These are starting to become a problem in Manitoba as well.
Looking forward to eating wild boar, just like my French ancestors did !!
SERM needs to allow landowners to hunt at night ......
wild boars do not multiply like rabbits unless you feed or the food is an easy access ....
in Europe we never any heavy and hardly population up to the day they started to feed and bait them, so i imagine that in Sask. and MB the food is easy and full other than that i dont see it.
for the meat if you treat and cook it well no worries on the gamey part except during the rut that is suppose to be december- January ...
It would be a shame if a truck load of these pigs 'escaped' on vancouver island! I kinda wish I didn't move from Sask 20 years ago (not realy) but might have to come visit to bag a few of these...
you don't want them trust me they are not a game animal and should not be hunted like them(I see this as a common idea here filling the freezer and that's good enough) these are pest they do damage to crops and kill native wildlife best bet is to shoot as many as you can take what you want and leave the rest for the coyotes
Yes... because killing one ove-rexpanding varmint and using it to help sustain another is a great idea.....
Wel yaa!! Bait pile......hello!!![]()
Wel yaa!! Bait pile......hello!!![]()
They are a real problem in much of France and consequently there are very liberal hunting seasons for them.
I drove up to a B&B there one time and the front door was open, nobody around and a standing gun rack in the mud room held about 8 rifles and shotguns.
"We're going to like this place," I told my wife and host was indeed a hunter and we drank wine and told hunting stories all night.
you need to inform the local RM where you are hunting wild pigs and gain permission from that RM's local office
and the landowner



























