Releasing wild boar !

They are covered by the Wildlife and countryside Act 1981 regulates the release of non native species and the Dangerous wild animals Act 1976
 
I think, to keep them, you need a Dangerous Wild Animals Licence. That certainly used to be the case, anyway.
Apart from that, nothing to stop you doing it at all.
I'd use a good stockfence, with three or four strands of high tensile electric around the inside.
 
As someone who keeps pigs, not boar; good stock proof fencing with a couple of lines of electric, on the inside, will keep them in.

Otherwise they just lift the posts out the ground, and walk under.
 
Status of Feral Wild Boar
As a farmed animal, wild boar are subject to the Dangerous Wild Animals Act, 1976. That Act contains provisions for local authorities to licence the keeping of wild boar and specify conditions in the licence to ensure that animals are confined in a way that prevents their escape.

The Wildlife & Countryside Act, 1981 regulates the release of non-native species in the wild. Part 1, Section 14 of that Act makes it an offence to release or allow to escape into the wild, any animal that is not ordinarily resident in, and is not a regular visitor to Great Britain in a wild state, or is otherwise included in Part 1, Schedule 9 of the Act. For clarity, wild boar were added to Schedule 9 in 2010.

However, once wild boar have escaped, or otherwise have been released in contravention of these two Acts the question of their status arises. In 2008, DEFRA published the document ‘Feral Wild Boar in England: An Action Plan’. That document sets out the Government’s position on feral wild boar. The term ‘feral’ is used to clearly differentiate between captive wild boar, and those which have gone ‘feral’, living wild in the countryside. The 2008 Action Plan states that free roaming wild boar are feral wild animals, and do not belong to anyone. Responsibility for controlling feral wild animals rests with individual land owners and land managers, however, the Action Plan stops short of requiring land owners to control feral wild boar, instead the document leaves decision making to individual land owners and local communities.
 
Speaking from experience, forget electric fencing. Unless you can check it every day. 15ac would be a fair run to check.
A few pigs can soon make a mess of a block of woodland if not moved occasionally.
I ended up with ours in a permanent sheep netting pen. They soon rooted holes under the fence.
Ended up with electric just above ground level.
It worked to an extent but virtually everyday they’d root soil onto it and caused it to earth.
All in all a bloody pita.
 
Speaking from experience, forget electric fencing. Unless you can check it every day. 15ac would be a fair run to check.
A few pigs can soon make a mess of a block of woodland if not moved occasionally.
I ended up with ours in a permanent sheep netting pen. They soon rooted holes under the fence.
Ended up with electric just above ground level.
It worked to an extent but virtually everyday they’d root soil onto it and caused it to earth.
All in all a bloody pita.
Say about a sounder of 20 and keep the numbers under control would 15 acres be enough ?
 
And then bred them and put up a high seat or 2 to harvest some meat etc occasionally
Definitely no need for a high seat, just rattle the bucket of feed as 15 acres x 20 pigs will turn it into a wasteland in very quick time. Even high bracken fern is uprooted and they chew the rhizomes deep down resulting in ferns no more. In six months you will have 15 acres of very friable ground.
Fencing is a real problem if they want to leave. Elec fences work when they are on although I have seen big wild boar ignore them and charge through.
 
As JG says I don’t think it’d keep 20 occupied for that long.
We put ours in some very thick bramble and they soon cleared that up.
That reminds me, the bast@rd things would just go through a good electric fence and just take the belt off it. That’s why we ended up with a permanent fence.
 
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