Hogs and helicopters, can I clear this up for you folks!

A completely off the wall thought. Large predators in particular the Tiger is under intense pressure. Northern Australia is not very far from Tigers origanal range - they were present in most of Indonesia. Northern Australia has a large population of large Asian ungulates - notably Buffalo and Banteng. What about using some of the wilder areas to create reserve populations of Tigers at the same time controlling Buffalo.

Texas use to be home to the Jaguar and there is now plenty of prey in the form pigs.

Mankind has found it quite easy to eliminate populations of wild animals in many parts of the world. Should n’t we think about trying to reverse the situation??

And probably more economic than paying for helicopters, cullers etc etc

That would be epic Tasmanian tiger V2 😂.
 
A completely off the wall thought. Large predators in particular the Tiger is under intense pressure. Northern Australia is not very far from Tigers origanal range - they were present in most of Indonesia. Northern Australia has a large population of large Asian ungulates - notably Buffalo and Banteng. What about using some of the wilder areas to create reserve populations of Tigers at the same time controlling Buffalo.

Texas use to be home to the Jaguar and there is now plenty of prey in the form pigs.

Mankind has found it quite easy to eliminate populations of wild animals in many parts of the world. Should n’t we think about trying to reverse the situation??

And probably more economic than paying for helicopters, cullers etc etc
Economics. That's another reason you see the pay and blast thing. The rancher does not have to pay for the pigs to be shot, the shooters do.
 
Seems to me it’s not illegal otherwise it would be shut down sharpish.

So what we’re left with is that you don’t like them calling it hunting..........

By the way we don’t call what we do here Deer hunting but in the US that’s exactly what it would be called.
That’s spot on.
 
Helli hoggin - Texas style. First time I saw anything like this! Phil Collins followed by ring of fire! Great way to show the world how seriously things are done in the good ole USA!
 
It kind of shoots down your argument that it’s just pest control when numerous outfits in TX are selling ‘Helicopter Hog Hunts’.

seems like that’s what all the outfits are calling it so that’s what everyone’s going to think of it as.......

£££££££££££££££££££££££& more ££££££££££££££ is all they see, look at the gung Ho advertising,I Agree with AGOW

But these boys are making good£££££, but it ain't hunting,

As AGOW has said its vermin control, and if the outfitters can make a few£ fair play ,

But the thought behind it ( anyone picking up a semi auto , for the buzz of killing is wrong)

That's the fine line ..... This outfit should be playing HALO from an armchair

But if the pros do it ( as AGOW has stated ) that's a different matter all together

Kjf
 
£££££££££££££££££££££££& more ££££££££££££££ is all they see, look at the gung Ho advertising,I Agree with AGOW

But these boys are making good£££££, but it ain't hunting,

As AGOW has said its vermin control, and if the outfitters can make a few£ fair play ,

But the thought behind it ( anyone picking up a semi auto , for the buzz of killing is wrong)

That's the fine line ..... This outfit should be playing HALO from an armchair

But if the pros do it ( as AGOW has stated ) that's a different matter all together

Kjf
Ranching/farming is a tough go even under the best of conditions. Having to deal with a hoard of hogs can be the straw that breaks the camels back. What many don’t understand when they see the helicopter 🚁 gunning is that it would cost a rancher dearly to hire it done. A rancher by leasing his land to the chopper gunners or charging a fee for each trip, might actually be able to make some money or at least save his operation. I would bet that the worst hit properties don’t even ask the choppers for a lease fee or any other $.
 
The law does! This is not legal hunting. This is not hunting allowed by the law.
Rather depends on the jurisdiction as you well know. Not endorsing or bashing. The heli hog video I have seen clearly stated feral hog control not "hunting".
You can hunt them in a conventional manner.
 
The debate, on the internet:

Today, arguing for, we have The Truth About Guns.
The Truth About Guns: On The Ethics Of Shooting Hogs From Helicopters

And arguing against, we have The Sun.
The Sun: High-rolling hunters fork out £2,000 to blast terrified pigs from helicopters with machine guns for two hours

In today’s audience, we have the Common Suburban Man, Woman, Teenager and Child. None of whom understand anything about agrarian practices in the Southern United States of America. The winner of today’s debate will be judged on Facebook, with Likes.

Ready... Steady... GO!
 
The debate, on the internet:

Today, arguing for, we have The Truth About Guns.
The Truth About Guns: On The Ethics Of Shooting Hogs From Helicopters

And arguing against, we have The Sun.
The Sun: High-rolling hunters fork out £2,000 to blast terrified pigs from helicopters with machine guns for two hours

In today’s audience, we have the Common Suburban Man, Woman, Teenager and Child. None of whom understand anything about agrarian practices in the Southern United States of America. The winner of today’s debate will be judged on Facebook, with Likes.

Ready... Steady... GO!
That’s really what I would hate to see.
 
Not sure if this should be posted in this section because it’s not really about big game, here goes though. Over the last several years I have read where many of you are just sickened by the videos of people machine gunning hogs from helicopters. You spout it as barbaric hunting and unsportsmanlike etc. It is not hunting!! It is varmint extermination!!!!!!!!! I don’t believe there is any state where you can hunt anything from the air, not even in Texas. Many states do not allow you to even hunt big game on the same day you fly in a private plane. No state allows full automatic firearms for hunting big game, or even small game for that matter. The fact is that hogs in Texas and other places, cause extensive damage costing BILLIONS of $$$$$. Drastic measures have been taken to correct the problem. When you see hogs being shot out of helicopters, you are seeing varmints being exterminated. The guys doing it are not hunting, they are not big game hunters, they are people eradicating varmints. Full fing stop!!!!! Do you feel sorry when someone uses poison spray to kill a cockroach? Same thing. Don’t confuse exterminators with hunters.
I agree somewhat to what you say...,,but having lived there (not a far distance from one of the most popular ones in north Texas - Sky Hunter) please explain, if it’s simply for efficient pest control why cash paying Walter mitty’s (usually overweight) are allowed to unleash their custom AR with all the add-on’s in camo clothing (not sure why that’s required in a helicopter?) are allowed to perform the task (and from many of the videos available online- are not really up to the task of cleanly killing a moving animal from a Helicopter)

I don’t mind a sensible defence of something, but when it’s clearly a commercial venture which caters from many people with a “nam” complex....it’s hard to justify it.

if it was about efficient control, most of the farms up around the state line and red river area I spoke to used drop cages and just good old fashioned ground hunting, sometimes with groups of people waiting to hit a group of hogs, which would hopefully cull high number before they ran off.

regards,
Gixer
 
So, why don't people eat them then rather than cows, which are not adapted to the local environment and so are very expensive to rear?
 
Well, let’s put a plate of feral hog and a plate of prime beef in front of you and see which one you prefer.....
 
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Well, let’s put a plate of feral hog and a plate of prime beef in front of you and see which one you prefer.....
Another name for feral hog is wild boar, and you can put as much of that in front of me as you like...!

As for prime beef.... breads like Limousin and Charolait are little more than dog food. Aberdeen Angus is not much better. The best beef in my experience is slow grown Galloway, properly hung. But for all that, I would still set that aside for a plate of wild boar.
 
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As a commercial beef producer (Angus Charolais cross) I could embark on a lengthy diatribe to re-educate you.

But you’re kind of right.

I haven’t bought beef from a supermarket for so long I’d be guessing when. When I have the misfortune to eat some at a friend’s barbecue or wherever, it’s always a huge disappointment.

But I’m sure you are aware how top-class prime beef is produced graded and selected for use in the kinds of restaurants where the beef is super tasty and perfect texture. The preparation of prime beef for the sharp end of the market is completely different in every aspect to the common or garden fare that the normal man buys from Waitrose.

For example our homekill beef is regularly commented on as the best beef someone has ever eaten, and that compliment has been paid by other beef producers, including pure bred Angus. And it’s simply because our home paddock beef steers are treated like royalty and get the best of everything until they are well past the normal killing age. What might surprise you is that usually our homekill beef is Friesian cross Hereford, a right mongrel and not one of the “name brands” like Angus. In New Zealand they are known as black white faces or brown white faces.

The reason we use dairy cows crossed with small Hereford bulls is because they put on weight slowly. They are not genetically predisposed to become as big as possible as quick as possible. As long as the feed is plentiful and decent quality then they will grow out with a sensible proportion of muscle mass to bone structure. The trick is to leave them to add condition past the end of the second summer grass growing season. By this time they have finished the majority of their growth and now they are just putting on fat and filling out. The marbling in the meat is extraordinary. If I put a plate of my beef in front of you, you will think you are eating at the table of Helios.

Back to feral pigs or hogs or boar or whatever we shall choose to call them. There is as much genetic variety within the various populations around the world as the Pavement Special dog of unknown parentage. Having hunted and eaten feral pigs in New Zealand, Australia (against advice), America, Britain, France, Germany and Portugal, I can say with absolute certainty is that not all feral pigs are created equally... I’ve been served some pig that was downright delicious and other pig that has been all but inedible. And to be honest my palate doesn’t particularly agree with gamey meat, for instance I will spot a post-rut stag from a yearling hind instantly.

And therein lies the challenge with the hogs of Texas and elsewhere... (a) you’re not sure what you’re going to get in terms of quality, (b) the meat can taste too gamey for many, (c) the market demands homogeneity in all aspects. Feral hogs are omnivorous of course, they eat a huge array of different foods and the simple fact is no one likes eating animals that eat the rotten carcasses of their own. The best way for a farmer in Texas to clean up all the feral hogs shot from the helicopter is to allow the other hogs to eat them.... uuurrggghhh. Maybe I’m spoiled that I have zero inclination to eat the pigs of our property that I know have been scavenging our dead livestock dumps.

The feral pigs that come from deep within the New Zealand bush and forests such as the Whanganui are a completely different proposition. They don’t get to see dead livestock, they are proper pigs and make a living from rooting and berries primarily, and limited browsing around on the few grassed clearings that far into the timber. But you don’t get to see them very often.

I’m sure the reality of trying to shoot / recover / process / enter foodchain feral hogs is no less onerous than all the wasted meat in the Aussie outback - camels and scrub bulls primarily. There’s just no way of economically delivering meat from those animals in those locations to the supermarket shelf whilst adhering to today’s food standards. And considering it’s likely to be a small market anyway, because people will turn their noses up to feral hog, then who is going to bother?
 
I agree somewhat to what you say...,,but having lived there (not a far distance from one of the most popular ones in north Texas - Sky Hunter) please explain, if it’s simply for efficient pest control why cash paying Walter mitty’s (usually overweight) are allowed to unleash their custom AR with all the add-on’s in camo clothing (not sure why that’s required in a helicopter?) are allowed to perform the task (and from many of the videos available online- are not really up to the task of cleanly killing a moving animal from a Helicopter)

I don’t mind a sensible defence of something, but when it’s clearly a commercial venture which caters from many people with a “nam” complex....it’s hard to justify it.

if it was about efficient control, most of the farms up around the state line and red river area I spoke to used drop cages and just good old fashioned ground hunting, sometimes with groups of people waiting to hit a group of hogs, which would hopefully cull high number before they ran off.

regards,
Gixer
Gixer,
You miss my point entirely. I’m not defending it, don’t really give a rip about it. I just want people not to confuse this with hunting.
 
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