I just returned from my third trip to the forests/jungles of Laupahoehoe in northeast Big Island Hawaii. I got small pigs on each of the last two trips. I was back in from the 4WD road about a mile at 9:30 AM with fog, drizzle, and wind. I came to a valley that was solid with polka banana vines [passion fruit] and stood on the ridge above it. I heard a "woof" noise and recognized it as the startled sound that a pig makes when it sees or scents you. On the far side of the valley, just above the polka banana, was a solid black boar, and a big one. I sat down, calmed my nerves, and sent a .308 at his lungs. He sqealed and went down but got back up. I shot again and he rolled down into the thick vines. I sat down for 5 minutes and then hiked below the valley [it's too thick to hike through, particularly with a 30 pound pack, so I bypassed it] and then up above where the pig was. Plenty of blood and not a sound. I began poking around in the vines and immediately there was a loud grunting, squealing and the thick vines 40 feet away began to shake and the shaking vines got closer and closer at an alarming speed. I knew the boar was coming for me but couldn't see a thing because the vines were about 4 feet high and formed a thick canopy that won't even let light through. 10 feet from me the boar burst from a tunnel but fortunately a blowdown log was at his shoulder height so he went under it and squirmed and then burst out again 6 feet from me. I have a scope on my Winchester 100 so there was no time to aim. I just shoved the barrel out and shot him in the mouth, which was open wide. The shot hit him in the jaw and he turned to the side and then turned back. I shot twice more and he collapsed and died. I made sure he was dead and then sat down because my legs were shaking so much. I'd estimate his weight at 225-250. He was really fat, as the photo [hope the photos come through] will show. On the way out, I met the other guys who hunt the area and told them my story. One of them had been bird hunting on Kauai the week before and had been charged by a boar. He shot it at a range of 10 feet, in the face, and it veered off and disappeared. Uncle Ji and Ev Bouret can comment on this, but it seems to me that these Hawaiian boars, which rarely see humans, tend to be more aggressive than the boars I encountered in Hawaii.
This first photo [not sure if it will work] is of the boar, lying were it fell. It was too heavy for me to move so I had to bone it out right there.
This first photo [not sure if it will work] is of the boar, lying were it fell. It was too heavy for me to move so I had to bone it out right there.