News Article;Culling feral hogs from the sky

Wedgy

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Nothing new but it's getting to the mainstream media. The Humane Society is against it because it's "costly compared to other wild pig control methods"

Culling feral hogs from the sky in Texas takes off | Reuters

. | Mon Jun 12, 2017 | 10:22am EDT
Culling feral hogs from the sky in Texas takes off




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Ammunition is shown in the back of a helicopter during a wild hog helicopter hunt, near Houston, Texas, U.S. in this undated handout photo provided June 10, 2017. Courtesy Helibacon/Handout via REUTERS

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Unidentified participants take part in a wild hog helicopter hunt near Houston, Texas, U.S. in this undated handout photo provided June 10, 2017. Courtesy Helibacon/Handout via REUTERS

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Unidentified participants pose for a photo after taking part in a wild hog helicopter hunt near Houston, Texas, U.S. in this undated handout photo provided June 10, 2017. Courtesy Helibacon/Handout via REUTERS

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FILE PHOTO - Feral swine are pictured in this undated NASA photo released by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Courtesy NASA/USDA APHIS/Handout via REUTERS

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Unidentified participants are shown from a helicopter taking part in a wild hog helicopter hunt near Houston, Texas, U.S. in this undated handout photo provided June 10, 2017. Courtesy Helibacon/Handout via REUTERS

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Ammunition is shown in the back of a helicopter during a wild hog helicopter hunt, near Houston, Texas, U.S. in this undated handout photo provided June 10, 2017. Courtesy Helibacon/Handout via REUTERS

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Unidentified participants take part in a wild hog helicopter hunt near Houston, Texas, U.S. in this undated handout photo provided June 10, 2017. Courtesy Helibacon/Handout via REUTERS

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By Michael Hirtzer
In Texas, the pigs do not fly but the hunters do.
Tourists looking for ever more thrilling holidays are taking to the skies above Texas to shoot wild hogs as part of the state's effort to limit the spread of an invasive species that annually causes millions of dollars in damage to farmland and livestock nationally.
For up to $50,000, people can hunt the feral hogs from a helicopter and even use a machine gun to mow them down.
"There's only so many places in the world you can shoot machine guns out of a helicopter and no one shoots back," said Chris Britt, co-owner of HeliBacon, one of the companies offering the aerial hog hunts.
HeliBacon says its customers alone gunned down about 10,000 feral hogs in the last 18 months, but that barely makes a dent in the Texas' population of more than 2 million, a total higher than any other state.
There were 2,752 helicopter hog hunts in Texas last year, up 81 percent from 2011, according to Texas Parks and Wildlife Department data. About 34,400 hogs were killed in those hunts, up 53 percent.
The total U.S. population of the hogs is estimated at more than 6 million, and state and federal government officials are increasing efforts to rid themselves of the pesky animals.
There are nearly 150 companies and individuals permitted to hunt invasive feral hogs from helicopters as part of the Texas' so-called pork chopper bill passed in 2011. State legislators last month sent a bill to Governor Greg Abbott that would allow hog hunting from hot air balloons.

VULTURE FOOD
At HeliBacon, based south of Dallas, packages for two start at about $3,600 and corporate group packages cost as much as $50,000, including airfare, lodging, ammunition, trophy photos and upgrades from semi- to fully automatic firearms.
"They love it," Britt said of his customers that include father-and-son trips and groups from the oil industry. "They don't take the meat, it becomes vulture food."
Animals rights activists are not fans.
"The Humane Society of the United States opposes the use of aerial gunning – whether from a helicopter or a hot air balloon – as a means of resolving conflicts with wildlife populations because it is unnecessarily cruel, dangerous and costly compared to other wild pig control methods," said Samantha Hagio, a director at the agency.
However, aerial hunting is one of the most effective ways to eradicate hogs in open areas such as Texas fields of corn and rice that are destroyed, said Jack Mayer, manager of environmental sciences at Georgia's Savannah River Laboratory and author of "Wild Pigs in the United States."
Even so, hunting and trapping are not keeping up with the rate of breeding and the feral herd continues to grow.
"You are not even stemming the tide," Mayer said by phone.


Wild boars were brought to Texas and released for hunting in the 1930s. They bred with free-ranging domestic animals and escapees that had adapted to the wild, according to the Smithsonian. Since hogs, wild or otherwise, are not native to the United States, they have no predators and proliferated across Texas and other states.
About $25.55 million was appropriated this year to the U.S. Department of Agriculture to tackle feral hogs on the national level and the agency is testing unmanned drones to track the hogs that thrive in swamps and forests, said Dale Nolte, the USDA's feral swine program manager.
Helicopter hunting already is allowed in Louisiana and Oklahoma legislators are considering a bill that would permit aerial hunts there.
Hot air balloons could allow hunters to approach hogs more quietly than a helicopter or give shooters a steadier shot, Mayer said.
In South Carolina, where aerial hog hunting is not permitted, farmer Rusty Kinard pays a local hunter $25 for each hog killed on his land. Still, there are hundreds near his fields and the hogs ate through nearly 30 acres (12 hectares) of peanuts last month.
"We will kill them suckers, every one we can," he said.
 
Since hogs, wild or otherwise, are not native to the United States, they have no predators and proliferated across Texas and other states.

I have seen this statement in various forms and it is one of just plain ignorance and is wrong. Usually, the comment is that they don't have any "natural predators" here in the US, which is the gist of what is being stated.

Horses, cattle, domestic goats, sheep, domestic cats, chickens, pheasant, etc. are all non-native to the US and all have predators. Being non-native has nothing to do with it. Coyotes prey on them. Bears prey on them. Alligators prey on them. Mountain lions preh on them. Wolves prey on them. Predators don't care whether or not their prey is native or non-native. The problem is that we have so few predators now that will/can prey on hogs. We have so few predators that do them because we have killed off so many of them.

Wolves, smaller canids, and bears certainly eat hogs in the Old World as do big cats and crocodilians. We have some of the same types of predators, and in some cases, the same species of predators in the New World that eat hogs in the Old World. So to say that they aren't being eaten because the are non-native is just plain silly.
 
Normally I applaud the efforts of the Humane Society, but I have to wonder what snowflake wrote this press release? It is easy to object to aerial hunting when it is not your land, your way of life, and your livelihood being destroyed. I'm sure some farmers have been put out of business due to the high cost of hog damage.

I'd love to try this, but I get extremely air sick. I'd probably start throwing up before I got 10' off the ground.
 
I don't think they have anything to worry about here in Missouri because the state has tried to kill them from the air and shot one yet. In the area I live anyway
 
I'd love to try this, but I get extremely air sick. I'd probably start throwing up before I got 10' off the ground.[/QUOTE]

I wouldn't count on it. I have not gone fishing in 20 years as I can not make it out of the channel before I'm sic. I can't ride in the back seat even 7 miles into town, and only about five or six times back and forth on a swing with my son and I'm done. Worst part is if I do get six it affects me for days after. I even got sic on my brothers aircraft carrier in 6 foot waves. I didn't even know the boat was moving till I puked.
Helicopters are no problem I've never been sick in one and spent lots of hours in the air. I even stopped trying to learn to fly planes as I got sic to fast. Helicopters are no problem. Different motion. My friends dad has several of them ranging from small two person to large jet rangers and I can't think of anyone ever getting sic while in them. So you may be able to try it. I am this winter.
 
About $25.55 million was appropriated this year to the U.S. Department of Agriculture to tackle feral hogs on the national level and the agency is testing unmanned drones to track the hogs that thrive in swamps and forests, said Dale Nolte, the USDA's feral swine program manager.(taken from the op)

Seems it's ok for the Dept. of Agriculture to use Drones but not for the rest of us, humm. ***
 
I applaud the farmer Rusty Kinard for seeking his own solution. He pays a hunter $25 for each hog killed. I ask a rancher this week for permission to try to help with his hog problem that he was complaining to me about. I will give you one guess what he said.
 
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