nowarningshot
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
Claim they are invasive, not traditional; therefore, not able to be hunted by indigenous peoplekind. Release the story to canadian press.
Your welcome.
Your welcome.
trapping is not working period ... if source of food is available for them they are very hard to eradicate as i wrote earlier in the same thread.
Alabama, Georgia and Texas we see many examples of very successful captures of wild boar sounders. I wonder if the more northern states have equal success using similar trapping methods?
So my real question here: does, crops, terrain, weather and warmer temps contribute to more successful trapping of wild boar?
Snowbirds did a show over the weekend..Got me thinking??
Slow moving jets with napalm cannisters on the wings
Can anyone tell me how many hard points the wings have??
I'm thinking BBQ
As I wrote earlier in the thread trapping can indeed be effective to reduce wild pig populations when done properly. It is certainly much more effective than hunting.
"Wild pigs can be managed through small-scale exclusion, trapping, and/or shooting. While recreational hunting is often a preferred method, it is not effective at controlling wild pig population growth. Trapping, however, is highly effective at controlling and reducing wild pig population growth. All methods of control are only effective long-term if adjacent property owners work together cooperatively to reduce population size; otherwise, even the most efficient wild pig removal programs will suffer from frequent reinvasion from neighboring pig populations."
http://ipm.ucanr.edu/PMG/PESTNOTES/pn74170.html
Overblown media hype. Heavily populated European countries like Germany have somehow survived with wild boar for decades. Our climate won't allow them to be as prolific as they are in the southern states. Those are also not wild boar, but ones that have cross bred with domestic pigs many years ago, so their litter size and rate of multiplying is far greater than that of a wild boar.
Overblown media hype. Heavily populated European countries like Germany have somehow survived with wild boar for decades. Our climate won't allow them to be as prolific as they are in the southern states. Those are also not wild boar, but ones that have cross bred with domestic pigs many years ago, so their litter size and rate of multiplying is far greater than that of a wild boar.
Bounties won’t work
Trapping isn’t keeping the numbers down
Leaving it to hunters won’t work
The pigs are with us forever now
The problem is you can’t get at them. Crops in the fields
Farmers won’t allow you access to the bush.
The bush where the pigs live are too vast to hunt.
Farmers dumping tons of burnt/spoiled grain in the bush doesn’t help
We have had too much snow to access the swamps where they are
And your not allowed to carry a firearm on a snow machine.which doesn’t help.
Also the hunting laws prevent you too, can’t hunt of a night nor can you use dogs.
Sask also doesn’t allow the placing of bait purposely to attract pigs ( who the Fck thought that one up)
The odds are constantly in favour of the pigs.
I’ve seen piglets the size of my hand in middle of February-30c
Maybe not a bounty per say, but a prize for each hog eliminated.
Get one token per hog, and save them up to get a better prize with each token earned.
1 token - Baseball cap with "Successful Hog Hunter" on it.
5 tokens - Hoodie with "Hog Hunter"
100 tokens - 1 lb of powder of your choice, delivered(when available).