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Hog Hunting For Dummies
Hog Hunting For Dummies
For the last few years hog hunting has exploded in popularity. It’s never been easier to hunt hogs or to find information about hunting hogs. The amount of information that can be found online now versus three years ago is astounding.
3 to 4 years ago if you wanted to learn about actually hunting a hog outdoors you had to join forums and submit yourself to being treated very poorly by the members that were more experienced than you were.
That is no longer the case. A large number of hunters,including myself, have created websites just like this one so you can learn how to hunt hogs on your own without someone being a jerk or banning you from any forum because you have a different point of view on how you do things.
I believe that this has created a whole new generation of Hog Hunter. Not just because of the internet, or people like me. I believe that the Internet has made it possible for people who don’t know how to hunt hogs or deer or ducks to learn how to do it very easily with very little effort, and in a way that is extremely productive for creating new hunters in the outdoors.
The old-school way of doing things was to join a forum and lurk the form for days and weeks and months until you finally get the courage to post something, and then immediately you’re shot down and/or ban. I’ve seen this time and time again.
So here’s a very quick and very short, very easy how to hunt hogs for you to follow for finding hogs, hunting them, and ultimately being successful.
#1 You have to find logs. Finding hogs is not difficult, you just have to look around and think like a pig. Hogs will not seek out a source of food like a corn feeder or other sources just for the sake of finding food. They are omnivorous. This means that a hog is going to eat just about anything it finds. The easiest thing to do is to find a trail or find an area where hogs are very active. That is obvious from the tracks in the wallows and watching the trails. Using game cameras is also a good way to tell if your trail or area is active with hogs. Do not set up your feeder, or bait until you have confirmed they are present. Not before you know they’re there. They will not come to your bait unless they are already in the area and stumbled on it by accident.
#2 Decide where you going to take the shot from. Taking a shot means different things to different people. Some people like to bow hunt, some people like to hunt with a rifle. Hunting with a rifle is extremely productive and can build a large amount of confidence in a young hunter. This is why you will find that I always recommend taking a youngster into the woods with a rifle to get their first kill or to shoot their first animal because it’s 100% success rate, if YOU have done your job correctly in training them. After you have decided where you going to take a shot from, set up your stand.
#3 Set up your stand. If you’re going to hunt with the bow you need a tree stand or some sort of tripod. If you’re going to hunt with a rifle you need to set up a blind or a ground blind, or some other way to set up your rifle and take a good steady shot. most of the time when you hunt hogs you, you’re going to be hunting at night. It’s a really good idea to have a good, high quality, hunting light that you can depend on. These days it seems everybody is inventing their own hunting light. It really doesn’t matter what light you use, as long as you use a light that works for you. I have my favorite lights, and I’m sure others have theirs. There is nothing wrong with this, and there’s nothing wrong with any of your friends loaning you a light or recommending one to you. The key is that you get outside you hunt hogs and you take good solid ethical shot.
Feeder lights are also very popular, and a very good for hunting hogs at night. Using a good, high quality feeder light will do a lot for your success rate when it comes to harvesting hogs. You can use just about any color feeder light that you want. Red, Green or even white will work just as well. The game will not spook from any of the lights given enough time and familiarity with the area it will not be a problem. The biggest concern that you should have should be getting enough light underneath your feeder so you can take a shot that is safe and make a kill that’s ethical.
Some people use brake lights for this. Others build special LED lights. Some people build special LED lights and use brake lights. Most feeder light systems are either 6 or 12 VDC, and depending on your situation you can have a setup with a photocell (dusk to dawn) or even use remote on-off switches. Feeder light technology has come a very long way in a very short amount of time.
The best recommendation I can make is get a light that you like, you can use, and it works for you. We have several to choose from in our store.
#4 Now it’s time to set your bait in your timer. One of the simplest methods I use for baiting hogs is a post hole digger. Using a post hole digger you can dig a hole in the ground 2 feet deep, fill it with corn and wait for the hogs to come to it. I highly recommend putting the game camera over the bait site so that you know what kind of activity you have without guessing when they will be there and whether you have hogs coming to it. I also use game feeders with timers on. This is a good way to set your timer so that you know exactly what time it goes off, and if you’re running a good game camera, you have an idea within a few hours what time that they might be there when you want to go hunt them. I always set my timers to run longer in the evening that I do in the morning. But, I always will drop a little corn for an animal that is a nice hog in the area that I want to hunt and he only comes in the mornings. How do I know that? I know this because I watch my game cameras and I am diligent comes to hunting hogs. And you should be too.
#5 Now you need to know what time you need to be in the stand in order to hunt your hogs. This is fairly easy in the spring or the first quarter of every year (in my area) to determine. I generally hunt around the arrival of cool fronts or whether changes in our area. People say this is good, but very few people actually do it. It is one of the simplest, most successful methods that I use today. So watch your cool fronts, watch weather changes, watch the temperature changes, watch for rain, just watch for anything that changes the weather or changes the barometric pressure in your area and then hunt it. By doing this over time, you will learn how to track when they are there. You can confirm when they are more active by watching your game camera regularly (please don’t buy cheap one they are not worth the headache). We also have these in our store if you need one.
#6 Now you have everything you need in order to hunt hogs successfully. Five steps in a very simple point of view you have located the area for hogs, decided where to set your feeder, decided how to set up your stand, and now you know when to be there at the right times.
Hog hunting isn’t for dummies. Don’t ever join a form or visit a website where you are treated like you do not know what you’re doing because someone talks down to you or acts as though you don’t have a right to do what they did. Hunting in the outdoors is open, available for everyone who wants to participate, and especially available for any youngster that decides that they want to do it. This should be the goal for every hunter.
As you can tell I still don’t agree with, or like, or participate in forums where users are restricted in what they learn and what they know and who they talk to just because the forum owner, or forum members are too busy trying to sell the members something.
In conclusion, be successful, enjoy the outdoors and do not ever let anyone tell you that you’re a dummy when it comes to hog hunting.
HHG
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The Time Is Right
Hog Hunting Is More About Timing Than “Hunting”
1/16/2012 HHG
Well, it’s official, deer season is over in most places and that means it’s time to get out there and hammer some hogs for most of us!
I personally love this time of year. Looking forward to a new year, new things, new hunts, new friends… Spring is lurking out there somewhere and food sources are scarce
This time of year it’s best to adjust your feeders back a little in the morning feed and just keep enough dropping to keep a few deer and other mammals interested. I’m usually an evening hunter more than morning, so I turn up my feeder for the afternoon feed.
If I was feeding for a total of 10 seconds per day, I adjust the morning feed lower, and add that to the evening feed. This puts more corn on the ground just before dark and increases the odds of me picking off a hog or two from my tree stand this time of year.
The other thing I think is EXTREMELY important this time of year are the cold fronts! It is official this time of year….. Things have become VERY predictable when it comes to hog hunting. And that is VERY unusual!
Here’s my basic run down for the next few months:
I hunt when I feel like I should, but that does not always mean I am hunting when I “should”. When should I hunt… you ask? That’s easy- When your hogs are most active, and most comfortable!
This time of year I hunt during a dark moon first. Hunting during a dark moon will ensure that you are in your tree stand when your hogs are most comfortable and in the dark. During a dark moon your hogs will move earlier when you are hog hunting than when it is not. During a bright moon they will stay in the shadows and not venture into the open areas unprotected any more than is absolutely necessary. This means you will have a good shot earlier than normal since hogs don’t usually move until the moon is low and the shadows are long
So, now we are hunting dark moons… the only other thing I do this time of year is to hunt directly in front of cold fronts. The weather change will make a huge difference and push hogs to your feeder early in the evening when a front is coming through overnight or early the next morning.
When you can hunt dark moons, and directly in front of cold fronts you will increase your odds of harvesting a great deal more than hunting other times during this “post deer season” time of year.
Good luck in the field. Please be sure to visit the forums to contribute and get more tips and tricks.
Also please be sure to visit our sponsors. Their products are high quality and can make all the difference under a dark moon when you’re making a shot that needs to count.
HHG
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Rifle Lights For Hunting Hogs
Hog Hunting With Rifle Lights
Using a rifle light for hog hunting is gaining in popularity as technology improves how they function. Gone are the days that a tiny little light had to be strapped your your rifle and you were lucky if you could see your cross hairs in the dark.
Today’s rifle lights are very advanced and extremely durable. Choosing the right one can be a bit tricky if you have not had a few different lights in the past. Just using a “tactical” light won’t always get you what you need when hog hunting with your rifle light.
Don’t get me wrong, I truly believe that it doesn’t matter what you hunt with, as long as you hunt. My objective is always to get hunters in the field, expose new hunters to the sport, and to ALWAYS make sure we take a minute to get kids involved and exposed to the world of hunting.
Used to be that the only way to rifle hunt your feeder for hogs was by using a feeder light. And, they work good. BUT with todays products you can actually get a good high quality rifle hunting light for about the same cost, or even less.
Now, don’t get me wrong… I DID NOT SAY CHEAP! One thing is universal, if all you are shopping for is low price, that’s about all you’re going to get most of the time. This is also not to be confused with paying more means you get a better product.
I like a good balance between high quality and fairly priced. Now, to me, a fair price is one I can understand, AND one I don’t have to save for 6 months to justify. If I make that kind of investment in my hunting light set ups, you should believe I’m going to make sure it will do EVERYTHING I want before I buy it. And I’m a cheap skate on some things.
One of the best compromises I have found for a good rifle hunting light is the Rifle Lite from BAP. It is VERY good in either red or green, and works well for us out to 250yds. We don’t hunt with high dollar scopes either. We hunt with meat guns. They get kicked around, put in the back seat, on the dash, you name it. Using a high quality scope will just make your experience that much better hunting hogs at night with your rifle light.
You can mount these lights on your gun in a number of ways now. Using a universal barrel mount, scope mount, or rail mount will make a big difference in your hunting stand. Using a fixed feeder light is nice, but nothing is as flexible as using a good rifle light. Notice I use the word “good”. You can even get these lights in 2 mode…
2 mode lights mean that you have the ability to switch them from high to low and visa versa. Doing this will give you much more flexible in your stand. If your hogs come it at 45yds instead of 100 like you had planned, you have the option of taking aim right then on “low”. This will reduce the shadows that are cast from the light, and keep your hogs much more comfortable.
Alot of the time we will put the lights on low until we are able to lower them onto the target before taking our shot. Once we have our bearings, we go to high mode and let them have it!
Rifle hunting lights are changing the way hog hunters take their game. Big improvements have been made in the last year or so regarding their technology. Before you set up a feeder light, I would highly recommend checking out some rifle lights before you set up a stationary feeder light.
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Seasons Change
Seasons Change
3/1/2011 HHG
Changing with them will increase your odds…..
This time of year Spring is right around the corner. That is good, and bad.
If you’re keeping your feeders full, and setting the timers for the hogs, odds are you’re having some good hunts right now.
What do you do when the weather changes? From cool to warm? Be prepared. Hogs aren’t much for hot days, so even if you have fewer fronts to hunt there’s still alot of opportunity.
Keeping your feeder full, and set will go a long way to keeping the hogs regular at your place. Don’t forget that they are “looking” for your corn. If they happen across it, they will stay for a while. If it is a dependable source of food, they will stay in the area.
I like to set my places near water. Water is a sure thing to me. Everything in the area will go there eventually. Whether or not you’re set up on a good trail depends on what you have to choose from. If the trails aren’t heavily traveled, or there are more desirable places close by, that’s where you need to be.
I have one set up that isn’t close to water, but it is on a major trail between the neighbor’s watering hole, and our property. The hogs like to bed down on our place because there is alot of cover. At dusk they’ll move down to the water and then back up to our place to feed for the evening. That’s where I come in.
I set up on the major trail between the two locations. So, everything on that side of the property that wants to water in that spot will eventually pass through there.
I like this. It increases my chances of having a good hunt. This way, all I have to do is pick the right time when the weather is “right”, and just sit and watch the wildlife come through.
It’s like shooting fish in a barrel ;-)So, I pick the absolute most reliable times I can. I hate wasting time, and making a blank trip can be very frustrating.
Keep your feeders full, watch the weather and track everything on your game cameras according to the moon. Use the moon as your constant (it happens every month of the year) and watch your cameras to see how the weather (which you are tracking) changes the animals movements.
Good Luck!
HHG
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Hog Hunting Reminders
Hog Hunting Refresher Course
2/7/2010 HHG
I was asked earlier this month what to do with pesky raccoons that keep stealing corn from traps.
So, I thought it would be a good point to list a few reminders.
Use a small amount of diesel on your corn if raccoons are a problem in your traps. Hogs don’t mind and other animals will leave it alone.
Sour some corn to help get your spot started a little quicker, and set your traps and stands on ACTIVE trails.
Hogs are much more likely to stay on your feed station longer (and more regularly) if you put it in a place where they walk through it. You CAN’T miss with this tactic.
Then all you have to do is be there at the right time. Use a good game camera, or even a remote camera (uploads to internet) to monitor your feed stations and go hunt them as soon as the time is right! Don’t put it off.
My limit is 3 days. I’m hunting on day 3 if the same hog or group has been there at the same time (approx) for the last 2 days. EXPECIALLY if it is directly before a cool front or change in weather!
Best of luck in the field this month. Keep the rest of us hog hunters in mind and remember that what you do affects our reputations as well. And take a kid hunting…..you won’t regret it.
HHG
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Know When To Hunt
Know When To Hunt?
1/1/2010 HHG
Picking the right time to increase your odds…..
I learned a long time ago that fishing when I wanted to fish usually meant I wasn’t going to be catching the fish I wanted to catch. The same is true with hunting in my experience.
Everyone can tell you to watch the moon, and that’s true. My favorite time to hunt hogs is during NO MOON. Watch your lunar transit times and get a good calendar. Then you will know when each phase of the moon starts and stops.
Typically my hunts are the worst during a FULL MOON. Hogs and other animals stay in the shadows and under brush in order to stay away from predators. I don’t blame them. Walk around your lease one time at night during a full moon and I’m sure you’ll agree that it is like daylight. Imaging if you could see in the dark.
For my hunts I’ve adapted a slightly different approach that I learned while fishing the lower Laguna Madre for years. Find our when they will be there, and then you make sure you’re there too.
Pretty simple, yes I know. But can you do it? That is the challenge. I love to hunt when the weather is either perfect, or nasty. But that doesn’t mean I’ll see game. It’s better for duck hunting most of the time.
So, I pick the absolute most reliable times I can. I hate wasting time, and making a blank trip can be very frustrating.
So, my process is to watch every single change in the weather. Is it going to rain? Is there a cool front coming? What has changed this week and how does it relate to the moon phase. Even hunting a full moon with thick cloud cover can be productive some times.
I usually hunt the evening a front is due to come in (or the evening before if it comes in the following day). During a quarter moon it can be good. During no moon its better.
If the weather changes dramatically with rain I will also hunt right before or right after. Animals will move the most during this time and that will increase my odds of seeing a real trophy.
So, start tracking the weather, the wind, the moon, and the conditions on your lease or ranch. Slight changes in these things will move the game around and increase your odds of taking one with much more regularity.
If the only time I hunted was directly before a cool front moved through…. I’d be close to 100% success rate. Problem is, I’m human… That means there are days I “want” to hunt…. and as a result my ratio is much lower than 100%.
Keep your feeders full, watch the weather and track everything on your game cameras according to the moon. Use the moon as your constant (it happens every month of the year) and watch your cameras to see how the weather (which you are tracking) changes the animals movements.
Good Luck!
HHG
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Don’t Be Afraid
Don’t Be Afraid! Changing with the animals…..
1/1/2011 HHG
Sticking to the same old hunting tactics you have used all season doesn’t always put late season game in the cooler. Sometimes you have to change with the animals to increase your odds for success.
This last week I hunted our place as a last hurrah for deer season. I had several other family members there as well that “didn’t see anything”. As it ends up, they just weren’t looking in the right places.
The first evening I arrived late (last minute decision). Everyone was in the stands when I arrived, so I took one of my bow stands in the very back of the property. Accepting that this was probably where I was going to hunt the next day (because of the other hunters), I needed to make the most of it.
Now, I hunt over a feeder that barely works and no one helps to maintain or fill. But what I do is use PHD (Post Hole Diggers) to keep my area active. It works well for me and I don’t have to worry about anyone trying to sit in my tree stand when I’m not there because it doesn’t look very inviting under the feeder.
That evening I observed a fair amount of game (and especially hogs) galavanting around and crossing the road about 125 yds up wind of me… I decided to do something about this the following day…
After sitting in a warm blind the next morning and watching 5 of our young bucks play around my feeder for more than an hour, I set in to correcting my lack of meat in the cooler.
I knew the animals crossed the road regularly. I’ve watched them do it most of the time all season. So, I decided to sprinkle some corn with a heavy dose of hog wild onto the road at their crossing locations. This would surely stop something as they crossed. I also set up a make shift blind on the side of the road next to the fence at the top of the hill (opposite from my tree stand and feeder at the bottom of the hill).
The results from this little change were HUGELY successful! I put 300# of meat in the cooler in less than 24 hrs!
The smallest change made this possible. I moved my “stand” location and changed the “feeding” area slightly. All of a sudden I wasn’t watching for game…I was hunting them.
So, as I sat there, I thought this was a great topic for this month’s letter. Don’t be afraid to adjust your set up. The hogs have seen it all year. Sometimes you will need to hunt outside the box to get things done. When you do, and your timing is right… you’ll be the lucky SOB that “always” gets something…
Works for me
Good Luck!
HHG
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Hog Hunting Lights
Choosing The Right Type & Color Hog Hunting Light
12/1/2010 HHG
Light color choice is probably the #1 question I get asked on a daily basis when it comes to hunting hogs.
Choosing the right color light has a little more to do with hunting pressure than it does the brightness of the light.
Bright lights are important when hunting at night. I know that is a basic statement, and you’re probably thinking, “Duh”. Brightness is important, but it’s not the only thing. It’s easy to spook game with any bright light. Use a Rifle Lite (130yd light) at 50 yards and the hogs are going to spook. Guaranteed. Use a Bow Lite on your compound or crossbow at 10 yds (5-75 yd light) and most likely the hogs are going to get fidgety too.
Brightness isn’t everything, though. You will be amazed how little light it takes to make an ethical shot in the dark with some practice. Like anything, the more time you spend hunting in the dark, the better you are at it. Having a very bright light, then gives you an option. You can go to that next level if you need to. You have the ability to reach out there and “touch” them.
So, what color is best? That’s the million dollar question. The $.02 answer is, “It depends”.
There are a couple of things I ask when helping someone choose their light color. Where are you hunting, and what type of hunting are you doing?
If you plan to hunt hogs on ranches, and with outfitters then you should consider talking with those people a little to find out what colors EVERYONE else brings. That’s right. You don’t want to shoot what 1,000 people before you have shot.
Typically this is red. Using a bright red light on a ranch where everyone hunts with red lights will give you fits with spooky hogs. The animals can’t “see” the light, but they know when something is different because of the shadow that is cast, or the angle of the shadow…. Remember pigs are scientifically proven to be one of the “smartest” animals on the planet (about like a dog)….. You’re not going to take 300 shots over hogs and think the ones that didn’t get picked off aren’t going to learn something.
Second, choose your light for the style of hunting you do. If you bow hunt get a good Bow Lite. Are you hunting hogs? Are they free range? Are they in a pen (yes, even a 200 acre pen) on a ranch?
Free range hogs are less spooky because of the reduced amount of hunting pressure they get. Realistically (and I’m sure there’s a statistic somewhere) the percentage of hogs that are shot at regularly in the wild versus the hogs that are shot at on a ranch has got to be significantly less. Keep this in mind when choosing your light for hunting hogs at night.
Probably the best option is to consider a “two mode” light. I started hunting with one of these when I wanted to get a little closer to my game for better film. A two mode light will give you the flexibility you need to not freak your game out with a spot light. Even hunting over spooky hogs on a ranch gets better with a low mode light. This will let you get your light on to acquire your target, while keeping your target under the feeder.
I hope this helps clarify some of the things I have learned about light color choice and brightness when it comes to hunting hogs or other animals at night. Brightness is important, but it’s not everything as long as you have the option to use a “low” mode when you need to.
With hunting lite’s increasing in popularity, animals are becoming more keen to the subtle changes while in the field. The slightest shadow, or cast off from a lite that is too bright, or a lite that is not bright enough is just the right ticket to send your game animals into high alert. Stay stealthy….use 2 mode lights, and pick the right color for the game & place you’re hunting.
Best of luck in the field this month. Keep the rest of us hog hunters in mind and remember that what you do affects our reputations as well. And take a kid hunting…..you won’t regret it.
HHG
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Hog Hunting Feeder Lights
These hog feeder lights and accessories work awesome! They’re so bright, we’ve had neighboring properties ask us about them because it looks like “aliens” land at our place every night!
Piranha Feeder Light
This hog hunting feeder light has 24 high powered green LED’s that will light up your feeder. They use a very small amount of power and don’t require a huge battery array to operate them every night. Super easy to set up with solar panels, photo cells and charge controllers these lights are 100% water proof and will run for 50,000 hours before they reach the end of their life expectancy.
Hog hunters can operate these lights on 12 or 6v systems. When operated on a 6v system the light output is approximately 50%. On 12v systems we guarantee you cannot look directly at the light when on (NOT recommended). We normally warn people when displaying the lights so they don’t look directly into them.
The green color light is well within the non-visible color spectrum for hogs so you can rest assured the color of the light will not spook hogs or other game at your feeder.
Set this light up with a photocell, remote control, or motion sensor for a truly hands free operating feeder light as it should be.
ANY light you have to walk up to the feeder to turn on just increases the chances that you will spook your hog when hunting at night because of scent. DON”T BE “THAT” GUY! We have hundreds of customers who enjoy a truly hands free hunt every night.
$19.99
Voltage: 12v/6v | Length: 20″ | 100% waterproof (submersible) | Color: Green
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Hog Hunting Guides
Featured Hog Hunting Guides
Working Man’s Hog Hunting
Working Man’s Bow Ranch located in Daingerfield, TX . Where you’re sure to find a good time, a quality and memorable experience, and most importantly: a GREAT hog hunt! Our hog hunting guide prices are the most affordable out there.
Our goal is for the Working Man to be able come out and enjoy a GREAT hog hunt without taking out a second mortgage. We offer high quality hunts (both gun and bow) for hunting wild hogs on our 200 acre ranch, we can bring in any exotic you would like to hunt given adequate notice. Click Here For More Info….
Newsom Ranch
Newsom Ranch is all about trophy boar hogs. If you are looking for low cost Texas hog hunting guide trip you have come to the right spot.
We offer affordable guided hog hunts and accommodate every type of hunter, from the ones that like to rifle hunt to the ones that like to stalk hunt with a bow. The ranch as has a great number of whitetail bucks as well as giving refuge to numerous waterfowl. The beautiful Pinoak trees also hold many squirrels and other small game. Click Here For More Info….
Spot Available
This featured hog hunting guide/ outfitter spot is available for advertising. This is a great location for any guide or outfitter that wants to grow, or start their services. We rank on the first page of Google and other search engines for many search terms like hog hunting guide, hog hunting, etc. Contact us today for rate information and details! Click Here For More Info….
Spot Available
This featured hog hunting guide/ outfitter spot is available for advertising. This is a great location for any guide or outfitter that wants to grow, or start their services. We rank on the first page of Google and other search engines for many search terms like hog hunting guide, hog hunting, etc. Contact us today for rate information and details! Click Here For More Info….
Spot Available
This featured hog hunting guide/ outfitter spot is available for advertising. This is a great location for any guide or outfitter that wants to grow, or start their services. We rank on the first page of Google and other search engines for many search terms like hog hunting guide, hog hunting, etc. Contact us today for rate information and details!Click Here For More Info….
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Texas Hog Hunting Guide
Featured Hog Hunting Guides
Working Man’s Hog Hunting
Working Man’s Bow Ranch located in Daingerfield, TX . Where you’re sure to find a good time, a quality and memorable experience, and most importantly: a GREAT hog hunt! Our hog hunting guide prices are the most affordable out there.
Our goal is for the Working Man to be able come out and enjoy a GREAT hog hunt without taking out a second mortgage. We offer high quality hunts (both gun and bow) for hunting wild hogs on our 200 acre ranch, we can bring in any exotic you would like to hunt given adequate notice. Click Here For More Info….
Newsom Ranch
Newsom Ranch is all about trophy boar hogs. If you are looking for low cost Texas hog hunting guide trip you have come to the right spot.
We offer affordable guided hog hunts and accommodate every type of hunter, from the ones that like to rifle hunt to the ones that like to stalk hunt with a bow. The ranch as has a great number of whitetail bucks as well as giving refuge to numerous waterfowl. The beautiful Pinoak trees also hold many squirrels and other small game. Click Here For More Info….
Spot Available
This featured hog hunting guide/ outfitter spot is available for advertising. This is a great location for any guide or outfitter that wants to grow, or start their services. We rank on the first page of Google and other search engines for many search terms like hog hunting guide, hog hunting, etc. Contact us today for rate information and details! Click Here For More Info….
Spot Available
This featured hog hunting guide/ outfitter spot is available for advertising. This is a great location for any guide or outfitter that wants to grow, or start their services. We rank on the first page of Google and other search engines for many search terms like hog hunting guide, hog hunting, etc. Contact us today for rate information and details! Click Here For More Info….
Spot Available
This featured hog hunting guide/ outfitter spot is available for advertising. This is a great location for any guide or outfitter that wants to grow, or start their services. We rank on the first page of Google and other search engines for many search terms like hog hunting guide, hog hunting, etc. Contact us today for rate information and details!Click Here For More Info….
Standard Listings
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Newsom Ranch
NEWSOM RANCH
We offer you a chance of a lifetime at a trophy boar hog. There are beautiful rolling hills and running creeks loaded with monster boar hogs. Come book a hunt with us and get a chance to kill hogzilla.
These boars are huge with super large teeth. This poses a real challenge for the hunter, the bigger they are the smarter they are.
We know there are different strokes for different folks, so we offer every type of hunting. You can hunt with a rifle, shotgun, bow, crossbow, pistol, and stalk hunt. Whatever you want we can do, our goal is to cater to your wants and wishes.
Newsom Ranch also offers a few special hog-dog hunts throughout the year. This is an action packed hunt full of excitement and thrills. You never know what to expect when you turn the dogs loose.
If you are an adrenalin junky, then this is the hunt for you. There is no other feeling than running into a bay and catching a big boar hog by the back leg. You can either hang back and watch how it is done or you can jump in and grab a leg. It will be your choice to tie the hog or stick the hog. If you choose this hunt you must be prepared to walk, get dirty, get scratched up, etc. This type of hunting is not for everyone. You can bring your own atv or ride along with us. We will drive as close to the bay as we can. Some hunts will be a dry run, while others we ‘ve caught up to 10 hogs.
Not only does Newsom Ranch have some of the best hog hunting in these parts, it also has a great number of large whitetail. We offer bow hunts and rifle hunts throughout deer season.
With hunting season right around the corner be sure to book your trophy whitetail hunt today. We have hunting stands scattered throughout the ranch. There are corn feeders running year around. We also have a number of food plotts planted on the ranch. With this abundance of food, numerous trophy hogs and whiteails make their home here.
Book a hunt today and get a chance at a trophy!
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Working Mans Bow Ranch
Working Man’s Bow Ranch
Providing YOUR hunting needs, whether it is stand hunting, spot and stalk, semi guided, or do it yourself.
GOOD HUNTS,GOOD TIMES,
GOOD PEOPLE
PLEASE NOTE ALL WEEKEND HUNTS ARE NOW A 2 DAY MINIMUM (FRIDAY noon THRU SUNDAY noon)
Thanks for visiting Working Man’s Bow Ranch located in Daingerfield, TX . Where you’re sure to find a good time, a quality and memorable experience, and most importantly: a GREAT hunt!
Our prices are the most affordable out there. Our goal is for the Working Man to be able come out and enjoy a GREAT hunt without taking out a second mortgage. We offer high quality hunts (both gun and bow) for wild hogs on our 200 acre ranch, we can bring in any exotic you would like to hunt given adequate notice.
Single hunters, corporate groups, friends or family groups are welcome.
If chosen to provide a hunt, we promise to be of unforgettable assistance to you.
Whether it’s your childs first hunt, or you’re looking to add a prize boar or nice ram to your collection, you can count on us to provide plenty of game.
We have plenty of stand locations with ground blinds, treestands, and tripods. There are several locations with 2 person setups for videoing your hunt.
Thanks again for visiting, and please feel free to fill out the contact form below for more information on what we have to offer.
-Matt and Brooke
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G3 BowLite Bow Hunting Lights
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G3 BowLite- Bow Hunting Light from BowLite Archery Products
BowLite Archery Products is very proud to introduce our 3rd generation Bow Lite! This bow mounted high power LED hunting light takes hunting at night to a whole new level!
This kit comes complete with one G3 Bow LiteTM, two rechargeable batteries and a wall charger that can also be used with a cigarette lighter adapter, and your choice of 1, 2, or 3 High Power LED’s
LED Color Options: RED | GREEN | WHITE
This complete G3 Bow LiteTM kit represents the best value for a bow hunting light you can find today!
This light puts out over 180 lumens of RED light in a flood pattern that will make it easy to find your sights, and your game for consistent performance in the field time and again. GREEN lights will put out more than 200 lumens of light. The White light puts out over 350 lumens of white light. This light is EXTREMELY bright!
2 MODE LIGHTS: The 2 mode options will produce approximately 50% of the lumens that these lights do on “High”. 2 Mode bow hunting lights greatly increase a hunters effectiveness in the field. Giving them the option to hunt right up close to their game when the hunt requires it. No spooking game from bright lights with our 2 Mode Bow Lites. Just screw this light into the stabalizer adapter on your bow, mount the pushbutton on and off switch and you’re ready to hunt hogs or other game at night with this bow hunting light.
Be sure to check your local hunting laws for your favorite hunting grounds before using this product.
G3 BowLite Kit- 1 Mode Red LED $104.99
G3 BowLite Kit- 1 Mode Red & Green LED $119.99
G3 BowLite Kit- 1 Mode Red-Green-White LED $134.99
Upgrade 1 Mode LED to 2 Mode LED
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Policies
Returns Policy
You may return most new, unopened & unused items within 30 days of delivery for a full refund. We’ll also pay the return shipping costs if the return is a result of our error (you received an incorrect or defective item, etc.). Shipping costs are non refundable unless the return is the result of our error for an incorrect or defective item.
Any return for a refund may be subject to a 25% restocking fee. This fee may be waived for the following reasons:
Carrier damage
Defective product
Received incorrect product
Product was an extra item not ordered
Note: Any return that is misrepresented as being for any of the above reasons or that has been used will automatically have the restocking fee applied even if it was initially waived.
You should expect to receive your refund within four weeks of giving your package to the return shipper, however, in many cases you will receive a refund more quickly. This time period includes the transit time for us to receive your return from the shipper (5 to 10 business days), the time it takes us to process your return once we receive it (3 to 5 business days), and the time it takes your bank to process our refund request (5 to 10 business days).
If you need to return an item, simply login to your account, view the order using the “Complete Orders” link under the My Account menu and click the Return Item(s) button. We’ll notify you via e-mail of your refund once we’ve received and processed the returned item.
Shipping
We can ship to virtually any address in the world. Note that there are restrictions on some products, and some products cannot be shipped to international destinations.
International shipping is not included in the basic checkout. If your address is an international address, we will send the paypal request for payment separately PRIOR to shipping the item.
When you place an order, we will estimate shipping and delivery dates for you based on the availability of your items and the shipping options you choose. Depending on the shipping provider you choose, shipping date estimates may appear on the shipping quotes page.
Please also note that the shipping rates for many items we sell are weight-based. The weight of any such item can be found on its detail page. To reflect the policies of the shipping companies we use, all weights will be rounded up to the next full pound.
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Success
Thank you for your order!
We will process your order and ship it out within a day or so. You will receive a shipping email from Paypal when your items ships.
If you have any questions feel free to use the contact page.
Please note our return/ shipping policies before you do so.
HHG
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