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Hogs and Exotics Gun or bow, you can stretch your season and fill the freezer with wild hogs and an assortment of exotics.

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Old 08-29-2005 | 07:47 PM
  #11  
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Dominant Buck
 
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Timber only if you get cut while skinning or butchering. The pig might not be
infected. I have never contacted Trachinain 40yrs of hog hunting. Make
sure it is cooked good. Don't eat pink pork meat, it has to be well done.


Pigs have been found to be highly susceptible to the synanthropic (domestic) population of Trichinella [correction of Trachina] and weakly susceptible to the natural (native) one. Fur-bearing animals (polar foxes and foxes) are more susceptible to the natural population of Trichinella [correction of Trachina], but minks are equally sensible to the two variants of T. spiralis. In the host's body, synanthropic Trichinella [correction of Trachinas] form capsules of lemon-like, less frequently, oval shape, but the native population do round capsules. There is larval adaptation when Trichinella [correction of Trachina] larvae enter the nonspecific host's body after their prepassage through the organism of domestic carnivorous animals (cats, dogs). The pig is successfully infected with T. spiralis nativa via the cat or dog; the infection rate is approximately close to that observed during control infection of pigs with synanthropic Trichinella [correction of Trachina].


trichina
Related: Invertebrates

(trĬkī´ne) , common name for species of roundworm of the phylum Nematoda . The species Trichinella spiralis is an important parasite, occurring in rats, pigs, and man, and is responsible for the disease trichinosis . The small adult worms mature in the intestine of an intermediate host such as a pig. Each adult female produces batches of up to 1,500 live larvae, which bore through the intestinal wall, enter the blood and lymphatic system, and are carried to striated muscle tissue. Once in the muscle, they encyst, or become enclosed in a capsule. Larvae encysted in the muscles remain viable for some time. When the muscle tissue is eaten by a human, the cysts are digested in the stomach; the released larvae migrate to the intestine to begin a new life cycle. Female trichina worms live about six weeks and in that time may release 15,000 larvae. The migration and encystment of larvae can cause fever, pain, and even death. Encysted larvae in pork are destroyed by thorough cooking or long periods of low-temperature storage. Trichina are classified in the phylum Nematoda
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Old 08-29-2005 | 07:59 PM
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So don't cut yourself while you're skinning em"
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Old 08-29-2005 | 08:16 PM
  #13  
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Dominant Buck
 
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ORIGINAL: bigboar23

So don't cut yourself while you're skinning em"
BB, you can contact it if you eat pork that is not cooked good. They have
it in the musles and intestines also. Read my post.
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Old 08-29-2005 | 08:21 PM
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From: Camden County, Missouri
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Thanks for all the info but you're still scareing the crap out of me![:@]Is there any way to tell by looking if the animal is infected? Looking at the inerds etc.
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Old 08-29-2005 | 08:23 PM
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Yeah, I did. Thats a very informative bit of information. I would start a new thread with that reply. More people need to know the details. I was unaware for some time and was shocked to find out. Fish and Game did a study here and found it in every pig they sampled, just at different levels. Like you said, it doesn't even effect they majority of them. I had seen a sign up at one of the WMA's that I hunt, but never paid it any mind until my butcher told me the extent of it.
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Old 08-29-2005 | 08:28 PM
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i have heard about it and have never meet NE1 or hear of NE1 local to get it. been catchin/skinnin/cookin them for 10+ years with no issues. But i suppose it like swimin with sharks, sooner or later you gonna get bit
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Old 08-29-2005 | 08:30 PM
  #17  
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Dominant Buck
 
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From: WC FL
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ORIGINAL: TimberCreek

Thanks for all the info but you're still scareing the crap out of me![:@]Is there any way to tell by looking if the animal is infected? Looking at the inerds etc.
Timber, when you roast it at 400* or 450*the larvae is destroyed completely,
but when you are gutting, skinning and butchering and get a knife cut, the larvae
can enter thru your wound. Like I mentioned, I have never contacted Trachina
in 40yrs of butchering hundreds of pigs. I quess I was lucky!
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Old 08-30-2005 | 08:37 AM
  #18  
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I process my own. As for bacon, I have never sliced it. I cure out my hams but that is about it. All other cuts are smoked and cooked like most other meats.
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