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View Full Version : Anyone here remember "Hogzilla" the Giant Swine?


Dunkirk101
03-22-2005, 06:53 AM
For those that don't, he was the Urban Lengendary Hog that weighed over 800 lbs that supposedly terrorized the woods of the south for ages, well, it seems as if he wasn't actually a legend at all :eek:


Super swine was real, experts say
Tuesday, March 22, 2005 Posted: 3:47 AM EST (0847 GMT)


Chris Griffin, 31, with the half-ton wild hog he shot near Alapaha, Georgia, in this June 2004 photo
Image:

http://i.a.cnn.net/cnn/2005/US/03/22/hogzilla.ap/vert.hogzilla.ap.jpg






ALAPAHA, Georgia (AP) -- A team of National Geographic experts has confirmed south Georgia's monster hog, known to locals as Hogzilla, was indeed real -- and really, really big.

They also noted the super swine didn't quite live up to the 1,000-pound (450-kilogram), 12-foot (3.6-meter) hype generated when Hogzilla was caught on a farm last summer and photographed hanging from a backhoe.

Donning biohazard suits to exhume the behemoth's smelly remains, the experts estimated Hogzilla was probably only 7 1/2 to 8 feet (2.25 to 2.4 meters) long, and weighed about 800 pounds (360 kilograms).

The confirmation came in a documentary aired Sunday night on the National Geographic Channel; it will be rebroadcast Wednesday and Saturday.

"He was an impressive beast. He was definitely a freak of nature," said documentary producer Nancy Donnelly.

She said Hogzilla's tusks -- one measuring nearly 18 inches (46 centimeters) and the other nearly 16 inches (41 centimeters) -- set a new Safari Club International North American free-range record.

That wasn't good enough for Ken Holyoak, owner of the 1,500-acre (600-hectare) fish farm and hunting preserve where Hogzilla was shot by guide Chris Griffin.

"I need to stress that they did not have that much to work with, seeing as how the poor beast had been underground for nearly six months," he said Monday.

Holyoak said Hogzilla weighed in at half a ton on his farm scales, and that he personally measured the hog's length at 12 feet (3.6 meters) while the freshly killed beast was dangling by straps from a backhoe.

"As with any organic being after death, tissues will decompose and the body will atrophy, making actual measurements change over time," Holyoak said. "Have you ever seen a raisin after it was a grape?"

Donnelly said the experts allowed for some shrinkage in making their final estimate.

Despite the dispute, this town 180 miles (290 kilometers) south of Atlanta has already adopted Hogzilla as its own. It went with a Hogzilla theme for its fall festival, with a parade featuring a Hogzilla princess, children in pink pig outfits and a float carrying a Hogzilla replica.

"Our insides were just bubbling," said Darlene Turner, who hosted a party to watch the documentary Sunday night.

"At first, I was afraid it might be an embarrassment. But now I wish everybody could see the documentary. It would take the doubt out of people's minds." <end>





Heres the link: http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/03/22/hogzilla.ap/index.html

mad dog
03-24-2005, 09:48 AM
Dunkirk;

Sorry I didn't check this out when you 1st wrote it{thought it might have been about a comic book or something :) }

I just watched a show about this brut he did measure atleast 8 foot and weighed 800+lbs. It is not uncommon for a domestic animal to get this big but it is odd for a wild one to grow to this extreme. It is also possible for a domestic pig to breed with a wild one and bang the world ends up with a hogzilla. This creature was 7 yrs. old so more then likely he has offspring. It is very possible there may be other hogzilla's running around. The show also talked about how adaptable pigs are. A domestic pig can turn wild within just a few weeks and would have no problem with breeding. I sure would hate to be in the path of one of these giants. A 200lb pig would have no problem with killing a full grown man could you imagine the terror one of these bruts could raise.

cheerios
03-28-2005, 01:17 AM
yeah wasn't that nuts. I guess the town had a parade and everything every year. They were proud of the legend. Which I guess isn't a leggy anymore...

Darth Be'lal
03-28-2005, 08:04 PM
Dang, dang, dang,

WELL, the least they could've done after shooting hogzilla is eat the damn thing. I wonder why the beast wasn't prepared for table.

This reminds me of the time I was squirell hunting, I had a .22 rifle with me. Something SCREAMED and went crashing through the bushes, then SCREAMED again and crashed through the bushes some more. I usually only put five rounds into my .22 when squirell hunting and I had popped off a couple of shots and was wondering just how many shots I had left. I didn't think I had time to reload and whatever it was that was out there, I really thought would've needed more than two or three shots to take down. I was also reminded, forcibly, that bears and mountain lions have been reesablishing themselves back in Ct. This one woke me up.

I guess I do know how someone would feel walking through the woods and wondering whether hogzilla was real and where he might be at.

Geez.

OldPhart
03-28-2005, 08:24 PM
The thing I try to remember about feral pigs is that, unlike panthers and bears, they can't climb trees (thank goodness).

BTW I had a sow black bear and her 2 cubs "treed" about 200' from my house, by the neighbors <20 lb dog this past January.....LOL

cheerios
03-28-2005, 09:04 PM
they had the parades before they shot it.