Surfswest

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well, as you might have read on the other topic, my wife was not too excited to let me go. She was quite hesitant and very worried about letting me and my two best friends go out with a hunter that we had never met before. The fact the this experienced hunter is a retired scout sniper for the military and has 25+ years hunting this private Property with numerous success stories did nothing to quell her nerves. None the less, I still went.
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6 am sat morning we all met up in rosamond. 2 hours and 5 locked gates later and we were unloading our gear to setting up for the hunt. The night before it had snowed up in the mountains and had left a couple inches on the ground. The sun was shinning bright and the only clouds were way out in the distance. We knew that that gave us a good two hours give or take to hunt before it got bad. Being up at 6500' we knew that when the clouds moving in, we had to get out.
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we staying up in that area for a good three hours. during that time we saw dozens of quail, coyotes, a 300+ pound brown bear, and tons of fresh bobcat tracks, but no pigs. The spot we chose was one that is abundant with tunnels and bedding area, but there were just no pigs to be seen, at least for recent tracks that is. At about 10:30 i decided to hike the mile back to the trucks to get something from the land cruiser. as i approached i heard the pigs callin. after dropping my pack and quietly calling the other guys on the radio, i started the stalk. within 20 minutes the guys showed up and i had already made my way downwind and almost under the pigs, or i should say where the sound was coming from.

after conferring with the guys, i made the decision to start crawling through the thick scrub oak and try to find and/or flush out whatever was in there. halfway through the 150 or so yards of srub, and the noise disappeared and who knows where they disappeared off to. right as i made it through, the snow started to fall again and we knew we better get out now or we'd be camping there.

We made it back down the hill and below the cloud cover as it started snowing and was near white out conditions. We came to the are our "guide", Ralph, called green valley and hung out for 30 minutes or so. My friend and I convinced ralph and our other friend to meet us at the bottom of this valley with the vehicles, that we wanted to hike down the three miles to the bottom from here. Thankfully about 20 minutes into this hike the snow let up a bit and was just flurries the rest of the day.

On this hike we spotted some wild mustangs, another brown bear, a bobcat,and even a herd of deer with a couple of 4-point bucks. Plenty of pig trails and signs of pig scat, but just no piggies seen the entire day. I take that back, I can't say the whole day was pig-less. The bacon on my burger back at the Wayside Cafe in Rosamond was outstanding.
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I guess you can call it a successful hunt, we all came back with all our fingers and toes, saw some pig signs, and got a chance to see some of the most beautiful scenery i had ever seen. I am gonna try to shrink down the pics and get a couple of them posted shortly.

Thanks everyone to all the info leading up to my hunt and hopefully many more to come.

Frosty

ps. The wife was happy i came back empty handed, and said she would love to let me go out hunting again if i came home empty handed again. no promises....
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BobcatJess

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Glad to hear you had a great time Surfswest. The whole day sounded exciting especially with all the wildlife you encountered.

Jess.
 

Surfswest

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This is up top and all the scrub oak in the background is just full of tunnels. Just to show how far up in the hills we were, directly west over the ridge beyond the scrub oak is the eastern edge of Tejon Ranch and due south is the small hidden community of white oak.
 

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Surfswest

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My two friends with the hills to the east behind them. This is where the bear was just walking down the road no more than 10 minutes after we drove it.
 

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Surfswest

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Lookikng due south, this is the valley my friend and i hiked to try one more time to get some piggies. This is on the way up the hill forst thing in the morning, before the snow came in.
 

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Surfswest

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One more pic. This on on the floor of the valley halfway down. Don't let the great scenery fool you, this was one tough hike in the snow flurries with temps no more that the low teens. You know what, I ready to do it all over again.
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easymoney

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Glad to hear you had a good hunt, though didn't score.
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div>
ps. The wife was happy i came back empty handed, and said she would love to let me go out hunting again if i came home empty handed again. no promises....[/b]
That's just what my wife always says...
 

Speckmisser

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Sounds like you had a great time, despite some adversity. Glad to hear it!
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A lot of folks get too wrapped up in the killing aspect of the hunt, and forget to enjoy the real bounty of a trip afield... sounds like you didn't let the absence of pigs detract from the experience.

I was looking at all the snow this past weekend, and wishing I could've gone out to take my gun or bow for a walk in it. Must have been beautiful up there!
 

Wild1

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Sounds like a good time in the great outdoors - well done. (I'm assuming you meant "black bears"). Wish I was there.
 

switch

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Surfswest, was this a hunt on private land? I still have a few pig and bobcat tags that need filling. Sounds like you had a blast.
 

Gyopo

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Sounds like a great time.
Nice pics.
Really nice FJ 40. I love those old landcruisers.

Pretty neat when you can hear the boars doing at whatever it is they do
in the thick stuff.
Sounds w/out visual confirmation seem to enhance the experience.
 

Metdawg44

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SurfWest,

Thanks for the story and the pics. Kind of makes us feel like we were there with you. Keep at it and you'll have your hog. By the way, what kind of camera did you use. I'm having a terrible time uploading my pictures to Jesse's, because they are too big. I've tried the free image crunching software but still have problems.
 

Surfswest

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To answer a couple of questions, here you go:

wild1 - yes, thanks for the correction, it was a "black bear"

switch - yes, it was on private land way up there in the tehachapi hills. took us about 2 hours to get there from rosamond, wash board roads and a couple of locked gates to go through takes longer that i thought it would. best of luck on that bobcat tag left as i know how elusive they can be. murphy's law, when you don't have a tag you see them, am i right?

metdawg44 - just your standard run of the mill digital cam. If you are having problems with the pics, do what i do. open them in paint (standard with all forms of Windows) and go to image at the top. click on stretch/skew and just start messing with the percentage size. that should drastically reduce the size of the image and the file size as well. if this doesn't help you can send them to me and ill post them for you.

I got another question for all of you out there. I have read a lot on this website and many other sites about behavior of wild pigs. When its sunny, when its raining, when its windy, or calm, but how about in the snow? Do pigs generally behave a certain way in snow or does it just depend on each pigs preferance?

Thanks for the encouragement all and hopefully soon with your help i will be enjoying my first wild pig.
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Frosty
 

SDHNTR

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Man I used to have that same Landcruiser. Same color and all. My friends used to call it Col. Mustard. That thing would go anywhere. It was my first ride when I was 16. Thanks man, you brought me back.
 

Metdawg44

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SDHNTR:

First car at 16, man there must be some stories behind that rig. My buddy had the same car, same color, similar name.
 

Metdawg44

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SurfsWest,

Thanks for the tip on image crunching using Microsoft paint. It's real easy to use, much better than the downloaded software. Always nice to learn a new tip.

Metdawg
 

baboltin

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thats awesome that u had fun, that is what it is all about. i know where u are hunting now that is pretty cool back there. the wild horses are really cool to see.
 
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