This is not a hog; THIS IS THE! HOG!!!

It was a fenced Kill. This kid did not hunt this pig he Killed it. Teaching our youth that it is ok to Kill animals in a fenced area is just wrong. This violates all fear chase rules for hunting, this kid and father are what I call slob hunters nothing more. Shooting this pig as many times as he did also proves he is not prepared or ready to be in the field to hunt. You owe it to the animal that you are hunting to be able to deliver a clean and humane kill.
This whole thing does nothing more than give us hunters a bad name and more ammunition for the anti's.


Tony, where did you hear that? From what I had read, the pig was hunted over an area of quite a few acres, on a fenced ranch, but a ranch of a few hundred acres.
If your right, I would have to change my position of support for the hunters.
 
I agree 100%...no challenge...might as well shoot someones pet dog
 
Tame hog.
Shoot it.
It's not dead. It's running away. Shoot it again.
. . .
Shoot it again.
. . .
Shoot it again.
. . .
Shoot it again
. . .
Shoot it again.
. . .
Shoot it again.
. . .
Shoot it again.

All over a period of hours.

Yup. True sportsmanship. :barf:
 
I heard some guy bought this pig for his wife as a present...then gave it to the preserve...just to spend it last days walking around.

Wonder how they feel that their pet pig was tortured and killed
 
Here is a video on high fence hunting for you Jimmy Houstin fans out there. I am an avid outdoorsman and hunter, but these types of hunting organizations need to be banned. Like I said before, these aren't hunters, they are slobs that are just killing.

http://real-hunters.com/full.swf
 
"The not-so-wild pig had been raised on an Alabama farm and was sold to the Lost Creek Plantation just four days before it was shot there in a 150-acre fenced area, the animal's former owner said."

Yea, that's pretty sad.

If it were a wild hog, 150 acres is quite a bit of an area but being a domesticated piggy, not afraid of people. Sad.
 
I just found out that this "monster pig" was a domesticated animal turned loose in a field to be killed. When I first read the story, I recall being a bit uneasy that (a) an 11 year old boy was allowed to hunt dangerous feral pigs, and (b) that it took eight shots from a heavy calibre revolver to kill it.

I am no bleeding heart, I regularly kill and eat game animals, but this sort of "hunting" is just plain wrong.

My earlier admiration for the lad has evaporated.
 
too bad we couldnt hunt terrorists that way-have them in a fenced in area and have a few beers while you pick them off-heck might even be more fun if they were tied to stakes also-

ive never understood why people would go to these fenced in hunting places,and claim they killed a animal that was captive-in reality its just a slaughter house without walls-nothing game about it
 
There has also been a market for monster deer .A local poacher shoots them out of season and sells them to a "hunter" who takes it home and brags about how he hunted the monster buck !!! There are other monster bucks that have been feed and bred so they have unusually large antlers. They are then transported to a hunting area where they are "hunted" !!..We may never know all the facts about Fred the pig but I wouldn't doubt that the boy, his father ,and the hunting preserve owner were all involved in the deception !! Between bragging rights and 15 minutes of fame on TV, the temptation is great !
 
OK......I've held my tongue long enough...



Rant ON


This is not about the kid...those of you that were initially "impressed" by this youngster and consequently "let down" after the news article....ought to rethink your position.

The kid went in with his Dad and his buddies to hunt what they likely honestly believed was feral hogs. Turned out to be a monster pig-turned-feral-hog raised on a farm. And shame on anybody who "knew better" and didn't say anything upfront. However....would anybody here be "more impressed" if the hog had charged the kid (like a true feral hog) and the accompanying adults (who were armed and aimed at his side) had to finish it off for him? I doubt it...! Do you really think an 11 yr. old has the skills to hunt, track and kill a hog on their own anyway? Not in today's Nintendo world.

Have any of you hunted feral hogs? I have....they have incredibly thick skin...and a hog that large would take a *long* time to bleed out. One of the guys in our hunting group had to stick his "relatively small 250 lb. hog" more than a dozen times to get it fall down. Sometimes they fight...sometimes you miss the kill-zone...sometimes they just don't bleed fast.

I'm sure everyone here knows somebody that has shot a deer, only to never be able to find it. Sometimes stuff happens. And it's not fair of us to sit back in arm-chair commando mode and criticize an 11 yr old for doing something most kids his age would never dream of trying (feral or not!)



Now, that said....I *am* quite disappointed with the video link that was provided...that kind of hunting is shameful...and ought to be prosecuted and eliminated!

(though, this kind of hunting has been going on for centuries among the elite!)



But let's lay off the kid about it....is it really his fault?


Condemn the act by the adults involved that might have "known better"...but the kid, even if he did know what to expect...was just "following orders".
 
Looks like the website has been updated:

http://www.monsterpig.com/

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The news media used it for headlines for a week claiming it's size was a hoax. On the evening of May 31, I was contacted by Bran Strickland of the Anniston Star and he told me that he had good news and bad news. He said that the good news is your claims about the pig's massive size have been verified. The bad news is that he came from a hog breeder and that the pig had been sold from the breeder to the preserve for the purpose of hunting. Early on the morning of June 1, I went to the computer and read Bran's article which portrayed the pig as a family pet. The pig that Jamison killed did not act like a family pet. It was a very aggressive animal. I was upset at first to read this report but after going through a week of being told what we killed did not exist by the network media, I decided to get to the bottom of this myself. I got my whole family up at 6:00 a.m. and traveled to Heflin, AL to meet with the Blissitts to give Phil Blissitt, whom I have never met or talked to before, the opportunity to explain to Jamison why he had sold a pig that was described as being so gentle and sweet to a hunting preserve in order for someone to come and kill it.

I was able to arrange a meeting with Mr. Blissitt who was happy to oblige as he is a father of a young boy similar to Jamison's age. Mr. Blissitt explained to me that he was an avid hunter and fisherman and that he did not see anything wrong with the hunting of the animal and if he did, he would not have sold it to the preserve. I asked him to tell me a little bit about the animal and asked was Mr. Strickland of the Anniston Star accurate in his docile description of the pig. Mr. Blissitt said he had bought all the pigs for his wife. The hogs were her deal, he and his son just took care of them for her. He said all of their pigs had just recently been sold for slaughter and the big boar was too big to be a breeder because of his massive weight and stature and would certainly be unsuitable for slaughter, referring to him being an uncut boar hog. He said the pig had gotten out several times by simply walking through the fence. He also said that the pig was very scary to people who would come in the yard because of his jaw popping, which is usually seen as a sign of aggression in hogs. He said that on several occasions, he had seen this massive pig throw other pigs around, once even over the fence. Mr. Blissitt also told of building the pig a large shelter that was big enough to cover him and keep him out of the weather but he said the pig tore it to bits in less than 40 minutes. Mrs. Blissitt herself even said in Mr. Strickland's article that at times the pig would even become irate. Mr. Blissitt said he could see how anyone looking at the hog with his jaw popping and aggressive behavior in the 200 acre hog preserve, that is part of the 2,500 acre hunting plantation, would certainly believe this pig to be very scary. He congratulated Jamison on his hunt and said that somebody had to kill the pig.

Mr. Blissitt then said that they never would have brought this issue up if we were not trying to claim it to be a record wild hog. I explained that we had never declared it to be any kind of record and until recently, I was not very well educated on the terminology of hogs and their classifications. As the Alabama Game and Fish Commission investigated the story and the parties involved for wrong doing with the exception of Jamison and I, we sat patiently trying to understand what was going on. When the investigation was complete, I spoke with officials from the Alabama Game and Fish Commission who insured me that nothing illegal or unethical had occurred by any of the parties investigated. They did not tell me this pig had been purchased for stock on the plantation, which does have many species of pigs, including Russian black boar, that do raise there in a feral environment. He did state that the pig was of a domestic origin which was the ONLY legal way for owner's of pig hunting preserves to stock or restock besides pigs being born on the property. I did not really think a lot about what he said nor did I care at the time because I was still fighting the battle proving the pig was real or at least to get the news media to quit saying it wasn't.

Now from the first time this story was told to the interviews Jamison and I have done on radio and television, we have never failed to say that the pig was hunted on a hunting ranch or farm. I know many of you real hunters and animal rights activist have chastised Jamison and I for this hunting trip from the very beginning trying to make it sound like it was something short of a true hunting experience and your opinion is well received and understood. However, I own no hunting land and have very little time so this opportunity to hunt what we thought and technically still is, according to the definition I have, a feral pig, was something I do not regret doing for my son. Had I known that in a short time, someone would call this pig their "pet", we would have simply hunted another hog. I would like to thank Mr. Blissitt for his honest and forthcoming description of the pig and his understanding and taking time to explain to my son that he did NOT shoot the family pet!

I have no hard feelings at anyone involved nor do I feel like I have been misled in any way now that I have a total understanding of this event.

Mike Stone
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Also, on this page:


http://www.monsterpig.com/dad's%20letter.htm

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The purpose of this hunt was to give Jamison the opportunity to challenge himself and with this challenge the opportunity to overcome fear and accomplish something that would not be easily done. As he is becoming a young man, I wanted to see if the stuff I had been given him over the years would be the right stuff and if he had enough of it to rise to this and other challenges that life would surly have in store. I have disciplined my children over the years quiet regularly and many times have heard them say that their friends did not receive the same punishment. My response has always been "I am not trying to raise another child I am trying to raise a Champion". I guess I wanted to see if I was on the right track.

When this hunt was over we wanted to share this experience with our family and friends from around the country. I got tired of e-mailing pictures so I built my son's website, (that is why it does not look very professional) never knowing that a few weeks later the world would be at our door. News sources tell me that Jamison's story was one of the most widely publicized stories in the world on Saturday, May 26. The web gurus were even saying it was the hottest website on that day. All of this seemed great at first, Jamison had many new friends from around the world congratulating him on his hunt and recognizing a bit of his character. Now the downside is that some negative comments started to come in from people who had either forgotten Jamison's 11 or just do not care. They are so opposed to the fact that we hunt that they send hate mail saying all kinds of profane things about he and I. We do not let him read any e-mail before they are filtered by his Mom and I, and although we do summarize the negative e-mails to him, he blows them off easily, except for the ones who say he could not possibly shoot that big gun, those make him mad. He prints off and reads most of the positive e-mails that his Mom and I move into his folder and he seems to stand a little taller with each one that he reads.

Many of the naysayers seem to make fun of the fact that we are Christians and that is certainly fine by us, it makes it easy for us to see who needs prayer and we are happy to provide it. In one case an e-mail was filled with so much hate that I felt compelled to send them back a prayer commanding the evil to leave the person and make way for God's Holy Spirit to come in and bring Joy and Peace to their life. Their next e-mail was one of confusion as they were trying to understand why someone who was sent evil would wish good things back on them. Before I knew the great and powerful fisherman, Jesus, I would have probably felt the same way.

Many of you have called this story the second shot heard around the world and others have called this story the place where old fashioned Christian values and our God given rights will take it's stand. I have always taught my children that since the fall of man, hunting was a necessary evil. You know God did intend to feed us without our working gardens or having to hunt. Remember that God killed the first animals for man's clothing. (Genesis 3-21) I truly believe from my experience working around the world that some people would simply starve to death before they would plant or hunt. I, however, have chosen to plant and hunt and to teach these skills to my children, male and female, and to encourage them to pass these skills down through the generations as they have been passed to me. If this story has become a platform then let Jamison and I now stand on it along with the millions of you who understand and are willing to accept the human responsibility to feed yourself and your family from God's bounty both for the body and for the spirit.

Please remember that as we work and hunt, it is also our God Given Right as Christians to hunt for the lost souls about us. You do not need a license and you can hunt in any state or country. Those lost souls will truly be our greatest trophies in the end.

I would like to take this opportunity to thank each one of you who are taking time to visit our website and congratulating Jamison. It means a lot to him and our whole family. I also want to thank The Dishonghs and Fitzner Families for letting me use their land to teach my children to hunt and my father, grandfather and uncles who took the time to take a kid hunting.

Thanks again and may God bless each of you-

Jamison's dad
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I attacked the father for teaching his son that killing animals in a fenced area is called hunting. I read in the last couple of articles that his father uses the word "hunting" regularly and I feel he truly does not know the true meaning. I do not care if this was a 150 acre fenced preserve; it still is fenced and violates any fair chase rules of hunting.
That video has every right to be posted; if others are made aware of this maybe, they will do something about it. Just because the elite has done it for centuries, surely does not make it right. Any one that takes game in this manner should be labeled as a slob hunter/killer.
It also states the boy gets angry when he reads when people say he cannot shoot the .50cal handgun. He may be able to pull the trigger, but obviously, he cannot shoot it effectively. A .50cal round placed in the vitals of any North American animal will bring them down in short order.

I am an avid bow hunter, so I know the difficulties of tracking game once shot. However, if you cannot deliver a lethal shot (bow or firearm) you owe that animal the respect of passing on the shot.
 
I agree Tony. Of all the superpowerfull handguns it is said that the S&W 500 is the most difficult to handle for recoil.In any case you should be able to put rounds into 1.5" max from the bench at 25 yds with the gun/ammo combination. The limits to range are the max that you can keep within the vital area [10" for deer] . Only good hits count !! Pride should come with a one shot kill .Excessive recoil and lack of practice are the biggest problems ! [I've taken my share of deer with my 44 mag ] ....The 'explainations' for the story seem to just add more questions.
 
I do not care if this was a 150 acre fenced preserve; it still is fenced and violates any fair chase rules of hunting.
In all honesty, I've hunted in state forest parcels that are smaller than that, some as small as about 75 acres in suburban areas.
 
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