Fishbonker
Life Member
This bill would allow feral hogs to be taken, with the property owners permission, from the air.
Link to the bill: <Hogs from above>
Link to the bill: <Hogs from above>
I dont want em but damn it be fun for a hot minute.
I dont want em but damn it be fun for a hot minute.
For sure. A blast to hunt and I totally get why people THINK they want them. If they bred like deer and could be controlled they would be ok but they have 2 litters a year with no set breeding season. Gestation is 3 months, 3 weeks, and 3 days and sexual maturity is 6-8 months. Easy to see how quick they can get out of handI dont want em but damn it be fun for a hot minute.
Not with all the food plots.Wouldn't the mortality rate be high for feral hogs this far north, come winter?
I hear ya, they'd be able to keep their bellies full throughout the year, but I'd think a few consecutive days of negative temps would kill them off since they don't have fur coats. Can they survive any substantial duration of brutal cold temps, exposed to the external elements, even with full bellies?Not with all the food plots.
As long as they could still get to food somewhere, I really don't think the cold we have would limit them. The cold could make them easier to spot and therefore kill...but cold all by itself would not keep them down, IMO.Wouldn't the mortality rate be high for feral hogs this far north, come winter?
I've heard that CJ story as well, escaped from a "farmer".FWIW, I few years back there was a local legend of a group of "wild" hogs in the Columbus Junction area. I cannot verify any of these accounts, but apparently it isn't a tough task to take out the tuskers when there is:
Hogs thrive in cold weather. Russian hogs are from cold climates. The extreme cold may help regulate their breeding but they’ll be fine.Wouldn't the mortality rate be high for feral hogs this far north, come winter?
They develop thick coats in cold weather. Even down here in Georgia, there is a very noticeable difference in their coats in January versus July.I hear ya, they'd be able to keep their bellies full throughout the year, but I'd think a few consecutive days of negative temps would kill them off since they don't have fur coats. Can they survive any substantial duration of brutal cold temps, exposed to the external elements, even with full bellies?