that hunt? Walking through the woods with a heavy rifle looking for wild cattle. I didn't know about it because it's really hard to get info on anything pertaining to hunting here. You have to call around and take a lot of notes. Next year, if they have that hunt, I'll go.


Doc
 

Orso

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Nice report. Congrats on the birds and good luck on the hogs. We need to seem some pics of the terrain and the game you take.

So there are certain days to hunt certain types of animals???

Good luck on you next hunt.
 

kodiakoutdoors

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doc,
sounds like you found a little piece of the last frontier! at least on public land. it's rare to find any public land like that these days. congratulations on your birds and your discovery. keep the reports coming so that us mainlanders can keep dreaming of the day we can live the life that you have. i've hunted over there, but not public land. you scored!
 

bighorn67

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Way to go Doc,

I've been looking forward to your stories about tropical hog hunting.

Dave
 

EvBouret

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Hawaii public land is probably about equal with the private land over here in CA.

I think my friend is doing the feral cattle hunt. He goes to school in Hilo. Load up that 12ga with slugs and let em have it.

Familiarize yourself with an area and stay there. You'll learn to pattern the hogs. I have an area on Kauai where I can almost always tell you where the hogs will be. This is all depending on what time of the year it is and where the food is. There main food sources will be fruit off trees. Find the patches of fruit trees (rose apples, guavas, mangos, avos, bananas etc...). Mid summer mangos drop, rose apples can be all year in some areas or seasonal i think they drop early summer. guavas are year round. mountain apples are in the summer. If you can find a good mountain apple patch hunt the hell out of the area. Those hogs love mtn apples. If you have any questions or want me to put you in touch with another hunter on the big I let me know. He doesn't have a car but is a hunting fiend. Taught me everything I know about hunting. He's only 22 but has probably harvested more hogs and goats than people twice his age.

Orso: pigs are yr round, goats are yr round in certain areas, seasonal in others. Sheep should have a season...I'm not really sure how it works on the big island. On Kauai there are areas that are yr round for goat, no bag limit, basically no rules. And you're on the top of a mntn so inaccesible that you will NOT see another hunter. We went up to this area this summer and didn't see a footprint, piece of trash, machete cutting....its our secret goat hunting area, and the only on Kauai that is yr round and still lets you use rifles.
 

beastslayer

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doc,

it's good to hear from you again and glad that you are now living your dream -- after a little delay disposing off your possesions here in SoCal(?).

thanks for sharing the fun.
 

Uncle Ji

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Sorry for late reply, but I hope you got info you needed in email. Have you tried a perimeter of Mauna Kea drive on Mana road goig clockwise around Mauna Kea? Very beautiful sights and you can glass game from your vehicle and plan a stalk, i've alot of both goat and sheep on mauka (high side) side of Mana Road. Also if you ever try hunting Laupahoehoe during bird season there are the forest dwelling Kalij Pheasants in the dense forest, they look like a cross between a Blue Pheasant and a Jungle Fowl, pretty striking but they prefer to RUN than flush 99% of the time so most hunter don't mind opping them on the ground. Have 00 buck ready for pigs just in case (if still legal to hunt pigs in Laupahoehoe during bird season). Another thing to look into is hunting the vast Macadamia nut farms south of Kona on the slopes of Mauna Loa, many of these farms grant permission to help keep pigs in control who love to feed on the nuts.
 

doccherry

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Uncle Ji:

I received your email and many thanks for all the valuable info. I'll be hunting in Laupahoehoe this Saturday AM. I believe it is closed to bird hunting right now. You mentioned in your email that some of your hunting buddies used Winchester 100's for fast follow up shots in close quarters. So happens I have one in 308 and I'm [as per your suggestion] taking off the scope. I also have a Winchester 94 Trapper in 30/30 with open sights and an offset scope. I load Barnes solid X bullets and it makes a really nice, lightweight pig rifle. I'll see which works best.

Sunday I'll let everyone know how I did.

Doc
 

Rancho Loco

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Uncle, Ev, Doccherry...

Keep the Hawaii info and stories coming. I really do enjoy them.
<
 

spectr17

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kewl story doc.
<
I've always wanted to hunt in Hawaii. It sounds like a lot of fun.
 

Uncle Ji

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Aloha doc, if you have a low power variable scope it should be okay though a ghost ring peep or red dot would work even better. I haven't hunted Laupahoehoe in over ten years but if it hasn't changed, the vegetation will be thick with many shots point blank measured in feet not yards. Your model 100 in .308 sounds like the perfect pig gun for Laupahoehoe though the Trapper 30/30 sounds great too. Here's a VERY old picture (18 years at least) taken at Laupahoehoe, i'm on the right holding the baby pig I just caught, with my hunting buddy Richard on the left. Most pigs in Laupahoehoe are black so this guy had some domestic blood in him. As can be seen in background the vegetation is thick about belly high in most places so difficult to see pigs for long as they weave thru this stuff with many flushing at your feet like bird hunting, a real adrenaline rush. Good luck on Saturday.
DidYouCatchaPig.jpg
 

larrysogla

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Uncle Ji,
That vegetation is so lush and thick it must hold a ton of pigs and goats. WOW!!!!! Those pigs must be fat and heavy too from all that available food. Hunting there in Hawaii sounds like a real dreamboat. Like the rest of us here drooling in the mainland......KEEP THE STORIES COMING......WE REALLY ENJOY THEM!!!! Thanks. God Bless.
<
 

Uncle Ji

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Hi Larry, the pigs love this thick vegetation but the goats prefer the wide open spaces above tree line, or even in old lava flow areas, go figure. Here's 2 recent pictures I took of part of a massive over 200 head herd of wild goats on the grassy slopes of Mount Haleakala.
e88b473f.jpg
db48c993.jpg
 

Orso

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Awesome thread you guys... Please keep this going. We've got a vacation planned for the Big Island this time next year... I'm gonna have to take my bow.
 

Uncle Ji

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I know this should be posted in goats section but since we're on the topic here's a couple more recent pictures, first an afternoon shot of a nice billy, and nanny on arid hills of Kahikinui:
mini-kaupokao.jpg


Here's the rewards of a successful afternoon hunt 2 of 4 billys harvested, buddy on right Aaron, buddy on left Keli'i, I took the picture:
de4807da.jpg
 

larrysogla

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I can almost smell the cooking pot boiling with herbs and spices and goat meat stewing and wild boar broiling on the barbeque. Yummmmmm.....yummmmy!!!! Thanks Uncle Ji.
We are indebted to your inspiring stories and pictures. God Bless.
<
 

Uncle Ji

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Originally posted by Rancho Loco@Nov 17 2005, 05:18 PM
Is there a Hawaiian version of Birria?

Or mebbe curry goat?

<
Goat great for chili, curry, teriyaki, jerky, even stew in style of beef stew, very lean and surprisingly mild like lamb.
 

EvBouret

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I shot the same goat right here. If anyone is coming to Kauai winter time I'll take you here.
 
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