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Calling Javelina
Author AP Jones, www.javelinahunter.com

Calling Javelina
Let me first state,  predator calling for Javelina should only be used in a situational manner (I'll explain later).  If used incorrectly or in the wrong situation, predator calls will prove worthless.  In fact, it will scare the Javelina herd away 99.9 percent of the time.  Despite predator calling limitations, it's without a doubt the most exciting way to hunt Javelina.  Using a predator call exploits the Javelina's propensity to counter attack predators and come to the aid wounded or distressed herd mates. 

How to use the predator call.
The first thing you need to do is purchase a predator call.  There are many good choices for under $10, call's that mimic or are advertised as "cotton tail" or "jack rabbit" distress calls work best for Javelina hunting.
Next, forget what you know, or think you know, or how you've used calls in the past.  Most hunters have "played around" with a call before.  You blow into it, it sounds kind of like kazoo or  fairly deep "waaaa.... waaaa..." sound.  To affectively call in Javelina you want to imitate the sound of a piglet getting the hell chewed out of it.  This is done by blowing violently, using your hands to cup the end of the call to mimic the piglet's mouth opening and closing.  Imagine what a frightened piglet sounds like, adjust your hands and the "blow" pressure accordingly until you sound like an axe murderer at a teenage slumber party.

Situational Use
Use a predator call only in three situations.
Situation number 1.  You've spotted the herd, they are no more than 60 yards away and you can't easily close the distance because of thick brush (to noisy) or it's to open of an area (no cover). 
Before calling you should "set-up", pistol or bow at the ready, kneeling position, with the location of all animals identified as best as possible.  Your call should be on a lanyard, so you can spit it out of your mouth after calling (hands on weapon), buts its quickly retrievable if needed. A 3-4 second calling sequence will normally do the trick. As soon as the call sequence is complete be ready!  Javelina will be coming fast.  Generally they make 15 to 20 yard charges, stop, and charge again towards the area of the call.  You will often hear the "woof" sound they make with each step they take, as there coming in.  Stay calm and pick a clean shot.  Don't hurry the shot or settle for a bad shot, or worse yet "flock shoot", and don't worry if they see you.  I have called in, shot, and missed the same animal three different times with a pistol before, and ultimately bagged him.  It can go like this, shoot, miss, the animal runs away, blow on the call, the animal comes back, shoot, miss and so on.
Situation number 2.  Your humping along (day dreaming) and bang, off busts a herd at 40 yards in 5 different directions.  Get on the call (blow) immediately.  3 to 4 seconds, look for animals and listen for "woofing", wait a few seconds and back on the call for another 3 to 4 seconds.  Generally, not all the herd will of seen you.  Some Javelina may have stayed "frozen" unsure of the exact nature or cause of the alarm, while other Javelina may initially only run 50 -75 yards, then stop and freeze to determine the source of danger. Often times a quick calling sequence will bring the Javelina right back to you for a shot
Situation number 3.  Moving through thick mesquite tangles and  you hear a faint "woof" or smell pig.   Although you don't see Javelina, if you hear the telltale faint "woof" sound, then they are in close enough vicinity  to respond to a call. The "woof" call is an alert call, similar to a deer's "snort", even when alerted, Javelina still will respond to the call a great percentage of the time.
Cold calling.  Calling blindly, that is, with no Javelina or "hot" sign sighted is unproductive 99.9% of the time.

Authors note about safety. 
When Javelina are responding to a call, they are coming to protect a herd member--ready to charge and bite!  If you don't think Javelina can be dangerous, check out www.javelinahunter.com's Javelina Attacks page, for several newspaper accounts, and verified reports of Javelina attacking people and pets. They can get very, very close, very, very quickly, keep your situational awareness about you.  On several occasions I've had to make noise, waive my hand, stand up, kick, etc. to scare off Javelina. this has occurred even after I've shot and bagged an animal.  It's very common for Javelina to approach at ranges well under 10 yards when calling--that's close!...No that's fun!!

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Peace Country Hunt.....cont'd

We ran for the coulee with our hearts racing in anticipation. We stalked up a pipeline that dissected the brush-choked draw, and as we neared the top edge, the barley swathes started to come into view. We were just poking our heads over the edge to have a peek when Joel grabbed my arm and yanked me to the ground. The smallest buck, the one sporting the typical rack, was standing. Joel made his way to the edge of the trees to cut the distance to the deer. I watched in anticipation as Joel drew his bow and settled the pin on the buck's chest. The deer was quartering away from our position, and we had created just enough of a disturbance that it was looking back over its shoulder.
I left the top of my head in view, hoping that the buck would look at me and not at Joel. Joel sent the arrow on its way, but as if in slow motion, the buck moved as the arrow approached. Its body twisted and ducked, and when the dust had settled, all three deer were bouncing towards safer ground.
We hunted those bucks for the rest of the week and never did get close enough for another shot. They rarely left the field and always stayed in the open where we couldn't approach them. We set up on routes that they had been traveling but were outsmarted every time. It was one of the most exciting bowhunting trips I have ever been on.
The landowner let me know that the big bucks made it through the season, and the following year I arrived back in the same fields and found a herd of sixteen bucks working the rich feed, but I couldn't find the drop-tine buck. I soon learned that local hunter Greg Sutley, who owns Smoky River Outfitting, had taken the buck just two days before my arrival. Greg was thrilled, and for good reason-the buck scored an impressive 215 2/8 nontypical points, making it the largest Alberta nontypical mule deer taken in velvet with archery equipment.
Some of my hunting friends drew tags in one of the Peace country zones last year and in less than
two days they collected three bucks gross-scoring 179, 180, and 206. In 1996, when he was just 15, resident hunter Chad Lyttle harvested an impressive 4×4 buck that is still the provincial typical mule deer record. It scores an even 206. It was taken in the Peace country even before the draws allowed for the trophy potential we see today.
It has been exciting to see the Peace country turn into a trophy mule deer mecca. I recommend that hunters take advantage of it before the inevitable happens and Mother Nature once again hits this region with an old-fashioned winter.

Copyright Sports Afield, Inc. Oct 2004
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved

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