2 big boars shot with thermal in rice

If you play the wind and keep out of sight, then approaching sounders, certainly to within 70 yards on an open field (moving slow and low), 50-30 yards in an orchard, woods, high crop situation isn't too difficult. Sounders tend to make a lot of noise and some extraneous movement or sound isn't as apt to startle them as it would loner boars. They can be harder to approach because they spook so much more easily. Sound and smell seem to be the biggest problems for folks, but hogs see pretty darned well during the day and better than humans at night, so that is a real factor as well.
 
I've never tried this but I read an article in the Georgia Outdoor News (GoN) where a couple of fellows would put on waders and ease through swamps in wildlife management areas when during the early part of squirrel season. They would carry muzzle loaders (any muzzle loader is a legal small game weapon on a state WMA) and use wood duck calls to mask their sound. They seemed to have good success working the wind and slipping up on bedded hogs.
 
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