them hogs are way to big for crock!!!!!!!!!!!
hellbilly google up mule footed hogs. they are the actual descendants from the spanish explores who brought them here in the first place. they have hooves like a mule and are a bad ass breed of hog alot of people mistake them for russians and razorbacks, we have several of them over here in daytona where i hunt seen them and see there tracks but have yet been able to kill one. i nthe hog huntin world they are a great trophy to get to some and others could care less. personaly this year i'm gonna be all about gettin my first they also have large pops of them up in georgia also. i know where i hunt in lake delancey unit off 19 there are some real bruisers in there they might be what they are seing thinking they are the russians, but there is also alot of russians around that have escaped over the years from game farms also. but look up them footed ones they are worth lookin into.
Back around 1979 we were camping near Ocean Pond and heard hogs out in the woods early in the morning, about 2 hours before sunup. They were squealing and grunting, probably less than 100 yards from our camp. We got out on the lake about an hour later to topwater fish the shoreline for bass, and right after sunup we saw a herd rolling around in the mud near the bank. I remember my dad saying that they saw pigs like that all the time out at the mines around White Springs where he was working. Some of the guys from Texas and Arkansas who were on the job said they looked like razorbacks, but dad said they looked more like what he called the old Florida cracker hogs, which is probably the same as those mulefoots.
My buddy lives up in Perry and catches hogs by his house. A lot of the ones he catches have waddles on their neck, and he has caught a bunch of mule footed ones too
