Feral hogs in Texas

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mrrick

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October 29, 2006
With Hands and Hounds, Stalking Feral Hogs in Texas
By TIM EATON

ASPERMONT, Tex. — On a moonless October night, with the Milky Way staining the West Texas sky, a burly man in overalls turned off the engine of his mud-caked white Toyota truck. Yelps from coyotes and an owl’s hoot occasionally broke the silence. Then, from an open field, Bob Richardson heard the noise he had been awaiting.

Four of his short-haired scent hounds, which had been released earlier, began to bark from the darkness. Mr. Richardson jumped out of the truck and freed a black pit bull from a cage on the truck’s flatbed. He chased after his pit bull into the darkness toward the barking hounds.

He tripped in a wet ditch but kept running through the milo stalks. When he got to the baying dogs, the light on his miner’s hat revealed that the pit bull, trained for just this purpose, had clamped onto the face of a feral hog.

As he had done thousands of times before, Mr. Richardson, 58, pounced on the snorting beast and tied its feet together, immobilizing it. Within minutes, he had loaded the animal barehanded into a cage.

Mr. Richardson used to run through this brush land northwest of Abilene without any shoes, hence his nickname: Barefoot Bob. But when he worked for the fire department in Abilene, his bosses demanded he don footwear. Now, he wears sneakers, which he buys in bulk at Wal-Mart.

A lot of people in rural Texas catch wild hogs, which can grow to several hundred pounds, and Mr. Richardson traps them like most others. But there is sometimes a twist to Mr. Richardson’s hunts — he spends a few nights a week cruising the dirt roads of Stonewall County, a place with more hogs than people, to run down the wild animals using only his dogs and his bare hands.

“It’s for fun,” he said.

It has also become lucrative as Europeans and an increasing number of Americans clamor for wild boar. Mr. Richardson said he made $28,000 last year selling live feral hogs.

“I think it’s a great health-conscious niche market,” said Dick Koehler, one of Mr. Richardson’s customers and the vice president of Frontier Meats, based in Fort Worth. “It has real potential for growth.”

Mr. Koehler said that about 60 percent of the processed hog meat from his plant ended up on the tables of fancy restaurants in Europe, but that its popularity was growing in the United States. Each year, his company ships more and more hog meat to American restaurants and specialty supermarkets to feed the demands for organic food, Mr. Koehler said.

Even if the taste for wild boar gains a much wider following, there is little chance of overhunting the hogs any time soon.

The animals were introduced to North America as a food source in 1539 by the Spanish conquistador Hernando de Soto, said Billy Higginbotham, a wildlife specialist with the Texas A&M Agricultural Research and Extension Center at Overton.

During the 1800s and 1900s, escaped domestic pigs became feral, sprouted tusks and grew coarse black hair. They crossbred with Russian boars, brought to North America for food and sport. The resulting hybrid wild boar has spread across the country, increasing in number to an estimated four million in 39 states, Mr. Higginbotham said.

The population of feral hogs has ballooned for a combination of reasons, Mr. Higginbotham said. For one, he said, they are intelligent animals. Also, they will eat just about anything and are highly adaptable to changing food sources.

Wild pigs are prolific breeders. A sow can be ready for her first litter of four to six offspring within six months, and a mature sow can birth two litters a year, Mr. Higginbotham said.

In Texas, hunters bait deer with 300 million pounds of corn annually, he said, and the hogs eat a large percentage of the bait. Hunters sometimes capture feral hogs and release them into areas of the state where they had not lived before.

Wild hogs can bring new problems. In Texas alone, the aggressive, omnivorous and razor-toothed animals cause nearly $52 million in damage a year to farmland, livestock and pastures, according to the Texas Cooperative Extension.

Jerry Eddins, the owner of the 10,000-acre J. Duke Ranch where Mr. Richardson hunts, is a serious quail hunter. Every year, he spreads grain to feed the birds, but hogs eat the bird food, along with whatever quail eggs they come across.

“They eat anything. They really don’t have a natural predator,” Mr. Eddins said. “So, Barefoot Bob Richardson is the natural predator.”
 
Those things would be fun to hunt, do they have any in California, Nevada or Arizona. It would be too hard to drive to Texas to hunt them.
 
Yes they have them in calif. we recently went on a hunt and although we didnt see any hogs eating acorns while out hunting for them, they apparently invaded our cabin drank our beer and had a grand ol time;)

try here for more info http://www.boaring.com/
 

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Feral hogs are common just about anywhere...

that country folks used to keep hogs. In the 19th century and probably in the first half of the twentienth, in many parts of the south, hogs were not kept penned up, but rather left to range free and forage for themselves. People would cut a specific notch in the ear of their own hogs to mark them. Sort of like a brand. They would round them up like cattle a few times a year and mark the young ones. They had hog dogs even then. Of course when you wanted hogs for slaughter, you just caught them and penned them up for a while to fatten them.
As fewer and fewer people kept hogs this way, the animals would just be left to go wild. And some have definitely crossbred with Russian or European swine that were imported for sport hunting. Either way they make for very sporting hunting, although in many places they have become completely nocturnal. You'll seldom see them in the day time.
Here in Texas as this post says, people either hunt hem with dogs, or shoot them over lighted baited blinds at night. You'll also certainly occasionally see a few early and late in the day while deer or turkey hunting.
 
they are in every state in the union, i believe, with the exception of Alaska and hawaii. A lot of states have no season and no limit on hogs, I think, and in Texas, if it is your own land, go for them all.
 
As I was told on my first Texas hog hunt; "They don't care if you shoot 'em with an AK47 at midnight, just kill 'em all."
 
I had my first experience with wild boar a couple of weeks ago, along I-40. As I observed them looking for food on the side of the road, I had to wonder . . . what caliber is good for popping them?

If they are so prevalent that they are getting on the roads like deer around here (which was something that prior to recent memory never occurred), it's time to get the grill going and bring some home.
 
[QUOTEthey are in every state in the union, i believe, with the exception of Alaska and hawaii. ][/QUOTE] lots of hogs in hawaii
 
Going to Texas in December to do what?? You guessed it!! I went in March and going back again,, all expense paid for work/business trip. Yippie!
 
I have worked in the area around Aspermont, TX and know several of the land owners around there. I have seen several wild hogs as roadkill on the state highways around there.

One of the owners I know up there leases his acreage and is a guide for wild hog hunting. He told me that several years ago they would pay people to come and shoot them, now people are paying them to go on the hunts. He also told me that he stopped one with a .357 Sig with a head shot. I think just about all rifle calibers will stop them with a well-placed shot, but don't get them angry with a miss, or by winging them, they are known to go after poor marksmen. ;)

They are actually good eating, from what I have heard.
 
Here in Washington state, DNR classifies them as a "non-native destructive species." Which means open season, no license or tags required to hunt them.

Their range has diminished considerably since DNR made that decision.
 
"lots of hogs in hawaii"
You don't mean the tourists, do you? :neener:

I hear that .30 carbine and up can do the job fine... maybe even 9mm, and I seem to recall that someone used 7.62x25 Tokarev on one.
 
I travel down to Eagle Pass, Del Rio, Laredo for business.

I have found the best caliber for feral hogs is an 18 wheeler.

They seem to do a nice job on them. :evil:

Seriously, when I am driving at night down there on the back roads, you can see their eyes in your headlights as you drive down the road.

Gotta be careful, hit a big one and it can do a number on your car.
 
Hogs

Just want to add that it is a good time to hunt them in November.
When the full moon is bright and they are out there looking for some good roots. Fall brings the sap back into the root and Ymmmmy.

Guns are good, I have decided to bring the one with a bayonet in case I get to skirmish:what:

HQ;)
 
In Texas, hunters bait deer with 300 million pounds of corn annually, he said, and the hogs eat a large percentage of the bait.

Yeah, no kiddin'. :rolleyes: It can really P you off when the sun rises and you see your feeder turned on its side from the hogs beating it up.

Usually, the hog ain't tied up, he's stuck in the neck with a sharp knife and bled out. I've been on a few of these night time chases. We used filet knives. Not very tacticool I guess, but quite effective. They're sharp and everyone down here has one (for fish cleaning, normally).

I have found the best caliber for feral hogs is an 18 wheeler.

Maybe, but don't use a smaller caliber, like say, a Nissan 200SX. Or, if you do, make danged sure you have comprehensive and collision insurance coverage. And, wear a motorcycle helmet when you're "hunting". Dange air bags can leave a bruise!
 
This week, I saw a story on ABC News (see below) on this issue. I just did a search in Hunting to find out more and found this thread.

Interesting read.

I'm curious about other stories about: 1) what kinds of damage are they doing to property, and 2) just how "dangerous" are they to folks, with or without guns. Can any of you offer stories of injuries to people?

Here's that ABC News story.

Nem

added by edit: PS: I just found this longer ABC story on hogs in Florida.
___________

Hog Wild! Feral Pigs Invade Texas

Millions of Pigs Eat Their Way Through Farms, Frustrating Owners

By MIKE VON FREMD

DEL RIO, Texas, Nov. 13, 2006 — A million dangerous pigs are roaming Texas soil, challenging farmers and devouring their crops.

These animals have ravenous appetites and no natural predator in Texas. With the feral pig population exploding, game wardens are begging hunters to go after the wild animals.

"I often tell people to think of a feral hog as a four-legged fire ant," said Billy Higginbotham of the Texas Extension Cooperative, which offers Texas A&M research to state residents. "We are not going to eradicate them; what our hope is that we can reduce their population to reduce damage."

That damage is costing farmers $50 million a year, and one farmer said his attempts to keep them out failed. "In my sweet potato patch last year, I bought an electric fence [and] it has no effect on them," said farmer Lemar Bass.

"There are only two types of landowners in the state of Texas — those that have feral hogs and those that are about to have feral hogs," Higginbotham said.

"If it has a calorie, they will eat it," added hunter Bob Richardson.

Hunting Season

The Spanish conquistador Hernando de Soto brought the hogs to America in 1539 and now they are eating crops, chicken and sheep.

With game wardens asking hunters to target the feral pigs, hundreds of thousands of sportsmen are flocking to Texas, thrilled at the chance to bag the big one.

"There is some mystique about them; you know, he is called 'the poor man's grisly bear' and there is a certain amount of danger hunting them," said hunting lodge owner Maurice Chambers.

But not all are convinced this approach will work. "You are not going to control the feral hog population by hunting — they are smart," Higginbotham said.

"The wild hog just has the better intelligence of any wild animal living — they are just very brilliant animals," Chambers said.

That is, brilliant and unfettered as they chomp their way across the Lone Star State.
 
I've seen places where a bunch of hogs had rooted around and it looked like somebody got drunk and went to playing with a backhoe.

They'll kill and eat kids and lambs, as well as quail nests. If a bunch of them gets into a field of young corn, or into a garden plot, there's not gonna be much left.

If I said what I really think about those critters, I'd have to ban myself...

Art
 
Quote: "Can any of you offer stories of injuries to people?"

Go to Texas Patks and Wildlife web site and check out Hunting "Accident Reports". You'll see that the real danger, comes not so much from the hogs, but people getting excited and careless, often in lousy light.
 
Go to Texas Patks and Wildlife web site and check out Hunting "Accident Reports". You'll see that the real danger, comes not so much from the hogs, but people getting excited and careless, often in lousy light.
Interesting reading, especially beginning around page 8 of the 2005 TEXAS HUNTING ACCIDENTS ANALYSIS.

Here are two examples.

"Shooter and three companions were in a hunting competition hunting at night for hogs. Shooter mistook victim for a hog about 30 yards away and despite two warnings not to shoot from a fellow hunter he carelessly shot his rifle. Victim was wearing a white cowboy hat and tee shirt. The bullet struck victim through both buttocks." :what:

"Victim was covered by shooter swinging on game outside of his safe zone of fire. Victim, who had been sitting back in the golf cart, changed position without telling shooter. One pellet each struck victim above his right eye and cheek."

I'm trying to interpret that second one.

1) Texans are now combining hunting with golf?
2) Hogs are a nuisance even on golf courses, so the .30-30 rides along side the drivers & irons in the bag?

(Oh, but wait: it was a shotgun accident. So the quail & doves are out of control, too? Nobody shoots hogs with shotguns, right?)

OK, I'm kidding about the golf cart, quail and doves, but serious about the shotgun question: is anyone taking hogs with shotguns? I guess slugs would be fine, but not 00, let alone something lighter...?
 
(mental note keep any children away from hogs.) lol i saw that too and was like "ok...." they would probably eat a little kid as gruesome as it is. They are pretty vicious S.O.B.s. A guy i know had a run in with one and it charged him. he shot it b4 it got to him though :eek:


And hell yes, you havent ever heard of Golfcart hunting?.... Its only for EXTREME hunters ;)
 
Quote: "I guess slugs would be fine, but not 00, let alone something lighter...?"

Altho some like 00 buck and go for head/neck shots up close, slugs penetrate much better.

And "lighter" can work too in a pinch. ' Had a 19-year-old in class a year or three back who said he got into to 'em at 5:00 a.m. while going to duck honey hole on Lake Lewsiville. Put down 3 in "self defense" at reeeeeal close range with duck loads. (Methinks pigs wuz probably just trying to get out of Dodge, which is often the case when some think being "attacked".)
 
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