Any lawful quarry comes under AOLQ it doesn't have to be vermin to qualify!They’re classed as vermin so fall under AOLQ.
Any lawful quarry comes under AOLQ it doesn't have to be vermin to qualify!They’re classed as vermin so fall under AOLQ.
Yes & no. If you kill it no problem, if you merely wounded it you could get prosecuted for cruelty .So if I have an AOLQ condition for all of the calibres on my FAC, I can’t get prosecuted if caught taking boar with my hornet, .222 or .243?
This course was developed by very experienced boar shooters from BASC, DI and the NGO and well worth a lookFor the benefit of anyone who'd just like to learn a bit more about wild boar in the UK I'd suggest that you take a look at NGO's Wild Boar Certificate online course. If nothing else it will give you something constructive to do on cold, dark winter evenings.
Taken from a gold medal I shot in Croatia, 7mm RM 158g Privi GROM at about 60 yards driven, heart shot and bullet found under the skin on the other side during skinning (probably my best shot ever). The boar weighhed in at 195 kgs gralloched and ran about 5 yards after the shot. You need a well placed big bullet.
I shot a bigger boar in a similar fashion but the shot was a "bit back" with the same rifle and ammunition, it was tracked for 10 kms on dogs GPS collar until nightfall then they pulled back, sensibly. Not retrieved the following day as they coundnt find it. Obviously with hindsight I had missed something "vital". I now use a 30-06 or a 9.3mm round.
So for thos of us who haven't shot hoad or up on the anatomy..This is certainly a interesting topic, in theory you could shoot a boar with a .22 rimfire if its a humane kill but a word of advice, the boar has a big head and not such a big kill zone, if you go for neck or shoulder you need something punchy no lighter than 150grain. It really is all about shot placement, many who shoot their first boar shoot it like a deer, heart lung shot, your boar will run, and possibly a long way. I use 308 with a 150gr and drop virtually everything on the spot, I have also see boar shot at 70yds with a 300win mag 180gr bullet and run 60yd. I think the biggest problem is that someone who uses a 223 or 243 is probably not a regular boar shooter and when one comes into his sights the adrenaline starts to push the cross hairs all over the place, seen it happen to even experienced hunters. Then again a miss ( as long as its a clean miss) is the best outcome if you haven't got a pickup, quad and winch or a chiller big enough to cope, pulling the trigger is the easy bit.
There's nothing special in Grom, from non-lead (monolithic) perspective it's fastish to open and good choice. Only used in 308, I think it was 174gr or something. In fact about a year ago I gave rest of them to my Estonian friend and since they haven't complained I guess the performance continued to be good. There was 170-180 of them left.Hi, I have been scouring the net for any terminal performance reports on the PPU Grom - and yours is the ONLY one I have found! So thank you for that! From your photos, it seems that the lead core has fully disappeared. Is that correct? Also could you let me know the retained weight and diameter of the expanded bullet? thanks in advance!
Vitals are low, and especially in the winter the anatomy including hair will make it kind of difficult for first timers to select proper spot. Snow doesn't help any. Basically the spine extends backward from snout / head in the middle level, neck is thick and the hair is long in the shoulder (extending upwards) especially on males. So the challenge is mainly in vertical direction.Where's the I'm point for vitals ?
Hope these helpHi, I have been scouring the net for any terminal performance reports on the PPU Grom - and yours is the ONLY one I have found! So thank you for that! From your photos, it seems that the lead core has fully disappeared. Is that correct? Also could you let me know the retained weight and diameter of the expanded bullet? thanks in advance!


Hope these help
You getting the original Grom from somewhere, or are you talking about Z-Grom? Not that there should be huge difference, but only PPU knows...I also have a 7mm Rem Mag, so will be ordering some of these.
yes, the original Groms. My local gun shop here in Switzerland has them. Its hard to find premium bullets here that don't cost an arm and a legYou getting the original Grom from somewhere, or are you talking about Z-Grom? Not that there should be huge difference, but only PPU knows...