Feral Hogs

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https://animals.mom.com/a-list-of-states-that-have-feral-hogs-7802411.html

A LIST OF STATES THAT HAVE FERAL HOGS​

By Chantel M. Brunke | Updated August 11, 2017
Before venturing out for your next outdoor adventure, know which states have a high population of feral hogs. Also known as wild pigs, feral hogs are quite prominent throughout the United States. However, a few states are home to a very high population of these wild creatures. Because these animals are non-domesticated, feral hogs are deemed a menace to society and in particular farmers because of their destructive eating habits and how they spread disease.

Northern United States​

Although feral hogs don’t dominate the northern part of the United States, they do live in Indiana and Ohio. Mainly though, the state of Wisconsin has a dense population of these wild pigs. Because of the high population, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources promotes the removal of feral hogs at any cost, just as long as you possess a valid small game license. The state understands how these wild pigs destroy its surrounding environment and have the potential of carrying disease which could harm or kill both animals and humans.

Eastern United States​

Feral hogs are expanding predominately from the south and working their way towards the eastern section of the country. New Hampshire, Pennsylvania and Vermont are states where wild pigs reside. Additional eastern states have received reports of feral hogs. But it is the state of North Carolina, which has one of the largest wild pig epidemics in the East. This state’s main concern is the transmission of exotic parasites from the wild pigs to other animals as well as to humans. These parasites can have a dangerous effect on a human’s immune system and their health can be compromised.

Southern United States​

Approximately half of the feral hog population lives in the southern United States. Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi and Oklahoma exhibit a feral hog problem. The worse affected southern state is Texas, where roughly 2 million feral hogs roam. In 2007, "The Telegraph" reported that the wild pig problem is so devastating, tens of thousands of hunters come to Texas to trap and kill the feral hogs. Here it is not just the concern of disease that worries Texans, it also the idea of the feral hogs eating rare species of plants and shrubs, and disrupting the ecosystem as they prey on various animals’ eggs.

Western United States​

Similar to the northern region of the United States, feral hogs do not dominate any one section of west. However, three states in particular do have a feral hog problem: California, Hawaii and Oregon. The Wildlife Damage Management within the United States Department of Agriculture documented that the feral hogs in California and Hawaii possess a disease known as pseudorabies, which affects both livestock and humans. According to the United States Department of Agriculture's Wildlife Damage Management, the feral hog problem in these states has been difficult to control, which essentially means that more and more feral hogs are infected with pseudorabies and the risk of humans being infected with disease continues to increase.
 
I wish I could get south again, me and "Dinnard's hammer" would fill a freezer in a night! I really need a can to go in it though.

Dinnard's hammer is a custom built AR 10 built for me by a master gunsmith the week before he died. It literally drives nails!
 
There is a rumor there were feral hogs on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington.
The story was some tribal members released them.
The F&W said there was no limit and no restrictions.
Kill them any way you could and the pigs were wiped out.
Again that was all rumor and I have no proof, but it sounds possible.
This from an article in 2001
More feral pigs seen on Olympic Peninsula, so hunters are welcomed
 
I wish I could get south again, me and "Dinnard's hammer" would fill a freezer in a night! I really need a can to go in it though.

Dinnard's hammer is a custom built AR 10 built for me by a master gun smith the week before he died. It literally drives nails!
Texas did it right.
Hunt them 24/7, year round, night-vision fine, machine-guns if you have a stamp and helicopters, fine, shoot every one that you see. Shoot them all!!!
Free ham.
Free porkchops.
Free bacon.
Getyousome!!!:thumbs:
 
I know we didn't make the list, but if they are in Arkansas, it is hard to believe they wouldn't be in Missouri. They are incredibly destructive and breed as fast as rabbits. They should be eradicated.
 
Wild hogs are such a problem for agriculture in Florida that there are no limits on hunting them.
Year round, no limits, night vision is allowed.
The big problem with killing hogs is, to be effective, the whole sounder must be killed. Killing one, two, three, four, is not enough to even begin to solve the problem - the remainder of the sounder goes into "survival mode" and becomes more elusive.
 
Wild hogs are such a problem for agriculture in Florida that there are no limits on hunting them.
Year round, no limits, night vision is allowed.
The big problem with killing hogs is, to be effective, the whole sounder must be killed. Killing one, two, three, four, is not enough to even begin to solve the problem - the remainder of the sounder goes into "survival mode" and becomes more elusive.
Some around my area trap a bunch (20-30) and then kill them. Only to have that many back in two months!
 
Here in Australia feral pigs do so much damage to our native ecology and crops.

I brought Landshark from a line of extremely good pig dogs that not only track but hold.
She was supposed to not only keep the crackheads out of the yard and keep me safe but she was also supposed to
be trained and used to pull down feral pigs to put in my freezer and then later to have pups to sell or trade.
I guess 1 out of three "supposed to's" will have to suffice.
 

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