<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII</h2></div>
<p class="caption3">WILD PIGS—ANIMAL AND HUMAN</p>
<p>Shansi Province is famous for wild boar among the
sportsmen of China. In the central part there are low
mountains and deep ravines thickly forested with a
scrub growth of pine and oak. The acorns are a favorite
food of the pigs, and the pigs are a favorite food
of the Chinese—and of foreigners, too, for that matter.
No domestic pork that I have ever tasted can excel a
young acorn-fed wild pig! Even a full-grown sow is
delicious, but beware of an old boar; not only is he
tough beyond description, but his flesh is so "strong"
that it annoys me even to see it cooked. I tried to eat
some boar meat, once upon a time—that is why I feel
so deeply about it.</p>
<p>It is useless to hunt wild pig until the leaves are
off the trees, for your only hope is to find them feeding
on the hillsides in the morning or early evening.
Then they will often come into the open or the thin
forests, and you can have a fair shot across a ravine or
from the summit of a hill. If they are in the brush it
is well-nigh impossible to see them at all. A wild boar
is very clever at eluding his pursuers, and for his size
can carry off more lead and requires more killing than
any other animal of which I know. Therefore, you
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">- 242 -</span>
may be sure of a decidedly interesting hunt. On the
other hand, an unsuspecting pig is easy to stalk, for his
eyesight is not good; his sense of smell is not much better;
and he depends largely upon hearing to protect
him from enemies.</p>
<p>In Tientsin and Shanghai there are several sportsmen
who year after year go to try for record tusks—they
are the real authorities on wild boar hunting. My
own experience has been limited to perhaps a dozen
pigs killed in Korea, Mongolia, Celebes, and various
parts of China.</p>
<p>Harry Caldwell and I returned from our bighorn
sheep and wapiti hunt on November 19. He was
anxious to go with me for wild boar, but business required
his presence in Foochow, and Everett Smith,
who had been my companion on a trip to the Eastern
Tombs the previous spring, volunteered to accompany
me. We left on November 28 by the Peking-Hankow
Railroad for Ping-ting-cho, arriving the following
afternoon at two o'clock. There we obtained
donkeys for pack and riding animals. All the traffic
in this part of Shansi is by mules or donkeys. As a
result the inns are small, with none of the spacious
courtyards which we had found in the north of the province.
They were not particularly dirty, but the open
coal fires which burned in every kitchen sometimes
drove us outside for a breath of untainted air. How
it is possible for human beings to exist in rooms so
filled with coal gas is beyond my knowledge. Of
course, death from gas poisoning is not unusual, but I
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">- 243 -</span>
suppose the natives have become somewhat immune to
its effects.</p>
<p>Our destination was a tiny village in the mountains
about eight miles beyond Ho-shun, a city of considerable
size in the very center of the province. Tai-yuan-fu,
the capital, at the end of the railway, is a
famous place for pigs; but they have been hunted so
persistently in recent years that few remain within less
than two or three days' journey from the city.</p>
<p>It was a three days' trip from the railroad to Ho-shun,
and there was little of interest to distinguish the
road from any other in north China. It is always
monotonous to travel with pack animals or carts, for
they go so slowly that you can make only two or three
miles an hour, at best. If there happens to be shooting
along the way, as there is in most parts of Shansi,
it helps to pass the time. We picked up a few pheasants,
some chuckars, and a dozen pigeons, but did not
stop to do any real hunting until we entered a wooded
valley and established ourselves in a fairly comfortable
Chinese hut at the little village of Kao-chia-chuang. On
the way in we met a party of Christian Brother missionaries
who had been hunting in the vicinity for five
days. They had seen ten or twelve pigs and had killed
a splendid boar weighing about three hundred and fifty
pounds as well as two roebuck.</p>
<p>The mountains near the village had been so thoroughly
hunted that there was little chance of finding
pigs, but nevertheless we decided to stay for a day or
two. I killed a two-year-old roebuck on the first afternoon;
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">- 244 -</span>
and the next morning, while Smith and I were
resting on a mountain trail, one of our men saw an
enormous wild boar trot across an open ridge and disappear
into a heavily forested ravine. I selected a post
on a projecting shoulder, while one Chinese went with
Smith to pick up the trail of the pig. There were so
many avenues of escape open to the boar that I had to
remain where it was possible to watch a large expanse
of country.</p>
<p>Smith had not yet reached the bottom of the ravine
when the native who had remained with me suddenly
began to gesticulate wildly and to point to a wooded
slope directly in front of us. He hopped about like
a man who has suddenly lost his mind and succeeded in
keeping in front of me so that I could see nothing but
his waving arms and writhing body. Finally seizing
him by the collar, I threw him to the ground so violently
that he realized his place was behind me. Then
I saw the pig running along a narrow trail, silhouetted
against the snow which lay thinly on the shaded side of
the hill.</p>
<p>He was easily three hundred and fifty yards away
and I had little hope of hitting him, but I selected an
open patch beyond a bit of cover and fired as he
emerged. The boar squealed and plunged forward
into the bushes. A moment later he reappeared, zigzagging
his way up the slope and only visible through
the trees when he crossed a patch of snow. I emptied
the magazine of my rifle in a futile bombardment, but
the boar crossed the summit and disappeared.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">- 245 -</span></p>
<p>We picked up his bloody trail and for two hours
followed it through a tangled mass of scrub and thorns.
It seemed certain that we must find him at any moment,
for great red blotches stained the snow wherever
he stopped to rest. At last the trail led us across an
open ridge, and the snow and blood suddenly ceased.
We could not follow his footprints in the thick grass
and abandoned the chase just before dark.</p>
<p>Two more days of unsuccessful hunting convinced
us that the missionaries had driven the pigs to other
cover. There was a region twelve miles away to which
they might have gone, and we shifted camp to a village
named Tziloa a mile or more from the scrub-covered
hills which we wished to investigate.</p>
<p>The natives of this part of the country were in no
sense hunters. They were farmers who, now that the
crops were harvested, had plenty of leisure time and
were glad to roam the hills with us. Although their
eyesight was remarkable and they were able to see a
pig twice as far as we could, they had no conception of
stalking the game or of how to hunt it. When we began
to shoot, instead of watching the pigs, they were
always so anxious to obtain the empty cartridge cases
that a wild scramble ensued after every shot. They
were like street boys fighting for a penny. It was a
serious handicap for successful hunting, and they kept
me in such a state of irritation that I never shot so badly
in all my life.</p>
<p>We found pigs at Tziloa immediately. The carts
went by road to the village, while Smith and I, with two
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">- 246 -</span>
Chinese, crossed the mountains. On the summit of a
ridge not far from the village we met eight native hunters.
Two of them had ancient muzzle-loading guns
but the others only carried staves. Evidently their
method of hunting was to surround the pigs and drive
them close up to the men with firearms.</p>
<p>We persuaded one of the Chinese, a boy of eighteen,
with cross-eyes and a funny, dried-up little face, to
accompany us, for our two guides wished to return
that night to Kao-chia-chuang. He led us down a spur
which projected northward from the main ridge, and
in ten minutes we discovered five pigs on the opposite
side of a deep ravine. The sun lay warmly on the
slope, and the animals were lazily rooting in the oak
scrub. They were a happy family—a boar, a sow, and
three half-grown piglets.</p>
<p>We slipped quietly among the trees until we were
directly opposite to them and not more than two hundred
yards away. The boar and the sow had disappeared
behind a rocky corner, and the others were
slowly following so that the opportunity for a shot
would soon be lost. Telling Smith to take the one on
the left, I covered another which stood, half facing me.
At the roar of my rifle the ravine was filled with wild
squeals, and the pig rolled down the hill bringing up
against a tree. The boar rushed from behind the rock,
and I fired quickly as he stood broadside on. He
plunged out of sight, and the gorge was still!</p>
<p>Smith had missed his pig and was very much disgusted.
The three Chinese threw themselves down the
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">- 247 -</span>
slope, slipping and rolling over logs and stones, and
were up the opposite hill before we reached the bottom
of the ravine. They found the pig which I had killed
and a blood-splashed trail leading around the hill where
the boar had disappeared.</p>
<p>My pig was a splendid male in the rich red-brown
coat of adolescence. The bullet had struck him "amid-ships"
and shattered the hip on the opposite side. From
the blood on the trail we decided that I had shot the
big boar through the center of the body about ten inches
behind the forelegs.</p>
<p>We had learned by experience how much killing a
full-grown pig required, and had no illusions about
finding him dead a few yards away, even though both
sides of his path were blotched with red at every step.
Therefore, while the Chinese followed the trail, Smith
and I sprinted across the next ridge into a thickly
forested ravine to head off the boar.</p>
<p>We took stations several yards apart, and suddenly
I heard Smith's rifle bang six times in quick succession.
The Chinese had disturbed the pig from a patch
of cover and it had climbed the opposite hill slope in
full view of Smith, who apparently had missed it every
time. Missing a boar dodging about among the bushes
is not such a difficult thing to do, and although poor
Smith was too disgusted even to talk about it, I had a
good deal of sympathy for him.</p>
<p>We had little hope of getting the animal when we
climbed to the summit of the ridge and saw the tangle
of brush into which it had disappeared, but nevertheless
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">- 248 -</span>
we followed the trail which was still showing blood.
I was in front and was just letting myself down a snow-covered
bowlder, when far below me I saw a huge sow
and a young pig walking slowly through the trees. I
turned quickly, lost my balance, and slipped feet first
over the rock into a mass of thorns and scrub. A locomotive
could not have made more noise, and I extricated
myself just in time to see the two pigs disappear
into a grove of pines. I was bleeding from a dozen
scratches, but I climbed to the summit of the ridge and
dashed forward hoping to cut them off if they crossed
below me. They did not appear, and we tried to drive
them out from the cover into which they had made their
way; but we never saw them again. It was already beginning
to grow dark and too late to pick up the trail
of the wounded boar, so we had to call it a day and return
to the village.</p>
<p>One of our men carried my shotgun and we killed
half a dozen pheasants on the way back to camp. The
birds had come into the open to feed, and small flocks
were scattered along the valley every few hundred
yards. We saw about one hundred and fifty in less
than an hour, besides a few chuckars.</p>
<p>I have never visited any part of China where pheasants
were so plentiful as in this region. Had we been
hunting birds we could have killed a hundred or more
without the slightest difficulty during the time we were
looking for pigs. We could not shoot, however, without
the certainty of disturbing big game and, consequently,
we only killed pheasants when on the way back to camp.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">- 249 -</span>
During the day the birds kept well up toward the summits
of the ridges and only left the cover in the morning
and evening.</p>
<p>Our second hunt was very amusing, as well as successful.
We met the same party of Chinese hunters early in
the morning, and agreed to divide the meat of all the
pigs we killed during the day if they would join forces
with us. Among them was a tall, fine-looking young
fellow, evidently the leader, who was a real hunter—the
only one we found in the entire region. He knew instinctively
where the pigs were, what they would do, and
how to get them.</p>
<p>He led us without a halt along the summit of the
mountain into a ravine and up a long slope to the crest
of a knifelike ridge. Then he suddenly dropped in the
grass and pointed across a cañon to a bare hillside. Two
pigs were there in plain sight—one a very large sow.
They were fully three hundred yards away and on the
edge of a bushy patch toward which they were feeding
slowly. Smith left me to hurry to the bottom of the
cañon where he could have a shot at close range if either
one went down the hill, while I waited behind a stone.
Before he was halfway down the slope the sow moved
toward the patch of cover into which the smaller pig had
already disappeared. It must be then, if I was to have
a shot at all. I fired rather hurriedly and registered a
clean miss. Both pigs, instead of staying in the cover
where they would have been safe, dashed down the open
slope toward the bottom of the cañon. At my first shot
all eight of the Chinese had leaped for the empty rifle
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">- 250 -</span>
shell and were rolling about like a pack of dogs after a
bone. One of them struck my leg just as I fired the
second time and the bullet went into the air; I delivered
a broadside of my choicest Chinese oaths and the man
drew off. I sent three shots after the fleeing sow, but
she disappeared unhurt.</p>
<p>One shell remained in my rifle, and I saw the other
pig running like a scared rabbit in the very bottom of
the cañon. It was so far away that I could barely see
the animal through my sights, but when I fired it turned
a complete somersault and lay still; the bullet had caught
it squarely in the head.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Smith was having a lively time with the
old sow. He had swung around a corner of rock just in
time to meet the pig coming at full speed from the other
side not six yards away. He tried to check himself,
slipped, and sat down suddenly but managed to fire
once, breaking the animal's left foreleg. It disappeared
into the brush with Smith after it.</p>
<p>He began an intermittent bombardment which lasted
half an hour. <i>Bang, bang, bang</i>—then silence. <i>Bang,
bang, bang</i>—silence again. I wondered what it all
meant and finally ran down the bottom of the valley
until I saw Smith opposite to me just under the rim of
the ravine. He was tearing madly through the brush
not far behind the sow. As the animal appeared for an
instant on the summit of a rise he dropped on one knee
and fired twice. Then I saw him race over the hill, leaping
the bushes like a roebuck. Once he rolled ten feet
into a mass of thorn scrub, but he was up again in an
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">- 251 -</span>
instant, hurdling the brush and fallen logs, his eye on
the pig.</p>
<p>It was screamingly funny and I was helpless with
laughter. "Go it. Smith," I yelled. "Run him down.
Catch him in your hands." He had no breath to waste
in a reply, for just then he leaped a fallen log and I
saw the sow charge him viciously. The animal had been
lying under a tree, almost done, but still had life enough
to damage Smith badly if it had reached him. As the
man landed on his feet, he fired again at the pig which
was almost on him. The bullet caught the brute in the
shoulder at the base of the neck and rolled it over, but
it struggled to its feet and ran uncertainly a few steps;
then it dropped in a little gully.</p>
<p>By the time I had begun to climb the hill Smith
shouted that the pig might charge again, and I kept my
rifle ready, but the animal was "all in." I circled warily
and, creeping up from behind, drove my hunting knife
into its heart; even then it struggled to get at me before
it rolled over dead.</p>
<p>Smith was streaming blood from a score of scratches,
and his clothes were in ribbons, but his face was radiant.
"I'd have chased the blasted pig clear to Peking," he
said. "All my shells are gone, but I wasn't going to let
him get away. If I hadn't kept that last cartridge he'd
have caught me, surely."</p>
<p>It was fine enthusiasm and, if ever a man deserved his
game. Smith deserved that sow. The animal had been
shot in half a dozen places; two legs were broken, and
at least three of the bullets had reached vital spots.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">- 252 -</span>
Still the brute kept on. Any one who thinks pigs are
easy to kill ought to try the ones in Shansi! The sow
weighed well over three hundred pounds, and it required
six men to carry the two pigs into camp. We got no
more, although we saw two others, but still we felt
that the day had not been ill spent. As long as I live
I shall never forget Smith's hurdle race after that old
sow.</p>
<p>Although I killed two roebuck, the next day I returned
to camp with rage in my heart. Smith and I had
separated late in the afternoon, and I was hunting with
an old Chinese when we discovered three pigs—a huge
boar, a sow, and a shote—crossing an open hill. Crawling
on my face, I reached a rock not seventy yards from
the animals. At the first shot the boar pitched over the
bluff into a tangle of thorns, squealing wildly. My
second bullet broke the shoulder of the sow, and I had
a mad chase through a patch of scrub, but finally lost
her.</p>
<p>When I returned to get the big boar I discovered my
Chinese squatted on his haunches in the ravine. He
blandly informed me that the pig could not be found. I
spent the half hour of remaining daylight burrowing in
the thorn scrub without success. I learned later that
the native had concealed the dead pig under a mass of
stones and that during the night he and his confreres
had carried it away. Moreover, after we left, they also
got the sow which I had wounded. Although at the time
I did not suspect the man's perfidy, nevertheless it was
apparent that he had not kept his eyes on the boar as I
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">- 253 -</span>
had told him to do; otherwise the pig could not possibly
have escaped.</p>
<p>We had one more day of hunting because Smith had
obtained two weeks' leave. The next morning dawned
dark and cloudy with spurts of hail—just the sort of
weather in which animals prefer to stay comfortably
snuggled under a bush in the thickest cover. Consequently
we saw nothing all day except one roebuck,
which I killed. It was running at full speed when I
fired, and it disappeared over the crest of a hill without
a sign of injury. Smith was waiting on the other side,
and I wondered why he did not shoot, until we reached
the summit and discovered the deer lying dead in the
grass. Smith had seen the buck plunge over the ridge,
and just as he was about to fire, it collapsed.</p>
<p>We found that my bullet had completely smashed the
heart, yet the animal had run more than one hundred
yards. As it fell, one of its antlers had been knocked
off and the other was so loose that it dropped in my hand
when I lifted the head. This was on December 11.
The other bucks which I had killed still wore their antlers,
but probably they would all have been shed before
Christmas. The growth takes place during the winter,
and the velvet is all off the new antlers by the following
May.</p>
<p>On the way back to camp we saw a huge boar standing
on an open hillside. Smith and I fired hurriedly
and both missed a perfectly easy shot. With one of the
Chinese I circled the ridge, while Smith took up the
animal's trail. We arrived on the edge of a deep ravine
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">- 254 -</span>
just as the boar appeared in the very bottom. I fired
as it rushed through the bushes, and the pig squealed
but never hesitated. The second shot struck behind it,
but at the third it squealed again and dived into a patch
of cover. When we reached the spot we found a great
pool of blood and bits of entrails—but no pig. A broad
red patch led through the snow, and we followed, expecting
at every step to find the animal dead. Instead,
the track carried us down the hill, up the bottom of a
ravine, and onto a hill bare of snow but thickly covered
with oak scrub.</p>
<p>While Smith and I circled ahead to intercept the pig,
the Chinese followed the trail. It was almost dark when
we went back to the men, who announced that the blood
had ceased and that they had lost the track. It seemed
incredible; but they had so trampled the trail where it
left the snow that we could not find it again in the
gloom.</p>
<p>Then Smith and I suspected what we eventually
found to be true, viz., that the men had discovered the
dead pig and had purposely led us astray. We had no
proof, however, and they denied the charge so violently
that we began to think our suspicions were unfounded.</p>
<p>We had to leave at daylight next morning in order to
reach Peking before Smith's leave expired. Two days
after we left, one of my friends arrived at Kao-chia-chuang,
where we had first hunted, and reported that
the Chinese had brought in all four of the pigs which we
had wounded. One of them, probably the boar we lost
on the last night, was an enormous animal which the
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">- 255 -</span>
natives said weighed more than five hundred pounds.
Of course, this could not have been true, but it probably
did reach nearly four hundred pounds.</p>
<p>What Smith and I said when we learned that the
scoundrels had cheated us would not look well in print.
However, it taught us several things about boar hunting
which will prove of value in the future. The Chinese
can sell wild pig meat for a very high price since it is
considered to be a great delicacy. Therefore, if I wound
a pig in the future I shall, myself, follow its trail to the
bitter end. Moreover, I learned that, to knock over a
wild boar and keep him down for good, one needs a
heavy rifle. The bullet of my 6.5 mm. Mannlicher,
which has proved to be a wonderful killer for anything
up to and including sheep, has not weight enough behind
it to stop a pig in its tracks. These animals have
such wonderful vitality that, even though shot in a vital
spot, they can travel an unbelievable distance. Next
time I shall carry a rifle especially designed for pigs
and thieving Chinese!</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">- 256 -</span></p>
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