By DAVID RAINER, Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources
When some people harvest their first wild animal, it awakens an appreciation of the great outdoors and nature. For others, it is much more emotional and prompts memories of family or loved ones.
For Sadie Pettus, the latter is true. On a recent hunting trip to Barbour Wildlife Management Area (WMA), Pettus was able to take a feral hog, and it evoked memories of her late father, Clark Crates. Although Crates was an avid outdoorsman as well as a talented musician on the piano, he mentored his sons in the outdoor skills while Sadie was growing up.
“He spent his time in the woods teaching the boys,” said Pettus, who calls Wing, Alabama, home. “He didn’t know so much about being the girl dad. As we got older, the boys had zero interest in hunting, but the girl did. It was like, ‘Dang, I should have spent all the time with you.’”
Unfortunately, Crates health started declining, but he had a difficult time accepting he wasn’t able to do what he once could.
“It was Valentine’s Day, and he said, ‘I’m going hunting with you at Barbour. We’re going to be a power team. You’re going to get a 10- or 12-point buck, and you’re going to get a hog,’” Pettus said. “I said, ‘Daddy, I really want to get a hog, but I’ve never even seen one. People say they’re all over the management area, but I can’t get one if I can’t see it.’ He said, ‘You will; you will.’”
Crates asked his daughter what she wanted for her birthday in July 2023, and she said to get her something simple. He answered that he had bought guns for the boys and wanted to buy one for her. Crates ended up being too ill to purchase the rifle and passed away in March.
“I was able to finalize that myself,” Pettus said. “It doesn’t matter that I paid for the gun, it was still going to be from my daddy.”
Fast forward to the recent opening day of gun deer season at Barbour, and Pettus headed out with her new .308 rifle to hunt deer and hogs if she saw one.
“I was not really emotional at that point,” she said. “It was usually after the hunt. My daddy was the first one I called. I would tell him if I was in a ground blind or climber, and the wind did this or that.”
Pettus was in a ladder stand on opening day at Barbour when she heard movement nearby.
“I heard them and knew it wasn’t the sound of a deer,” she said. “It was cold, so I thought I’d better get my glove off and get ready. There were actually four hogs, but I could only put eyes on three of them. One of them I really wanted to get because I’d heard the guys talking around the campfire about getting a hog with the biggest cutters (lower canine teeth called tusks). I guess that’s the equivalent of bragging rights like the antlers on a deer.
“I saw the boar with these big ol’ cutters, but they’re not like deer. They don’t go slow. Deer will browse, but these rascals were going somewhere with a purpose. There were so many palmettos that I lost the opportunity to get a shot at that one. I was always told to go for the head or right behind the ear on a hog, but I didn’t have the opportunity on the sow. I didn’t know it was a sow at the time. It was like, it’s now or never Daddy.”