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General discussion

"Monster Pig" wasn't a wild pig after all...

Jun 2, 2007 1:39AM PDT

Seems the headlines last week of a wild pig that rivaled "Hogzilla" in size was a bit overstated. Turns out the pig had a name... "Fred"... and had lived on a farm until 4 days previous to being thrown out into the game farm and being shot.

Man... you just have to love the concept of a canned hunt. Some folk I know wonder why I quit hunting.

FRUITHURST, Ala. - The huge hog that became known as "Monster Pig" after being hunted and killed by an 11-year-old boy had another name: Fred. 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. Phil Blissitt told The Anniston Star in a story Friday that he bought the 6-week-old pig in December 2004 as a Christmas gift for his wife, Rhonda, and that they sold it after deciding to get rid of all the pigs at their farm. "I just wanted the truth to be told. That wasn't a wild pig," Rhonda Blissitt said. Jamison Stone shot the huge hog during what he and his father described as a three-hour chase. They said it was more than 1,000 pounds and 9 feet long; if anything, it looked even bigger in a now-famous photo of the hunter and the hunted. Mike Stone said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press on Friday that he had been under the impression that the hog was wild, not farm-raised. Telephone messages left Friday with Eddy Borden, the owner of Lost Creek Plantation, were not immediately returned. Stone said state wildlife officials told him that it is not unusual for hunting preserves to buy farm-raised hogs and that the hogs are considered feral once they are released. Stone said he and his son met Blissitt on Friday morning to get more details about the hog. Blissitt said that he had about 15 hogs and decided to sell them for slaughter, but that no one would buy that particular animal because it was too big for slaughter or breeding, Stone said. Blissitt said that the pig had become a nuisance and that visitors were often frightened by it, Stone said. "He was nice enough to tell my son that the pig was too big and needed killing," Stone said. "He shook Jamison's hand and said he did not kill the family pet." The Blissitts said they didn't know the hog that was hunted was Fred until they were contacted by a game warden for the Alabama Department of Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries. The agency determined that no laws were violated in the hunt. Phil Blissitt said he became irritated when he learned that some thought the photo of Fred was doctored. "That was a big hog," he said.

Discussion is locked

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Some folk I know wonder why I quit hunting.
Jun 2, 2007 3:31AM PDT

I wonder too. Were you afraid that the animals you were hunting were really domesticated, or what?

Seems puzzling to me.

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I don't understand either
Jun 2, 2007 3:59AM PDT

Why would the actions of someone else change what you may enjoy?

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Do you ride motorcylces DM?
Jun 2, 2007 4:21AM PDT

How many times have you seen some idiot on a bike pull a stupid move at an intersection? The guy is on a brand new Harley and wearing a thousand bucks worth of Harley leathers and other fashion ware and you just know the guy hasn't a real clue about motorcycle safety or even traveled more than an afternoon away from home on his bike. They guy is just an embarrassment to anyone who has ridden for years and their behavior makes you cringe. What worries you even more is you see more and more of these idiots out on the road every day.

It was the same thing with hunting. I saw more and more people going out and buying the biggest, most expensive gun they could afford and proceed to demonstrate they were as a danger to themselves and everyone around them.

Hunting should be one shot... one kill. If you need to let loose a clip then you didn't have a shot to begin with. A coup de gr

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I got disgusted with those folks...
Jun 2, 2007 4:26AM PDT

So don't hunt with them.

Jeez, is this too simple or what?

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Uhmm..... Y e a h ....
Jun 2, 2007 4:48AM PDT

Just because you are not in the same hunting party doesn't mean that a stupid hunter on the other side of the woods isn't a threat to you.

I don't know how much simpler I can spell it out for you here Ed.

Bottom line is you enquired and I answered. The same with DM. Seems like now all you are trying to do is make my explanation seem ridiculous. Since you have never been a hunter I don't understand how you can be considered informed enough to pursue this much farther.

However, I do understand much better now how you form your opinions about the environment and animal conservation.

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(NT) Shouldn't affect what you do
Jun 2, 2007 5:14AM PDT
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Hunting used to be a skill and a sport.
Jun 2, 2007 4:02AM PDT

Where is the skill in hunting on a fenced in game farm? Where is the sport?

Where is the skill when you hear some fool in the woods let off a clip full of shots? Didn't the man or woman have a clear kill shot to begin with? Why the need to let off 6 rounds in a matter of seconds?

Some people still hunt because they need to supplement their food supplies with wild game.
Some people hunt because of family and cultural tradition.
I respect that.

Plain and simple, people who hunt on game farms are just looking to kill something. They often even pay for a guarantee the will kill a critter. They could just as easily go down to the local slaughter housed and get much the same experience.

Out of curiosity Ed... are you now, or were you at one time, a hunter?

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(NT) Nope, not ahuntger
Jun 2, 2007 4:16AM PDT
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Not a hunter...
Jun 2, 2007 4:19AM PDT

it holds no appeal to me at all. But the point is, YOU can hunt with skill. It can be a sport for YOU. What other people do is entirely beside the point.

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When your out in the woods and everyone has guns...
Jun 2, 2007 4:24AM PDT

... then you better make it a point about being concerned over what everyone else is doing.

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Is the forum software acting extra goofy today?
Jun 2, 2007 4:23AM PDT

Seems to be jumpy. Of course, we MUST have useless features like "real time" post reading instead of logical things like the ability to edit.

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(NT) chuckle ;-)
Jun 2, 2007 4:25AM PDT
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Com'n Ed,
Jun 2, 2007 5:17AM PDT

You don't see the advantage of watching a webpage to see if someone has responded to your post?