doccherry

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We moved to Kona, HI, on October 6 of last year. I began hunting in November. Since then I've taken 10 hogs, 6 with rifle and 4 with bow. We eat wild pork at least 5 times per week, sometimes more. We prepare some Hawaiian style, smoking it slowly. Other cuts we pressure cook and then fry into carnitas. We made about 40 pounds of smoked German sausage but it's almost gone and then yesterday we ground up 35 pounds of wild pork and mixed it with 15 pounds of domestic pork that I also ground by hand [with the old-fashioned grinder that great grandma used in her day]. We seasoned it and it tastes great. Had it last night on spaghetti and this morning with scrambled eggs. We'll give away about 10 pounds [in exchange for vegetables] and keep the rest.

I've been mouflon sheep hunting 3 times and have come really close, but no luck yet. Spanish goats are everywhere [I went running yesterday evening down by the shore and counted at least 50 goats, all within bow range] but I haven't hunted them yet because there is no room in the freezer and their meat is inferior to hogs or sheep. The other game taken includes 3 wild turkeys, dozens of quail, pheasant, chukar, and francolin.

I've got a little 15' skiff with two outboards and I go out about 3 miles from a small harbor where I launch. The catch there includes lots of ono [I hooked 6 this past Monday, all within 1/2 mile of shore], ahi, bigeye tuna, skipjack tuna, mahimahi, and one approx. 700 lb. marlin that spooled me within 15 minutes.

Guava, mango, passion fruit, avocado, papaya, and various other fruit grows wild everywhere and even at the local farmer's markets, it's really inexpensive.

At this point, the value of the game taken and fish caught pays almost all the expenses of hunting and fishing, including gas, gear, licenses, depreciation on the truck and boat, and beer. Never thought I'd see that.

This isn't meant to be a brag or a boast, just the way it really is over here. And the hardcore native hunters tell me that the hunting is actually better now than it was when they were kids. There is a lot more game and most of the younger generation no longer hunts and the old hunters are dying out or are physically no longer able to hunt. The younger people don't like getting up early in the morning and they don't like physical exertion. This is evident in the age of the hunters I meet out in the field, very few of whom are under 30 and most of whom are well over 40. I'll go up to Mauna Kea in the public hunting areas [hundreds of square miles] and often not see a single hunter or another vehicle.

Imagine this: We went sheep hunting up on Mauna Kea a few weeks ago and at dawn while driving from the check station on the highway to where we turn off to go uphill to the high country, a distance of about 4 miles, we saw dozens of wild turkeys, at least a thousand quail [no kidding], hundreds of francolin, and dozens of pheasants. Up on top we saw hundreds of chukar. All of these birds were on the dirt road. Bird hunters from the mainland would go nuts here.

The big ahi [150+ pounds] are moving in now, but I'm not exactly sure I can gaff or harpoon one and pull it up up over the side into my little skiff all by myself. Some locals told me to kill a large ahi [I carry a .22 stainless revolver and shooting hooked tuna is legal, and I also carry a large harpoon, which is deadly] and then tie it to the side of the boat. Other locals told me that if I do that and begin hauling the bleeding carcass back to the harbor, tied firmly to the boat with heavy rope, the tiger sharks will appear en masse [as many as 5 or 6, each over 1000 pounds] and become so aggressive that my little boat would be in danger of capsizing. I'll have to figure out what to do once I catch one, I guess.

That's it for now. The water is too rough today for my skiff and the freezer is full and my belly is more than full, so my wife and I will go for a long, long run out in the rolling grasslands of Waimea and then come home and eat ono fillets on Kaiser rolls with homemade tartar sauce, washing it down with a couple or three Kirin Ichiban beers [The Japanese influence here is as strong as the Mexican influence in California. Many of the hunters I do meet are Japanese---real gentlemen.].

Life is rough. By the way, I made a trip back to SO CAL about a month ago and about went nuts. All the traffic, people driving over 50 mph, wall-to-wall concrete, noise, graffiti, cold water---I know why I left.

Aloha for now.
 

Lurediver

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Doc I hate you!
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ducslayer

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Enjoy Doc .Have fun liveing your dream. We love hearing about it.It gives us hope.
 

EvBouret

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Ahhh.you're really starting to get the HAwaii lifestyle down....Im back now, went bass fishing the last two days. The freshwater fishing here is unreal
 

THE ROMAN ARCHER

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sounds perfect to me Doccherry, the ultimate lifestyle just to step out and hunt 24/7 and keep the belly and freezer full, lucky you Doc its just a fantasy for me, someday. enjoy life and enjoy hunting Aloha............tra
 

EvBouret

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All my friends that fish off little boats tie off the fish to the side of the boat and club it. then drive it in
 

scott0san

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Hope you are ready for some company on your hunting adventures come Oct-Nov.
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If I don't get drawn for any of the
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Ibex, Sheep, Elk, Antelope, Mule Deer hunts that I put in for I will have some extra time to put in the field.
If you get back to CA during the
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A zone hunt let me know I will take you out to my secret spot. That is if you don't mind hunting in
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100 degree temperatures. Not a sure thing but last year I saw more bucks than any other season
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larrysogla

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Thanks Doc for your mouth watering updates on paradise in the U.S.(yuppppp, in the U.S. of A.). No customs, no visa, no passport, no strange unintelligible language and no strange currency. We are all in awe at the swarm of fowl, big game and fish that have prospered from the lack of interest in the young generation.
Amazing. God Bless, Doc.
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Speckmisser

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Doc, I'm loving every minute of this jealousy!

Keep the tales coming. One day... one day...
 

Surfswest

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wow.................. I don't think I've drooled over a post that bad in a long time. It definately sounds like a true paradise where you are. I can only dream of a retirement someday like that. If you ever get some time, post some pics of your skiff and the ahi or tuna your catching.

Sounds great and stay safe, those tiger sharks are fierce!!!

Frosty
 

beastslayer

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Oh yeah, Doc. That's what we're missing. Those lovely pictures to complement your good and yummy stories.

Larrysogla - Give Doc your calderata recipe so he can begin to appreciate the meat of goats (preferably female or young buck, right?).
 

larrysogla

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Doc,
You are in hog heaven. Oh man.........the hunter's dream come true. That is so sweet the way the land and the sea is taking care of you. God Bless.
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doccherry

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Larrysogla:

You are absolutely correct in your assessment of Hawaii---the land and the sea are both taking very good care of me and my family. But you know, that's the way it is supposed to be. I can truly get a glimpse of what it was like in California back in the early 1800's. Very few people, lots of wide open spaces with even fewer people but lots of deer, elk, bear, gamebirds, and no "No Trespassing" signs. The seas unpolluted and wild, loaded with abalone, lobsters, crabs, and all sorts of fish. A guy or gal with any sort of gumption and guts could gather up his or her tools and head for nature's supermarket and eat like a king or queen. Can you imagine not having a dime but having a million acres or a mile of shoreline all to yourself and eating abalone, lobster, venison roast, elk tenderloin, or breast of quail for dinner every night? And we feel sorry for these people of the past because we, totally self-absorbed and buried in materialism, look down upon them as being impoverished?

Some of the excitement of hunting and fishing has left me because I do it so often. But what has replaced the jitters and excitement and the "hype" of opening day is a calm determination and an intense focus. I'm now a genuine predator, almost at the top of the food chain [the tiger sharks claim that position], and after several months of hunting 15 hours per week, my skills---stalking, tracking, moving undetected---have improved dramatically. My native Hawaiian friends are teaching me to make goat and pig and sheep sounds to call in these critters and within a year or two I hope to have that skill down. Just tagging along with these guys, guys who have hunted since they were old enough to walk, is a marvel. My best Hawaiian hunting buddy, Nolan, was born on Lanai and his family lived off the land and sea for the first dozen years of his life. Hunting with him is like hunting with a Sioux warrior or a Zulu warrior or an aborigine or a native along the Amazon. He seldom talks and he moves as silently as a ghost and sees things that I would never see. He always takes only one shot because during his childhood, ammunition and arrows cost money and money was something that was really hard to come by, so instead of filling his pockets with extra cartridges, likes I have done for decades, he has honed his stalking skills to the degree that he needs only one shot.

I can now read the water fairly well and am becoming a better fisherman. When I go out, I'm fairly confident that I'll bring home enough meat to feed my wife and I [and our cat and two dogs] for 15 or 20 meals. I've got a long way to go before I'm half as good at working the ocean as my Hawaiian friends.

Here in Hawaii, at least among the native Hawaiians, hunting and fishing and religion and culture and living are all intertwined. The only people who look down their noses at me are mainland transplants who shop at Safeway and pay to have their fish and game killed out of sight and then cleaned and neatly packaged. I detest these people and I detest the society they come from.

That's why I'm here. And the Good Lord willing, that's where I'm going to stay.
 

Uncle Ji

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Aloha Bruce, Ask Nolan if he knows the Woolsey, Batoon, or Asuncion families, all my hunting buddies from Lana'i. Have you tried making Chile Verde with wild pork in a crock pot? As we say here "broke da mout" delicious wrapped in a tortilla with jack cheese and fresh salsa washed down with an ice cold beer. I like to make goat chili and goat curry too though the younger the better. If alone when bringing in a BIG AHI best to haul in at the transom IF you have room to. As you may already know the area right outside Honokohau Harbor is known for it's rather thick population of sharks so dragging the fish may not be a best idea so better avoided IF at all possible. I have 357 mag bang-stick for bigger fish but several Kona fishing buddies like the stainless steel single shot .410 "Snake-Charmer" shotgun for dispatching big tunas while commercial fishing. A .22RF would be nice. less ringing in the ears. I'm assuming you have your own smoker by now, no kama'aina hunter/fisher should be without one even a Brinkman. All that Ahi which is too much for Sashimi and Poke' smokes up SO nicely after a light marination in a teriyaki sauce and sprinkled liberally (hate that word) with black pepper... YUM.
I just (finally) got my body brace off so I feel free to move around though still on 15 pound lifting restriction. When I make it up there lets do a hunt in Laupahoehoe with some of my old buddies. I'm loving your fishing reports, that's one thing that Maui lacks and that's almost year around calm water with decent fishing. Ono are a blast with light tackle as well as Mahimahi though what a fire drill getting a Mahi in the cooler! Thanks for your reports, take care, won't say God Bless because I think you have that part in spades.

Here's recent picture of my best buddy Aaron and my nephew Kaimana witha 65 lb. Ulua speared on Maui's north shore.
 

beastslayer

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One more story and nice picture and we will send an invasion force into your island and conquer for the Socialist Republic of Kalifornia!

Or we will tow it towards Santa Monica.
 

doccherry

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Uncle Ji:

What's your recipe for Chile Verde? I've never had it, but your brief description sounds great.

Laupahoehoe would be a blast. Right now, the undergrowth [mainly grass] is really thick so it's hard to hunt. In November and December, though, the undergrowth is gone and the pigs are easy to see and it's fairly easy to hike around. Get yourself healed up and I'll carry the pack and the meat. I'm not particularly bright but I've got a strong back. You just carry yourself and your favorite jungle rifle.

Aloha for now.

Beastslayer:

God Almighty---What a nightmare even thinking about California taking over Hawaii!!! Can you imagine those legislators up in Sacramento regulating the hunting and fishing and wide open spaces of the Big Island? Hawaii is, politically speaking, a very liberal state, but it's still the Wild West out here. California is looking more and more like Britain or France every year, with the really good hunting and fishing confined to private property and the cost of these pursuits being well beyond the means of the average working guy.
Here, all saltwater fishing is free and a non-res hunting license, including bird stamp and one turkey per day during November, including all general big game hunts, is about $115 per year. My next license will be a resident license and the whole deal will cost $33 for the year.

I'll start taking more photos and posting them. I tend to get so caught up in my hunting that I neglect the photography.

I'm going to grab a bite to eat and grab my bow and go up to this gentleman's estate and sit under a huge mango tree until dark. The pigs are going nuts there, but they are hunted hard by the locals and are the spookiest pigs I've ever seen. I've been up there 5 or 6 times in the past two months and haven't taken a single shot. I've seen and heard pigs every time but they are now almost exclusively nocturnal. I killed or scared off all the pigs at the other guy's house and he hasn't seen any pigs at all for the past two weeks. But they will return and so will I.

Adios.
 

EvBouret

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doccherry: Does Big Island have mangoes this year? There are none on Kauai because it's been so wet. My treestand spot is gonna be crappy this summer.
 

Orso

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This is so crazy... I love your posts... Please more pics when you get a chance.
 
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