What calibre is best for wild boar? I intend to go wild boar shooting soon.
Would you like to appear on our site? We offer sponsored articles and advertising to put you in front of our readers. Find out more.Wild boar (Sus scrofa) thrive in the UK and the woodland and scrubland here gives wild boar plentiful cover and the chance to breed successfully. The highest population is found in the Forest of Dean. Their ancestors escaped from a farm in Herefordshire in the 1990s and a dumped herd left on the edge of the Forest. Forestry England’s 2022/23 estimate for the wild boar population in the Forest of Dean stands at 441 head, down from 1635 in 2018/19 due to a culling programme.
Before raising a rifle to a wild boar, you must ensure your firearms certificate specifies you are allowed to shoot these animals. If your certificate says (as it should) that you may shoot “any lawful quarry” you can shoot boar. If it does not, ask the local police licensing department to have this condition added. There is no charge for this.
Shooting Times contributor and hunter Mark Ripley advises: “Many people believe that there is a law against using anything smaller than .270 on boar, which in fact is not quite the case. The .270 is the minimum ‘recommended’ calibre for boar, not a legal requirement. A .243 with a good shot placement at sensible range will kill boar reliably. That said, should you shoot a boar and cause unnecessary suffering, and that animal was found by someone and it could be proven that you had shot it, then you could, potentially, be prosecuted for it.
“In many areas wild boar will be simply passing through and can be seen one day then not seen again for months or even years on the same ground. They are also extremely elusive.”
Forestry England also advises that wild boar on land managed by the organisation may only be shot by the professional wildlife rangers it employs. However where the land owner / land manager holds the shooting rights, it is legal for that private land owner /land manager to shoot boar on their land.
This article was originally written in 2014 and has been updated.
Your choice of rifle will not only come down to personal preference but will also depend on which species you plan to stalk, writes Bruce Potts.