Convoy c8 and javelina.

No, I meant you were behind the hog invasion curve in the PNW…… not the news curve. :slight_smile:

Yeah, I like watching those videos too. Lots of action.

Ok, SE WA… that does seem to be about the only part of your state they have been reported.

I know what you were meaning. You just experienced my lack of info fulfillment as I mentioned earlier. Not intentional, but I sometimes am the reverse to a speed-reader.

I was just summing the invasion up to, when it becomes more pronounced in the news, I might consider making a trip to go help provide the necessary injections ;) :D

:+1: …. I hear ya’ ARsee. :slight_smile: … “Injection Administration” is the fun part…… :wink:
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The real question is did you use the turbo mode or a blinky mode. Inquiring minds want to know.

I am glad that it turned out the way it did.

Inserting a lead tracking device in the right place will usually solve the problem. :smiley:

Bob

Being a Long Island, NY guy, I’ve never heard of a Javelina. We don’t have them here. I personally wouldn’t want to come across one.

You ain’t kidding.

You’d honest to God be amazed at the amount of destruction a sounder (family group) can accomplish in one night.

The state is trying to poison them, but the program was just paused until more study could be done. Many are worried about the effect of the poison on other animals, humans who eat the meat included.

ETA: I’m talking about feral hogs, who are larger, more destructive and much more widespread than the native javelina.

In Texas hogs are able to be taken year round no season on them. I don’t know if its still the same way in my state still in Mississippi. As far as I know you can trap them year round here. They tear up so much farmland and gardens and anything else they can get into. But I wouldn’t go in the woods without a pistol at least. At a plant I use to work at by honey island swamp I hit like 3 of them in under 2 years in my mustang. Just ran across the road out of nowhere. The industrial park was a nature preserve. But they hired a guy to trap them and move them.

On another note glad the light worked. I DD c8 can be very bright. I’ve strobed raccoons with 4k lumens and they just sit there. And other times take off. They take off now they know i mean business to an extent. In city limits now so a shot without a suppressor is a no go. They come to steal the cats food. Had a opossum get snarly when I hit it with a x6 triple strobe. Things get kinda intimidating when you corner one and it can’t see. Threw a can of beans at it made it jump off the deck. Deck is about 5 feet up (All I was willing to lose from the store trip)
I had a friend when we were much much younger get ran up a tree with his bb gun. And it was trying to uproot the tree to get to him. So he kept shoptojg it in the face with BBS and yelling for help. Someone was shooting way in the distance. When they guy got close enough it turned and charged him. And took about 4 shots with a 9mm before it stopped feet before getting him with the tusks. Wild pigs/hogs/javelina etc can be very dangerous. Anyone who has hunting dogs. Has had to stitch their dogs up more then one time with fishing line or had to put one down that got gutted by the hog. The dogs hold the hog down while you come up with a knife and slit the throat

I live right on the edge of the City Limits Speed4goal, but in the City Limits. We had a bunch of Coyotes around here several years ago.

One afternoon late a pack of 7 walked slowly out of the woods, stood and checked me out while I was mowing grass. They were big & healthy too…. not skinny & scraggly. I called the City animal control guy & asked him what I could & couldn’t do “legally”.

He answered…. “On the record…. not much unless they attack. Call us.”
Then he continued…. “Off the record, one shot is about impossible to trace”.

I simply said…. “thank you, I understand completely”. :wink:

The coyote population began to dwindle early the following morning. :wink:

He was right too…. one shot is hard to determine where it came from. :slight_smile:
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edited for clarity. ….

Y’know, up to this point (arrow), I thought you had the biggest-ass nastiest opossums over by you.

The one by me that visits every night to eat leftover catfood just kinda stares at me and waddles away when I open the back door, maybe goes sluggish and plays dead when I go to pet him.

Couldn’t imaging shooting him in the face with BBs and still have him uprooting a tree to get at me.

Jesus…

With those javelinas and hogs and boars and wotdahellever, it makes it sound like a 12ga is the only way to go.

Or just set up some claymores.

Texlite & Speed4goal

When I see a video (which I did) of someone with a private chopper, load guys up with full auto M4's and 249's, my reality, and eyes opened wide. I wouldn't have believed it otherwise. That's taking things to the serious extremes. After watching the chopper fly over the landscape, and the amount of hogs there, HOLY ****. The hogs were in herds, running. Well strap me in. Lets GO!! And I thought watching the night hunts were a rush.

Poisoning them, huh? They better REALLY rethink LONG and HARD before they cut loose something like that. As mentioned, lots to worry about as an aftermath for results. I can imagine a lot of out-of-state hunters want to get in on the fun spree. What the heck though, I can't imagine all the hogs get eaten.

Wouldn’t it just be easier to find the Mother Of All Herds, get ’em into one big wide-open field…

and get a Spectre gunship to do ’em in? Send ’em to <coff> Hawg Heaven.

I can just imagine a chopper full of yayhoos getting mechanical trouble and having to land right smack in the middle of one of those herds. “It’s game over, man! Game over!”

Poisoning? Nah. Sounds like a Good Idea ‘til someone’s favorite coon-hound gets a bellyful of poison and starts bleeding out his eyes and takes a half-hour of painful retching to finally croke. Then it’s no fun anymore. Or when little Jenny is on a camping trip and somehow manages to stick some colorful nuggets in her mouth, then ends up meeting ol’ Zeke the coon-hound.

The state had these feeders built with weighted steel trap doors, hogs were supposed to be the only critters with a snout strong enough to open them. If you’ve ever seen hogs eat though, I’d imagine they’d leave enough scattered around for another animal to pick up. Warfarin is what they’re using, the blood thinner they give to heart patients, my dad was on it for years. In large doses the animal hemorrhages and dies. Many of these feral hogs that are trapped are sold to vendors who sell them overseas. I have a relative who’s traps and sells to a buyer, they buy everything, even the old stinky boars. One of the concerns was that a poisoned animal would be killed and eaten by someone, or something else in the food chain after it died, like coyotes, buzzards or wolves. Wolves have been almost completely displaced by ’yotes, haven’t heard or seen any in years. According to the State wolves were hunted to extinction here, but the family land I was raised on borders National Forest, and we used to hear the wolves often, got a light on them many nights.

Yeah, those pesky Unintended Consequences…

Maybe increase the “dose” but lessen the amount of the bait, so it’d be just 1-2 bites… then Hawg Heaven.

Yeh, standard rat-poison, too. They eat and just bleed out from, like, everywhere, even internally.

As food?

I remember an article about helicopter hunts, how most carcasses would just be left to rot, but some were scooped up to be used as food. Someone commented how just using those fresh carcasses could feed lots of starving people even right here in the States (eg, the Ozarks), let alone overseas.

Not a bad idea…

Hey, one place where I worked, there was a refrigerated vending machine that sold things like microwave pancakes, etc., and one of my weaknesses was the sausage patty on a bun. Really tasty. Main ingredient: “whole boned hog”.

Yeah, just take the skinned carcass, pull out the bones, and probably just grind up the rest into hog-paste.

Still was tasty…

Unno, seems like plenty can be done, not just getting rid of big-ass mammalian locusts, but putting them to good use. Hell, do a Lawrence of Arabia and run the herd off into a canyon… Then back up the refrigerated trailers and haul ’em off to the processing plant.

Hunters for the Hungry has chapters in most states and is a great way for hunters to donate meat to feed the hungry. Typically it is deer and in some areas they donate hogs as well.

Bob

Don’t know for sure if they’re used for food, I assumed they were. I’ll ask my relative the next time I see them, maybe they know.

The problem with a mass roundup is that Texas is almost entirely private property, and you’d have to have permission for access at each property. Whatever is done will have to be done piecemeal. That’s really one of my only gripes about Texas, we have very little (comparatively) publicly owned land. We have lots of National forest, but you’re limited in what you can do on it. That coupled with the size of the state makes any real solution for complete eradication a pipe dream IMHO.

Thanks HH, I’ve never heard of this group until now. Seems like a worthy cause.

Wild hogs - an annoyance and danger. Up here on LI they call it free range Boar and charge big $$$ for it, like it's some rare exquisitely tasting treat. I do really like it, just wish I could get it an easier way - it's bout as expensive as Alaskan king crab legs.

If you could somehow make the right Texas connection or connection in another select Southeastern state, make a pilgrimage once a year there for a few days…. rifle in hand; you could probably go home with enough to last you the rest of the year at least. :wink:

Plus you’d get to have the fun of ridding said sate of some more of the pesky critters… thus helping the environment too. :+1:

Its only one will NEVER feed the hungry
30 years ago UN start a program for a massive Somalia help, this inclues donations in money and food /goods /medicine for over 800 000 000 USD , every year!
You know what happened? Before a somalian woman had 2…3 children tops, now they have 7-8, many of them 10…and the starvation is even bigger
Same thing happens in Nigeria…

Back to the topic, here you got, some fresh average weighting hogs :wink:

I usualy make those from the best meat, its time consuming yet its worthy

Sadly, that sounds about right……… :person_facepalming:

Looking good there Mitko!!! :+1:

What are you making in the bottom picture? Are you going to smoke that, make jerky, or what??

I got a fierce hunger just looking at all that. :slight_smile: