#146 - Kill ‘em All - The World's Largest Feral Hog Hunting Contest
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Whiskey of the night: Pig Blood, Single Malt Small Batch Cherry Oak Pecan Barrel Reserve, 122.333333333333 proof
Last night’s episode wasn’t a podcast so much as a controlled detonation. The Whiskey Bros welcomed Trey Hawkins of TheHuntingGame.com with the stated intention of discussing the Wise County Hog Contest, but within minutes that plan was abandoned in favor of whiskey-fueled confessions, cultural whiplash, and the kind of verbal drive-bys that only happen when no one in the room has any interest in being employable later. Microphones were hot, standards were low, and Trey slid into the chaos like a man who’s been living among feral hogs, firearms, and bad ideas his entire adult life.
Somewhere between the first pour and the fifteenth tangent, we learned that what started in 2011 as a humble effort to thin the hog population has metastasized into the largest hog hunting contest on earth—complete with six-figure prize pools, polygraphs, barred-hog scandals, and teams hauling pigs for four hours just to be told their trophy has no nuts and therefore no future. Stories piled on stories: 500-pound mutant hogs bending barns, contestants who don’t care if they win as long as they had a good night, and side pots so specific they sound like inside jokes made legally binding.
The episode then veered hard into its natural habitat: exploding goats, buzzards eating livestock alive, thermal optics, kill-them-all contests involving dump trailers full of hogs, raccoon body counts, archery hypotheticals, and at least one serious discussion about spear-based combat that absolutely should not exist in recorded form. Along the way, we somehow covered cardiology, near-death experiences, involuntary pants-shitting, bidets, whiskey proofs, and why hogs are single-handedly rewriting the ecological rulebook of Texas. If you’re wondering whether any of this was edited for tone or taste, the answer is no… thank God for that.
By the end, the room was buzzing, the whiskey was flowing, and whatever fragile line separates “podcast episode” from “group therapy for men with guns and opinions” had been fully erased. This was loud, reckless, wildly informative, and deeply Texas. No apologies. No lessons learned. Just hogs, whiskey, and a reminder that civilization is thinner than we think, and probably smells like Blanton’s and feral pig blood.