Posts Tagged ‘south carolina boar hunting south carolina hog hunting’

Weird Winter Weather Continues, Snow Comes To The Lowcountry

Monday, February 15th, 2010

dsc01201webJust in case we haven’t had enough crazy weather affecting the hog hunting this Winter, we now have one more condition to add to the constant rain and windy conditions the lowcountry has experienced - SNOW!

That’s right. The South Carolina lowcountry was pummeled by about 4 inches of the white stuff on Friday night, leading to quite the sight on Saturday morning for our hog hunters. However while it was beautiful to look at, it did absolutely nothing to help get the hogs moving, and not an animal (deer, turkey, hog, squirrel, etc) was seen from the stands.

The VA Crew: Bruce, Stanley, Donnie and Bobby

The VA Crew: Bruce, Stanley, Donnie and Bobby

Fortunately, after the snow melted off Saturday afternoon, the animals were hungry and started moving again. This allowed Chris, across the road from the lodge on the Bowers tract, to kill a nice 90 pound boar while his dad Robert, in the next stand down, to first miss a hog, then graze another. The warming afternoon conditions also enabled our hunters at Boggy Creek and the Lower End tract to see some hogs, but unfortunately no one was able to get a shot due to either sows with piglets or the lack of a clean shot.

Tyler with his sow from the River

Tyler with his sow from the River

However before the snow came, the weather was a little better for the couple of hunters we had during the week, and several of them were able to put some pork down. In our group from northern VA,  Bruce shot a nice 165 lb boar during a morning hunt at Sandy Run while his dad, Donnie, hammered a big 220 lb slow over off Boggy Creek during an afternoon sit. We also had Tyler, whose wife bought him his hunt, down from Ohio with his buddy Doyle, and Tyler shot a nice sow down on the River while Doyle missed a song dog at Boggy.

Robert and his son Chris with his Bowers tract boar

Robert and his son Chris with his Bowers tract boar

The lowcountry is supposed to get even more rain with windy conditions tonight, but in honor of President’s Day, the Cypress Creek crew is taking a few days off to get some rest, allow the woods to quiet down and give the weather another chance to straighten up. So we will be back and ready to go when our next big group rolls in to the lowcountry on Friday. See you then!

Another Cypress Creek “Outdoor Moment”

Sunday, December 13th, 2009

Since the season is finally winding down, we haven’t had much going on around the lodge this week. So I thought it was about time to break back into some of Danny’s video library to see what else he had in there. And sure enough, he still has plenty of great footage to be shared here at the Skinning Shed.

This clip is of Kelly, from Outdoor Moments with Bub and Kelly, attempting to take a great buck… I thought that everyone would appreciate it since it shows that the TV personalities are no better of a shot than anyone else - they just happen to have their “mistakes” captured on film for everyone to see. I also love the fact that the buck just stands there in total defiance of Kelly after the shot as well as that the video shows why the single shot rifles are great when your first shot does the job, but SUCK when they don’t :) .

Steve with two nice late-season deer
Steve with two nice late-season deer

We also have hunters back in camp this week, so we are ready to report on some deer being put down on the ground in next week’s post. And since two have already been knocked down in the COLD, rainy weather, I feel certain that we will talking about late-season kills and not the warm weather that has plagued us this entire season. So stay tuned for more updates, and until then, check out Steve from Florida with his lowcountry double.

Also, please note that our 2010 Spring Turkey season is just around the corn, so if you are planning on pursuing the red heads with us, you had better get on the horn and make your reservations soon to ensure that you get the dates you want.

A Real American Hero Visits Cypress Creek

Friday, December 4th, 2009
Sgt. Greg Stube and his lowcountry hog

Sgt. Greg Stube and his lowcountry hog

Cypress Creek Hunting Lodge was privileged earlier this week to have a great American war hero, Greg Stube, come and hunt with us along with a couple of his friends including Kerry Earnhardt.

You can read all about Greg here in an interview with Glenn Beck, but basically he was a Special Forces field medic who was wounded horribly by an IED during combat in Afganistan in 2006 and lived to tell about it. Now, 17 surgeries later and still in the Army, Greg works with the Special Operations Command Public Affairs Office as a spokesman for the US Army. He is also a representative with the Wounded Warrior Foundation where he travels around the country working with and supporting veterans as well as promoting the use of the outdoors and hunting as part of a healing regiment for wounded veterans.

cdy_0905webGreg’s group spent two days at our new bow camp, and they had a great time hanging out by the Savannah River and hunting the hardwoods that run along it’s banks. And after lots of sightings of deer and a few hogs, Greg came out on top when he stuck a great hog right at dark on his last afternoon sit. So congratulations to Greg, and we look forward to the next time we are are blessed to have him here with us.

We also had a small group down from VA and MD, and they too had a great time. However our winter heat wave continued to make the hog hunting tough for everyone, and while this group had a few sightings, none were taken out on the back on the vans.

cdy_0763webWe now have about a week and a half off before we have more hunters, so everyone is taking a few days to catch up on their sleep and rejuvinate themselves for some late-season hunting. However we have some new trailcam photos to keep everyone entertained, and next week we get back into some of the great video footage we have in our archives. So stay tuned!

Looks Like Its Going To Be An Early Fall

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

dsc_0185webHaving hunted in South Carolina for most of my 38 years, I can tell you that 60 degree mornings are not the norm in August. Neither are having bucks out of velvet on opening day or leaves falling off the trees before late September. So that can only mean one thing, and that is that we are going to have an early Fall.

And that should really help out our rut that typically starts around October 15th but doesn’t really get cranked up until almost Halloween when it cools off. So with cool weather already here, and hopefully cold weather just around the corner, the deer should really be moving great soon. Therefore anyone looking for some great hunting this fall better go ahead and call Becky to get their dates on our calendar.

mdgc0061webHowever, just because our Fall is coming a little early this year doesn’t mean that the deer and hogs aren’t killable RIGHT NOW. The movement of both animals has definitely been better after a slow start to the season, and lots of bucks are being seen on all of our properties by our guests. As a matter of fact, Orlando from Goose Creek, SC and his brother visiting from the Phillipines, left the lodge last week with two nice bucks off of our any-legal-buck tract. So congratulations to both of them on their FIRST deer, and we look forward to you guys sending us some pics to put up here on the Cypress Creek Skinning Shed!

dsc_0130webIn addition to our guests and guides Bubba and Henry seeing lots of bucks while out prepping our properties for the rut, we have also had lots of activity on our trailcams. Both have been hanging over on the bow camp for the last few days, and both caught some unbelievable trophies just wandering around without a care in the world during the night and in daylight hours. First we have some beautiful bucks frequenting a feeder, then we have a giant boar hanging out in a wallow near another stand on the same tract.

cdy_0085webAnd don’t forget that our doe season starts on September 15th if you are just looking for some tasty, healthy meat along with a fantastic hunt. Rates are just $225 a day with all meals and lodging included for our doe-only hunts that run from the start of doe season until October 15th. So again, just give Becky a call to book. We look forward to hunting with you!

Jeff

Opening Week Starts Off Slow

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Opening week of deer season has now come and gone, and unbelievably, none of our guests killed a deer. We started off slow last year too, but finished up strong with a couple of real monsters being taken by the end of the first week. Unfortunately it just didn’t happen this year, and once again proves why you can’t predict how the animals are going to move. Fortunately, all of our guests had a really great time with us and rebooked before leaving, so that says a lot about them for understanding that “there is NO guarantee in real free-range, fair-chase hunting “… cdy_0060web

From talking to lots of fellow hunters around our area, the deer just shut down in much of the lowcountry this past week, so we weren’t the only ones to feel the pain of slow deer movement. And we knew from the moon phase and hunting charts that opening week wasn’t going to start during a good time, but we figured that it would still be OK. But then the low from the tropical storm moved in and sat on us for the entire week bringing rain and funky weather which lead to even worse deer movement than we had expected.

We kept thinking it would get better, but it didn’t. And that is just unbelievable since we have been seeing tons of good deer all summer, and we even had our bow hunters see quite a few great bucks just two weeks ago at the bow camp. However opening week’s bow camp hunters didn’t see any big bucks. They did fortunately see quite a few big hogs during daylight, and Patrick down from NC finally got some within 30 yards and stuck a nice sow.

cdy_0058webThe other hunters we had at our main lodge did see some good bucks, but most were on the way in to the stand in the dark or on the way out after dark. And the couple of good bucks that were seen during shooting hours didn’t stop long enough for clean shots! AGHHH… But again, that is REAL hunting.

We have a few hunters coming in this weekend, so I will keep everyone updated on how they do. But with opening week now over, we will get back to working on the properties so they are ready for the pre rut to start up around mid October when the majority of our guests will be down. We will also work on getting our cameras back out and running to capture some of our bucks on film for everyone to see. Until then, enjoy two neat pictures of big hogs feeding during shooting hours from the bow camp…

Jeff

Deer Season Is Almost Here!!!

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

That’s right. The South Carolina deer hunting season is just about here… 25 days and counting to be exact.

I sure hope everyone is getting excited about hitting the deer woods again, even if it is 100 degrees in the shade with giant mosquitoes joining you in the stand :) I know we are! We have been working hard to get everything set up and ready (Bubba and Henry the hardest to be honest), and I think we are almost there. We have just a couple of food plots left to plant and just a few stands that need some TLC, and we are ready for those fortunate hunters that will be joining us those first few days.

dsc_0300webNow we just need to get the trailcams moved over to Pleasant Hill so we can get some great new pics of our trophy bucks our guests will be looking to harvest. We are also hoping to find some time to actually get out and sit in a stand with the video camera too so that we can get some great new footage up here of those monsters! So definitely keep checking in with us as kick into high gear for the coming August opener.

And speaking of video footage and trailcam pictures, we have some of each to keep everyone informed and entertained until our next big group of hog hunters arrives this coming weekend and provides us with some hunting stories and harvest pictures. First we have two new hog hunting videos - one is from the Dodge Everyday Sportsman and the other is from Blue Ridge Outdoors.

dsc_0251webdsc_0320webWe also have a couple of new trailcam pictures, despite the best efforts of our hogs to rub against the tree it was tied too and spin it around so that it looked into the bush. As I have said before, some of them are just downright shy about having their picture taken. First we have a giant sow moving through the woods behind the feeder, second we have neat looking hen turkey cruising around and finally we have the leader of the trailcam revolution - Mr. Squirrel - there checking to see what needs to be done to disable the camera so that it doesn’t get any good shots of his friends the hogs :)

Hope everyone is having a great week!

Jeff

Hot Weather Doesn’t Stop Hogs

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009
Ron, Clif, Tristan and Travis with the group's two-day take

Ron, Clif, Tristan and Travis with the group's two-day take

Even though we didn’t get much rain last week and the weather stayed hot, our wild hogs kept moving for the lucky hunters we had in camp last week. Our group of four down from the upstate for two days started things off by killing 4 nice pigs. Clif knocked one down while Ron stacked up two more; their friend Tristan was covered up in hogs for most of their stay, but had some problems hitting the fast moving suckers. And unfortunately the one that he did kill, we didn’t find for a few days despite a huge search for it. That left their good buddy Travis the lone man out with no pigs sighted or shot at… but as I say, that is REAL hunting. And since they are already making plans to return, we have promised to tie one up for him for his next trip :) We also want to wish Tristan well and thank him for his service as he heads overseas to defend our great nation!

We then had a two day break before Jeb Jr. and Sr. showed up from Virginia to try and get the younger one his first boar. And despite having only one day to do it, Jeb saw quite a few pigs and then put a great shot on his 130 pounder which dropped right in his tracks over at the Bar Pit at Boggy Creek. They took some good pictures of it, and they have promised to email us a copy, so I will get it up as soon as I do.

Clif and his pig

Clif and his pig

Next our good friend Clay from N.C. came down for two days of hog hunting with his girlfriend Cayla. And I know that they saw several hogs but couldn’t get a shot at them before they got by on their first day out. However I am still waiting for information on their second day’s sits, and hopefully they managed to watch the woods and not each other so that Clay could take home some port. And of course if he did, the pictures will be up here next week too!

Ron and his two wild hogs

Ron and his two wild hogs

So that wraps up our week’s worth of hunting, which considering how hot it is and how few hunters we have in the woods right now is pretty good. Now, since most of our food plots are in, we have another week to work on our our stands before our next big group of 12 come in. And with two weeks of no pressure on the hogs, they should put some pork on the ground while they are here too.

cdy_0354webI also promised some new trailcam pics this week, and our new cuddeback over on our bowhunting-only tract didn’t disappoint us. We had lots of deer and hogs on it as well as a gray fox, and they all seemed to come by at all hours of the day and night. Fortunately many of the visits were during shooting hours. You can see one nice boar was at the feeder right cdy_0047webaround 6am and the start of legal shooting time while another wandered by around 7:30pm. We also had a couple of good sows with their piglets that stopped by quite frequently too - and what was neat about getting them on camera was the fact that you could see the stripped young hogs. FYI: piglets that are mostly feral are a solid, single color while those with stripes have more Eurasion hog genes in them. So obviously some good hogs over there just waiting to be stuck :)

cdy_0453webSo there you have it… a recap of our week of hog hunting along with some new trailcam pics. Now to get back to working on getting some more video clips up on here! See you in a few days…

cdy_0039web

Jeff

This Weeks Hog Hunting And Two New Videos

Monday, July 6th, 2009

It’s Monday, and we have several hunters in the woods this morning. They came in late yesterday just in time to get in their stands, and I am still waiting for a report on how things are going since they arrived. However until I either hear from Bubba or Henry on what they have seen and/or killed or I go to work tomorrow to find out, enjoy a couple of new videos. One is from A-Way Outdoors with Greg Abbas who stalks big boars in and around a corn field when sitting in a stand doesn’t produce. Another clip is from the Dodge Everyday Sportsman, and they follow a young man as he not only kills his first hog, but his first deer too… and this is a funny clip because the young hunter and his cameraman score on a hog right by one of the many corn sheds we have scattered around our properties as well as then giving you a first-person recovery of his deer.

So enjoy these clips today, and then keep checking back for details on this week’s hog hunts. I will also have some new trailcam photos from the Bow Camp in addition to updates on how our planting is going over on Pleasant Hill Plantation.

Jeff

Enjoy Two Hunting Videos From Outdoor Moments With Bub And Kelly

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

Outdoor Moments with Bub and Kelly was a great TV show that covered lots of hunting in the South and was even produced right here in South Carolina. Unfortunately it is no longer on the air, however we have been working on getting some of their old clips up from their many visits to Cypress Creek Hunting Lodge up on our website. And now that they are ready, check out one of the hunts where Kelly shoots a big old boar and then has to track it down in the thick brush with the help of our old guide Mike Rayano. Then follow along as they let Mike have a chance in front of the camera to try his hand at shooting a big hog - with Kelly’s gun! It’s great stuff and should provide a few laughs in addition to reminding everyone why you NEVER hunt with a gun that you haven’t personally verified is ON TARGET.

And I posted last week about how we were going to have some hunters in camp this past weekend, so I guess I better report on how they did… Well, most of the hunters saw hogs - that was the good news. The bad news was that two of them had a monster boar run by without getting a shot over on our Sandy Run tract while Tim, who was down with Doug from Clover, SC, had a pack of 30 hogs show up at his stand on Boggy Creek only to miss a giant one. Fortunately our good buddy Joe, down from NC with Rick, Gene and Randy, managed to get his crosshairs on a good sized pig and drop him. The bad news on his good kill was that his shot almost cut the hog in half, so no pictures were taken for the blog…

We have this July 4th weekend off to celebrate the founding of our great country, then we get back to business with several groups coming in starting Sunday and running through the following weekend. So if the hog movement will continue to stay decent and our new hunters can sit still as well as shoot straight, we should have some new hunting stories and kill shots for the Skinning Shed next week - so stay tuned. I will also have some new trailcam shots as well as more updates on our preparations for the opening of deer season.

I am also still working on getting many, many more of the clips from the different hunting shows converted and uploaded here. Then I will begin transferring all of the unseen video footage that Danny has taken over the last few years so that we can get it up here as well. And since I have seen some of it, all I can say is that you better keep checking back - you don’t want to miss any of it because there is some unbelievable action on those tapes - and we truly look forward to sharing it with you.

Jeff

Summer Preparations For Opening Day Of Deer Season Continue

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009
A big boar grabs a bite at 2:17pm over on the bow camp; check out the stand right behind the hog... do you think you can hit him from there?

A big boar grabs a bite at 2:17pm over on the bow camp; and check out the stand right behind the hog... it's waiting for YOU!

While most of our Cypress Creek Skinning Shed readers sit in the AC at work and dream about their fall hunts with us, we continue to work hard to prepare our lands for the opening day of deer season… which starts now in just over 6 weeks!

Bubba and Henry have been working just about every day checking and fixing stands, cleaning out wasp nests, adding pull ropes (where the old ones went, we don’t know) and trimming shooting lanes while Danny bush hogs the roads and plows the food plots to get them ready for the beans and peas that the deer love in August. And me, well I have helped with a little bit of it all, but I must admit that I don’t mind the days that I get to sit in the AC working on the website :)

And with all of this work, the bow camp is now ready to go! We have the cabin in great shape, the pond cleaned out, the stands and feeders up and the food plots plowed. Now we just need to the hogs and deer to cooperate and show up during daylight hours during opening week like they have been this summer… check out the big hog stopping by the feeder for a snack in the 100 degree heat at 2pm that our new cuddieback captured last week!

We are now moving over to Pleasant Hill Plantation to prepare our trophy deer hunting tract for August 15th. And when we do, we will put up a couple of cameras over there so that we can show everyone some of the great bucks that survived last season so that our guests could shoot them now that they are even bigger this year. So make sure and keep checking back.

PS: We didn’t have any die hard hog hunters this week that were willing to tackle the swarms of bugs in the unbearable heat to try and kill a wild pig, so no new kill shots here at the Skinning Shed. However we have a group coming in on Thursday - so we should have a few new pictures on Monday if the heat does not keep the hogs from moving- because with no hunters over the last two weeks, hunting pressure sure won’t be the cause if our hunters do not get an opportunity.

Jeff