Tips and tricks for hunting and trapping wild boar and feral hogs.
Don't pile
your bait up on top of the ground! Use a post hole digger and dig a
hole as narrow and deep as you can; then fill it up with your bait. The
top picture shows that the hogs will gobble it up within
minutes. If the bait is hard to get to; they will have to take
turns; this makes them hang around longer and forces them to sneak in
during daylight hours to beat the crowd. This will increase your odds
of taking one. 
My good friends Scott Young and Ivan Murphy came up with some great ways to keep your trail cams safe.
The Top was made by Scott out of an old ammo can; the bottom was made by Ivan out of a cash box.

Trail cams have become a valuble hunting tool. They can help you
predict the future and save you time in the field. I use them
constantly for research and predictability. I like to check my pictures
as much as I do hunting! I suggest investing in a good digital; they
can take hundreds of pictures and video as well. It is almost a sport
itself.
. 
If you use a stand or
blind; camo it please! Hogs don't have the best eye sight in the animal
kingdom, but they are not stupid either!
Shooting
lanes, trails, high lines, pipelines etc, are great places to stalk
hogs and look for sign. You can walk quietly and see them from a
distance. If you want to bait them in these places; scatter it out over
a long distance to make them keep coming back to find it. I use my 4
wheeler with an auto feeder on the back to scatter bait here and there
along trails. 
Wild boar love to rub
on trees and wallow in the mud to rid themselves of lice , blow flies,
etc. Telephone poles are thier favorite because they contain creosole
(a preservative and bug repellent). I cut one up that fell in my yard
during Hurricane Rita and took it to the woods for the hogs; they use
it constantly. You can see the bed they have made beside the bottom
picture.

Put your stand were the hogs are if your going to stand
hunt! If you want to be succesful; you have to be willing to work , and
get dirty! I have to wade to this stand sometimes, but I stick em in
the pump station regularly.
Dominant boar are like an old buck, they like to be by
themselves. Every now and then you will catch one in the daylight
showing his authority. 
While we are on the
subject of dominant boar; hunting them can be difficult and
challenging; because they are loaners, and they are well educated to
survival. Large tracks that are by themselves usually indicate a
dominant boar.

Stake down any feeder
that you use. This boar picked up my barrel "that weighs about 500lbs
when full" with his snout. It was cracked .

When you see baby hog tracks; its time to hunt. momma
hogs have a hard time keeping up with the babies and feeding them; they
love to eat! Not only does nursing deplete momma from calcium, and
makes her eat more often, but the babies are learning to eat real food
and are not educated to rules of survival. They will lead the whole
heard into the daylight. They want to eat and the heard wants to
protect them! Hunt them down now! 