Shot this guy last evening, northern San Saba county. Only shot I had was straight on, just the face, in thick cover. Put one right in his mouth, guess it went on back and got his spine, never took a step. Taped 4'6" snout to base of tail. I've killed tons of pigs and this one is way up there, weight wise.
"It's not dyin' I'm talkin' about Woodrow, it's livin'!"
You know if you are going to measure the length, you might as well measure the heart girth (in inches) right behind the shoulders at the pits, getting the smallest circumference possible. Multiply by 10 and subtract 200 and that will give you a good approximation of the weight.
You know if you are going to measure the length, you might as well measure the heart girth (in inches) right behind the shoulders at the pits, getting the smallest circumference possible. Multiply by 10 and subtract 200 and that will give you a good approximation of the weight.
^^^^^
I keep a cloth tape in both vehicles I use for hunting and often use this formula rather than weigh them on a scale. It is fairly accurate.
There any source material on that calculation? 10lb difference is pretty substantial on a 49lb hog, but not nearly as concerning on a 349lb hog. Just curious, I have no experience on measuring myself.
There any source material on that calculation? 10lb difference is pretty substantial on a 49lb hog, but not nearly as concerning on a 349lb hog. Just curious, I have no experience on measuring myself.
I don't know the origin of it....but I have weighed many, many hogs and then compared against the Heart Girth method and it remains fairly close for the hogs in my area.
That said, there ARE notable exceptions. Pregnant females (depending on far along) can weigh significantly more than 'taped'.
Certain body types (long slender hogs, versus squared off, chunky hogs) will weigh differently, but on average the mature hogs, in good condition will be pretty close to the posted figures. Close enough that I rarely put them on a scale anymore. In fact, never unless its a really large one....and then just to satisfy my curiosity.
If it appears to be under 250 lbs. I'm not really interested in its true weight. Most of the time I can estimate the hogs weight within 10-15 lbs of what the scale will tell.
There any source material on that calculation? 10lb difference is pretty substantial on a 49lb hog, but not nearly as concerning on a 349lb hog. Just curious, I have no experience on measuring myself.
The formula most of us use is to multiply the heart girth by ten and the subtract 200 from that product.
So the approximation commonly used by hunters might understate the 'real' weight by maybe five pounds or so, but it's accurate enough for conversational purposes.