texasjohn
Super Member
ROX... you need to define "problem pig"
My definition of problem is damage (current or future) that is more than you are willing to take compared to the cost of removing the damaging entity.
You have already indicated that you are having to repair damage. This will continue unless the damaging entity (the hog or hogs) are removed. I predict that you will reach your tolerance level rather soon if it has not already been reached... be aware that Eddie is unique in being able to sight and remove numerous animals in a rather short period of time. Typically it takes more effort to "get your hog"
I bow to Eddie and Steph... they are HUNTERS and I wish I were doing as well with my coyote problem as they are with their hogs
I have learned from you that the wild hog population in France is at least as significant as it is here in Texas... who would have thought that France and Texas would have had anything in common since the French abandoned Texas around 1684.
Eddie is right... there is no reason to not eat wild hog...just make sure it is well cooked... the raw meat can on occasion have parasites living in it... a well known phenomena and fully solved by cooking properly...
If you trap the hogs, you can make sure of a very clean kill since you will be close to the animal and can call your shots. Any animal shot thru the gut with all the insides strewn around will smell... even when fresh... that's just the way life is. Alternatively, a head shot and carefully cleaned animal results in no lost meat and only wholesum smells of blood and meat. My sons and I shoot deer ONLY in the head... we each learned the hard way in our youth that any other kind of shot causes varying problems. If we can't hit the head with certainty, we don't shoot. This makes the cleaning chore much more pleasant. Makes following the blood trail a lot shorter, too
Keep us up to date on the progress of your olives and hogs! Maybe we should try olives here.... we have droughts here too
My definition of problem is damage (current or future) that is more than you are willing to take compared to the cost of removing the damaging entity.
You have already indicated that you are having to repair damage. This will continue unless the damaging entity (the hog or hogs) are removed. I predict that you will reach your tolerance level rather soon if it has not already been reached... be aware that Eddie is unique in being able to sight and remove numerous animals in a rather short period of time. Typically it takes more effort to "get your hog"
I have learned from you that the wild hog population in France is at least as significant as it is here in Texas... who would have thought that France and Texas would have had anything in common since the French abandoned Texas around 1684.
Eddie is right... there is no reason to not eat wild hog...just make sure it is well cooked... the raw meat can on occasion have parasites living in it... a well known phenomena and fully solved by cooking properly...
If you trap the hogs, you can make sure of a very clean kill since you will be close to the animal and can call your shots. Any animal shot thru the gut with all the insides strewn around will smell... even when fresh... that's just the way life is. Alternatively, a head shot and carefully cleaned animal results in no lost meat and only wholesum smells of blood and meat. My sons and I shoot deer ONLY in the head... we each learned the hard way in our youth that any other kind of shot causes varying problems. If we can't hit the head with certainty, we don't shoot. This makes the cleaning chore much more pleasant. Makes following the blood trail a lot shorter, too
Keep us up to date on the progress of your olives and hogs! Maybe we should try olives here.... we have droughts here too