
Wade Seago’s schnauzer, Cruiser, was a reliable alarm system. In the woods around Samson, Alabama, the dog’s bark usually signaled a wandering deer or a nosy raccoon. So, when Cruiser started up one ordinary afternoon, Seago didn’t think much of it—until his daughter’s scream cut through the house.
He found her at the front window, staring. About fifteen feet from their porch, looming like a misplaced boulder, was a hog. But this wasn’t just any feral pig. It was a monster of an animal, with tusks like curved daggers glinting in the sun. The creature was easily the size of a grand piano, and it was standing on his lawn.
Adrenaline kicked in. Seago, a taxidermist and hunter, knew these animals could be dangerously unpredictable, especially near a home. With Cruiser still barking defiantly and his family inside, he didn’t hesitate. He grabbed his .38 caliber revolver.
By the time he got a clear line of fire, the hog had moved to about thirty-six feet away. He made sure Cruiser was safe, took aim, and fired. Once. Twice. A third time. Finally, the colossal animal fell.
The next day, curiosity got the better of him. How big was this thing? He hauled it to the drive-thru scales at the local Brooks Peanut Company. The digital numbers climbed and settled on a figure that seemed impossible: 820 pounds.
“I’ve never seen one that size,” Seago later told reporters, still sounding a bit stunned. In Alabama, feral hogs are a common nuisance, an invasive species that tears up crops and natural habitats, causing hundreds of millions in damage every year. But this one was in a league of its own.
For Seago, the decision was straightforward. Alabama law allows the culling of these pests on private property to control their booming population. This one wasn’t just a pest; it had been a potential threat at his doorstep. “I didn’t think twice about taking down this hog,” he stated. “I’d do it again tomorrow.”
Back at his taxidermy shop, the work began. The humid Alabama air meant the meat wasn’t safe to eat, so it was discarded. But the hide and the impressive skull were preserved. Seago planned to mount the head and shoulders, a permanent trophy of the extraordinary day a backyard nuisance turned into a front-yard giant.
The story of the 820-pound hog of Samson spread quickly, a testament to the wild surprises that can still turn up at the end of a driveway, even in your own front yard.
