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Dog Saves Edgefield SC Man from Wild Hog Attack
by Clint Bowie, Edgefield Advertiser
August 18, 2004
An Edgefield man was hospitalized recently after being attacked by a wild hog at his home on Gaston Road. The hog, which eyewitnesses estimated to weigh upwards of 700 pounds, materialized in Fab Burt’s backyard while he was working in his garden.
“It came out of nowhere and attacked me,” said Burt. “It had me pinned on the ground and was mauling me.”
Fortunately, Burt’s seven-month-old German shepherd, named Bobo, was on hand to help him fend off the hog. “He saved my life,” said Burt.
The hog attack comes on the heels of the widespread reports of “Hogzilla,” a 1000-pound wild hog that was killed in Georgia and subsequently gained nationwide notoriety as the largest hog ever killed in the wild.
According to Dr. Jack Mayer, a wildlife ecologist who has been studying wild pigs for the past thirty years, county residents shouldn’t be fearful of similar incidents occurring to them. “This type of incident does happen from time to time, but it’s not the sort of thing that, if you happen to be in the woods, I would worry about.”
Beech Island, he said, and other hamlets along the Savannah River have notable wild pig problems, but Edgefield’s feral hog population is nothing significant.
Seven-hundred-pounders, however, are significant. “Wild pigs,” said Dr. Mayer, “can reach 500 pounds, but anything more than that is extremely rare.”
County residents’ fears can be assuaged in knowing that the Edgefield hog responsible for the recent attack was put to death in the days following the incident.
by Clint Bowie, Edgefield Advertiser
August 18, 2004
An Edgefield man was hospitalized recently after being attacked by a wild hog at his home on Gaston Road. The hog, which eyewitnesses estimated to weigh upwards of 700 pounds, materialized in Fab Burt’s backyard while he was working in his garden.
“It came out of nowhere and attacked me,” said Burt. “It had me pinned on the ground and was mauling me.”
Fortunately, Burt’s seven-month-old German shepherd, named Bobo, was on hand to help him fend off the hog. “He saved my life,” said Burt.
The hog attack comes on the heels of the widespread reports of “Hogzilla,” a 1000-pound wild hog that was killed in Georgia and subsequently gained nationwide notoriety as the largest hog ever killed in the wild.
According to Dr. Jack Mayer, a wildlife ecologist who has been studying wild pigs for the past thirty years, county residents shouldn’t be fearful of similar incidents occurring to them. “This type of incident does happen from time to time, but it’s not the sort of thing that, if you happen to be in the woods, I would worry about.”
Beech Island, he said, and other hamlets along the Savannah River have notable wild pig problems, but Edgefield’s feral hog population is nothing significant.
Seven-hundred-pounders, however, are significant. “Wild pigs,” said Dr. Mayer, “can reach 500 pounds, but anything more than that is extremely rare.”
County residents’ fears can be assuaged in knowing that the Edgefield hog responsible for the recent attack was put to death in the days following the incident.