Here's one more: TX sweat 06. Last day in the evening and I'd not taken a shot, although had opportunities on Javelin, but didn't really want one. I was messin around by myself just looking for cottontails more than anything when I glanced up a sendero and saw three hogs coming my way. Shrunk back into the brush and got ready. By the time they got to me, two of them had gone under a fence but the third was still coming. Just before he got to my "spot", he winded me and turned directly facing me. Now, if you know the anatomy of a big hog, when he's facing you, all you can see is face and feet. LOL. But then he "growled". Let me tell you, when you're alone, nearly dark and one of those suckers is trying to figure whether to come for you, you're attitude changes a mite. I drew and released, mostly out of self defense. The arrow, from my 56lb. Zipper hit right where I was looking...right between his eyes with a noise as if I shot it from 10 feet into a telephone pole. He came at me and veered about ten feet to my right and I heard that aluminum shaft bouncing off brush for about 40 yards. Preliminary looking showed nothing. I'd figured the arrow would have fall out of his skull, but no. Later, Curtis and his dad helped me look with lights...nothing. The next morning, another trad ganger and I scoured the area with no results...not even the arrow. Hope the hog recovered. Curtis told me that a couple of years earlier, some gun hunters had killed a hog that had an arrow head imbedded in his skull which had probably been there a couple of years. I'm guessing the hog I shot weighed about 250 lbs. Curtis said that when they get that big, they have no natural enemies and can become aggressive. This one sure did.