doccherry

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A friend of my wife's and mine just moved to the Big Island from San Diego. He's an outdoors kind of guy and has been hinting about going on a boar hunt with me. Today was the day and he met me at West Hawaii Explorations Academy in Kona, where I teach. We met at 3:30 PM, drove to the Kilohana hunter check station at the 6000 foot level on Mauna Kea, sighted in my Ruger 77 .300 Win Mag at 4:30 [it was dead nuts on], and then drove up to the high country. I still wore my shorts and t-shirt and tennis shoes, my teaching attire. The first thing we saw was a herd of Mouflon sheep right in the middle of the 4WD road. They took off but I didn't follow because I had hurt my back loading the gear in the truck and could barely walk. A mile further up the road we saw one of the ugliest boars I've ever seen, scraggly and scrawny and, well, just plug ugly, if you know what I mean. We parked the truck and slowly trailed him but nada, so we called it quits. I drove up to the 11,000 foot level and showed this guy the view---incredible!! You can see a zillion miles in every direction. At night, you can actually see the Southern Cross from this vantage point, which is really quite a treat for anyone north of the equator.

We headed back down the hill and I took a short side trip on a rutty road that ran alongside a grassy meadow. "I've seen pigs over here before," I said.

"What's that?" he replied, pointing to a spot about 50 yards off the road.

My eyes followed his pointing finger. A black furry thing moseying through the grass caught my attention. "Oh, that? Why that's a boar, my friend. 150 pounds, I'd judge."

I pulled off the road, took the rifle from its case, fed it a couple of rounds, centered the crosshairs a couple inches behind the boar's shoulders, and squeezed. The boar dropped like it had been brained with a Louisville Slugger.

"It's usually not that easy," I said, somewhat apologetically. "I usually have to walk a couple of miles and spend a few hours glassing."

"Well, this time you had to hike 18 inches," he said. "I like boar hunting. It's almost as much exercise as drinking a beer."

I walked up to the boar and tossed a rock. It thumped against the ribcage and the boar just lay there. 15 minutes later the choice cuts were removed and in the cooler. We headed home.

"Boar hunting is really cool," my friend said. "I expected it to be a lot of work, maybe hiking up and down hills in the heat and then crawling around through the brush and getting sweaty and dirty and tired. But from what I've seen here, it's pretty much like hunting at a petting zoo."

"It's usually not this easy," I said, repeating myself.

But, damn!! This Hawaii hunting is getting ridiculous!! You Californians have got to come over here and see it to believe it. After reading all of your posts about hiking over mountains and crawling through acres of poison oak and bugs and rattlesnakes and crystal meth labs and getting all excited when you see tracks and then I step out of my truck in my beach clothes and pot a fat boar with no more fanfare than picking up a frozen chicken at Safeway...well, I'm almost embarrassed to even write this.

Aloha for now.
 

THE ROMAN ARCHER

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putting your own food on the table Doc beats going to Safeway to buy meat anyday, no matter how close or how far,the distance of the shot
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that wont affect the taste
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! that was a good story Doc, ALOHA!...............tra
 

spectr17

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You're killin me Doc. We're going to play in the mud at FHL this weekend. Get stuck, get pulled out. Maybe see some pigs, maybe not. Freezin arse rain and wind. Mmmmm, thank god I got the heated seats in the new truck.
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hogwild757

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<
Hey doc you did it again good job
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. Could you have hunted those mouflon sheep in that area. It would have made a nice trophy. Good job.
 

wyemjohnson

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some times it comes easy and some times it comes hard, you know both!
 

scottosan

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"But, damn!! This Hawaii hunting is getting ridiculous!! You Californians have got to come over here and see it "


It sounds like you live in pig huntng heaven

After a year of reading your adventures I am ready to give up on CA and take you up on your offer to be shown around. I have my Hawaii Hunters safety exemption and the OK from the little lady.
Except for the Choppers hunt in May my calander is open


Let me know when you will need help hauling pork out of the jungles and I will be over with a gun or bow and as little as one weeks notice.
 

larrysogla

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Many, many thanks Doc. I am always excited and appreciative about your Hawaiian hunting adventures, whether it is 18 inches away from the steering wheel of your truck or over 18 miles back and forth over tough Hawaiian jungle tracking and getting your Vancouver Bull. It is really a hunting paradise what you have in there. Just so amazing. Wow!!!! I suspect, the big, big increase in hog and other big game numbers in Hawaii, Texas, Florida and other places is because the younger generation are no longer into hunting but into Video games. It seems that in your stories, you hardly run into other hunters, especially the younger ones. What with all the Hunter Safety Course, Hunting License, Gun Registration at the Police Department(in Hawaii) and all the walking and hard labor involved, the younger generation is staying away from hunting and just lazily going into electronic entertainment. Sad. Really. 'Nuff said.
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doccherry

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larrysogla:

Interesting point you bring up, about the young folks. You know, I've bumped into maybe 50 other hunters on my adventures here on the Big Island, perhaps 40 or so during bird hunting and another 10 during big game hunting. I've met another 100 or thereabouts while I volunteered at the check-in station during bird and turkey hunting. I have never, ever seen a teenage hunter and I really don't think I've ever seen a hunter under the age of 30. I discussed this with a wildlife officer who works for the Department of Land and Natural Resources here, and he told me that the young people on the Big Island show virtually no interest in hunting, hiking, camping, or any type of "roughing it" outdoor activity. Like you said, Larry, the youth today are more into "virtual reality" than "real reality," mainly because with virtual reality you don't work up a sweat and get cold or hot and hungry and tired or get any blood on your hands. Don't get me wrong---they have no fear of blood because the virtual games they play involve blowing the brains out of all sorts of people. The more brains you spatter, the more points you score. But pointing and clicking and pushing buttons involves no discomfort, something that many teenagers go to great lengths to avoid [remember, I teach the little rapscallions and have for many years, so I have some knowledge of what makes them tick]. I actually have students whose parents warn us teachers not to make their kids exert themselves because "they really become uncomfortable and even sick when they sweat." I'm serious. It's a totally different ball game today than it was when we were teenagers.

I don't mind not seeing teens out in the field because it means more game and solitude for me. But think about it---if hunting license fees are the only thing that keeps game animals from becoming extinct [and that's a solid, 100% fact], then what does the future hold when old farts like me cross over The Great Divide? I'm very fearful that wildlife and wilderness will go the way of the passenger pigeon and 10 cent cup of coffee. Maybe you folks who are reading this have a different take, particularly if you are the parents of teens.

Larry, you have been so kind for so long, ending your posts to me---a sinner if there ever was one--- with "God Bless," that I'm going to do the same for you. I'm not very religious---heck, the clergy uses guys like me in their sermons as examples of what not to be---but it gives me pleasure and instills a sense of peace when you end your posts that way. So, Larry, my friend, God Bless. And good hunting.


Uncle Ji, if you're reading this, is there a way to say "God Bless" in Hawaiian? Now that I spend more time looking over my shoulder at the road behind than I do looking at the road ahead and now that my yesterday's far outnumber my tomorrow's, maybe I better start cleaning up my act.

Good hunting to all.

Aloha.
 

hogwild757

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Doc,
Just so you know there is alot of hawaiian Legends especially on the big island with Pele the fire goddes and a bunch of others I can't remember. From the term used so much in hawaii( Hanabuda Days) we taught this in the youngers days when there was no such thing of video games or mobile phones. Thats why they have so much killings in oakland,richmond, and other counties here in california. But the good thing here is that enrollment in hunter safety is up for younger generation ages 12 to 16 according to a freind who teaches Hunter Ed. And I do see alot of younger people out in the fieild participating in hunting and fishing activities.
Although here in the states there is so much more activities availble to youths. They have alot of Junior and womens hunt these days than before.
 

doccherry

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The boar I shot made a dramatic transformation this morning. An hour of hand grinding and 10 minutes of mixing secret ingredients into the ground pork and 10 minutes bagging and labeling. That's Mrs. Doc in the photo. 30 pounds of sweet Italian sausage. We use it in spaghetti, meatloaf, scrambled eggs, pork burgers, and a bunch of other stuff.

Last night I cooked up a bunch of wild goat in the pressure cooker. Then I mixed the meat with onions, peas, bell pepper, and pineapple chunks and cooked it in a Filipino caldereta sauce. Simmered for an hour and then scooped over brown whole-grain rice---man, that was good!! The goat was fork tender and had the delicate taste of veal.

Yesterday I also smoked about 10 pounds of wild pork after marinating it in Hawaiian smokey spices for a few hours. It is really good---nice and tender---and that meat came from a tough old boar. The Hawaiians and the Filipinos really know how to turn a nasty old boar into a 5-star meal.

Fishing should pick up in about a month or 6 weeks. Mahi mahi, ono, tuna, spearfish, and a few others. Spring gobbler season begins on March 1 and lasts for 6 weeks. I'm allowed two during the spring season and will probably get those the first couple of weeks, going up to Mauna Kea right after school. While the turkey hunt is going on, there is no big game hunting on Mauna Kea. I'll have to do my boar hunting 5 minutes up the road at the estate where I used to hunt with my bow and crossbow. The pigs are back down from the upper elevations [no water up there---it's the dry season] looking for water in residential areas.

Life is tough here on the Big Island. I don't regret for one single second chucking the lifestyle of So Cal and moving out here into the middle of nowhere.

Aloha.
 

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slickhntr

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hey Doc...I'm a credentialed teacher...can you get me a job? lol fun story!
Ken
 

hogwild757

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Doc,
You really should vacumm pack those ground(wild pock) the flavor of your ingredients get better if seal from any air. You will notice the difference if you don't vacumm pack. Plus last longer in the freeze. I have elk meat from 2 1/2 years ago and we had some stecks last nite hmmm yummy.Good luck to you and the misses on the upcoming fishing season..
 

doccherry

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pwahuntn:

Thanks for the vacuum sealer suggestion. All that meat will be gone within 30 days. My wife and I will eat a dozen meals using it and we will give 1/2 to 2/3 away to our friends. They, in turn, have us over and we drink their booze. Fair trade, I'd say.

Aloha
 

Speckmisser

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ANother great one, Doc! You are SO living in paradise!

But you know that.

Hey, so if a haole wants to come over and chase some hogs or other critters, when's the best time to roll? Summer, fall, or winter?

And did I ask this before?
<


My bro and I have been trying to think of a good hunt where the better halves could come along and not complain about sitting in a freezing cabin all day long fighting off grizzly bears and mosquitos. I mentioned your stories, and I could see his eyes light up from 3000 miles away (he's in NC).

So it sounds like I may be returning to Hawaii a lot sooner than I'd expected.
 

doccherry

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Speckmisser and others:

If you are into big game, by far the best time to visit is from December to May. This is our dry season and the undergrowth, which can be inpenetrable during the rainy season, has died and pretty much disappeared. Ideally, I would suggest late January, all of February, late April, and all of May, because the bird season ends in mid-January and the spring gobbler season is from March 1 thru mid-April. The bird hunters spook the big game and big game hunting is severly limited during the bird hunts.

During the times I suggest, you can rifle hunt sheep on Mauna Kea, archery hunt sheep on Mauna Kea, archery hunt sheep on PTA Army base, rifle hunt pigs EVERYWHERE, archery hunt pigs everywhere, rifle hunt bulls in the Hilo watersehed [you could use archery gear, but you're crazy to do so---these things are just too big and too aggressive], and rifle hunt goats down south of Kona.

If you asked me for the absolute best time for big game, I'd say either February or May. The rains haven't started, you'll positively get a pig [and probably two] at Laupahoehoe, you'll almost positively get a pig up on Mauna Kea [on a one hour hunt right before sunset], you have a good shot at sheep on Mauna Kea and off the Saddle Road, and if you're in good shape, you have a very good chance for a wild bull. The mahi mahi and ono are thick, the tuna are moving in, and the weather is still quite mild. You live up in the Bay Area and Aloha Airlines has bargain fares in May, RT from Oakland to Kona, for about $325, non-stop. I'd be more than happy to guide you, working around my teaching schedule, but that means all Saturday and Sunday and weekdays after 3:30. And let me tell you, when you go hunting here after work or whenever, you usually score.

If you get serious, please email me and I'll help you set something up. I've now taken about 20 hogs in the past 14 months, all fair chase spot and stalk. No dogs and no bait. Of all the things I've hunted here, by far the most exciting adventure is hunting those Vancouver bulls. It's a long hike, 5 hours roundtrip at my slow pace [not much elevation gain or loss, but muddy and slippery in places], but back where the bulls are is very easy walking, beautiful forest with small hills and many open areas and a spectacularly beautiful jungle river. You won't see another soul. The bulls should be down around the river by May since the water holes have dried up. The pig hunting is much, much easier with very little hiking. I can absolutely guarantee you at least one hog if you go out to Laupahoehoe and hunt from sunrise to sunset. I'd be amazed if you don't get the limit of two.

Aloha for now.
 

hogwild757

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I just got my Letter of Exemption and now I can start my planing and if this all works out I'll be in hawaii this spring to hunt and visit my dad. Not sure of the dates but I now know the the plans can start.

Thanks Doc for keepin us updated will be in touch. Hope fully bring some salmon if the season even starts here. Hawaii alsway can use lomi lomi.
 

Speckmisser

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Mahalo, Doc!

We've been looking at next fall, but we might be able to make adjustments. We have a Texas hunt coming next month, and of course I have the JHO hunts in May and June, so that's gonna do it for me the rest of this winter/spring (besides some local stuff).

This living vicariously through your posts is wearing thin, though, and I can see I'm absolutely going to have to come out there at some point soon and do some hunting of my own. Be great to meet up with you, Nic, Uncle Ji (I was on Maui in October, but not hunting, and didn't really know about Uncle Ji until later), and anyone else who happens to be around.
 

larrysogla

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Doc,
Speck is ITCHING to put first blood on his traditional bow. Perhaps, the easy Hawaiian hog hunting is the ticket to put first blood on Speck's traditional bow and arrow. Hmmmm!!!! Speck blasting Vancouver bulls. That would be exciting and downright dangerous should these ill tempered Bulls go for broke. I doubt a .44 Magnum revolver will stop a charge from one of these one ton animals. It has to be the 45-70 rifles or some other large caliber rifle with heavy bullets.
Definitely, the ticket for Speck's dream rifle in .325 Short Magnum. Man o' man, what a sizzling story we will have for reading when Speck comes back from his Hawaiian Jungle Hustle. Pigs galore, Bulls, Goats, Sheep, Turkey, Francolin. Speck, better bring a lot of arrows and ammo. 'Nuff said.
<
 

doccherry

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Speckmisser:

If you're looking at next fall, then I strongly suggest mid-November. You WILL get at least one turkey [limit is one turkey per day], several francolin, several pheasants, all the quail and chukar you want to deal with, and plenty of pigs at Laupahoehoe. Pigs at Mauna Kea are a bit iffy at that time of year, but the sheep up above timberline offer good odds. The sheep hunting off the Saddle Road is very good. Fishing stinks [by Kona standards].

I honestly think that you should also consider a wild bull hunt in the Hilo Watershed. By mid-November, the river is low enough to ford almost anywhere. You will see loads of wild cattle sign and the pig hunting back there where the bulls are is as good as [probably better than] Laupahoehoe. Nic Barca took me on the scenic route, about 12 hours round-trip of actual hiking, but I hiked in on the Morita Camp trail and it was about 5 hours round-trip, much easier.

For your better half, the months of September and October can be hotter than the bowels of hell. It cools down quite a bit in November and the water is still about 80 degrees. If you really aren't into bird hunting, then I strongly recommend waiting until the latter half of January or anytime in February. The weather is actually cool enough that you may need a light jacket at night, even down near the water. Up on Mauna Kea [9000 feet] or even at Laupahoehoe [6000 feet], it's like Montana in October, anywhere from cool to absolutely frigid. The big game hunting is unbelievable then. If you spend three days hunting, you'll get 2 or 3 pigs, possibly a mouflon, and very possibly a bull, if you're up to it.

If you don't mind the heat, then September is a good bet because you can hunt Spanish goats with handgun or muzzleloader. The limit is two. It's very much like hunting mule deer, spot and stalk and by no means a slam dunk, but you'll get your two goats by noon if you go with me. Lots of pigs on Laupahoehoe, lots of pigs up on Mauna Kea, and the sheep are all over. Fishing is superb in September. I go out in my skiff and take all sorts of gamefish in September. But September is really hot and humid down around the water and some people in your part may feel so wilted that they develop the urge to drink mai tais and pina colladas. Happens to me, like about every day in September.

Are you a bird hunter? If not, I suggest waiting for February and going for pigs, sheep, and bulls. The bulls will really ruin you. Cape buffalo in God's country, that's what it is. And the meat is great.

I'll probably go up to Mauna Kea after work one afternoon this week to sight in a Win 94 Trapper in 30/30 and a 12 gauge pump with fiber optic sights and a red dot scope with rifled choke tube and I'll bet I see pigs and I'll bet I may even get a mouflon ram.

This place, I swear under penalty of death, is the Wild West, a little slice of Africa. I've been here 1 1/2 years and what I have found is that the fishing is not as good as I anticipated and the hunting is much, much, much, much better than I anticipated.

Aloha for now.
 
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