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Old 07-15-21, 04:00 AM   #91
vienna
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The same can be said for in-laws...




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Old 07-15-21, 04:09 AM   #92
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^ true .. lol

A bit OT, we also have animals visiting our so-called-but-not-yet-ready-if ever "garden", birds and sometimes cats and roe deer with kids/fawn(?) at day, and hedgehogs and such at night.

Our cat made a friend a few nights ago, a .. fox. Have you ever seen a cat and a fox playing?
I had heard strange noises at 3 am and went down to look, and a very young small fox was sitting directly before the glass door to the garden, beside our cat 'Max'. We do not have chicken so i have no problem with foxes, but thought it was threatening our cat, also of diseases foxes may have, so i opened the door but they both just sat there looking at me.
I tried to scare the fox away, but it just ran a circle and sat down at the same place again. Then they both raced off on the lawn and scuffled (no biting or such), then again sitting side by side on the lawn and looking at the forest. I take it it is a very young fox without bad experience with humans etc. but still.. never saw or head of such behaviour before.
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Old 07-15-21, 01:12 PM   #93
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Onkel Neal View Post
I like the animals, I have several bird feeders, hummingbird feeders, butterfly feeders, and squirrel feeders. They are welcome to feast. The birds like to bathe in the sprinklers.




Even the coons, if they want the corn I leave for the pigs, I'm ok with that. Deer too, although they are fair game in deer hunting season.

But if they get into my garden, that's a problem and I will shoot them. I have a fence to keep them out as well as the surprise sprinkler and electric fence. I want those vegetables, those belong to me.

Now, feral hogs, no. They are the enemy. And I will kill them when they come around.
Just get a PigBrig trap for the corn and call the exterminator!
befor> after> Saves aggravation, ammo, and beauty rest!
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Old 07-15-21, 01:34 PM   #94
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Hi Markus, yes we love animals too but some are just plain pests!! Kangaroos look nice but they make a mess in the garden and eat a lot of the plants. I use a home made slingshot, a good hit in their rumps sends them off!! The problem with roos, fences are no obstacle!!
It's the drop bears you should be more concerned about.
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Old 07-15-21, 05:58 PM   #95
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Originally Posted by Aktungbby View Post
COLOR="Lime"]Just get a PigBrig trap for the corn and call the exterminator!
]Saves aggravation, ammo, and beauty rest!
Where's the sport in that?

I am the exterminator.
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Old 07-20-21, 09:52 AM   #96
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Stay on your toes, Neal.

I think the pigs are plotting a counter attack.




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Old 07-20-21, 10:02 AM   #97
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Thanks! So far, no pigs have returned. I think they learned their lesson. But, yes, I remain vigilant.

Erm, what does a Plano house explosion have to do with this?
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Old 07-20-21, 10:15 AM   #98
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Well, note that the house was NOT made of straw or bricks.

If I had to guess, the pigs were able to order C4 on Amazon.
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Old 07-20-21, 11:25 AM   #99
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Originally Posted by Onkel Neal View Post
Thanks! So far, no pigs have returned. I think they learned their lesson. But, yes, I remain vigilant.

Erm, what does a Plano house explosion have to do with this?
That looks like a dwelling natural explosion gas explosion. Iv'e dealt with two in the past myself in my responder daze. But it seems your feral pig hunting is similar as well. Your service to humanity does not go unnoticed! https://gizmodo.com/feral-hogs-pollu...car-1847319891
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Nearly two years ago, we all had a hearty laugh about 30 to 50 feral hogs. Turns out that all those pigs aren’t just a horribly invasive species, but they could be wreaking real havoc when it comes to climate change. According to a new study published Monday in Global Change Biology, wild pigs around the world are releasing the equivalent of 1.1 million cars’ worth of carbon dioxide each year—just from digging around in the dirt.
“Given that wild pigs are known to damage soil, we realized that no other study had looked at the total area at risk at a global scale,” Christopher O’Bryan, the study’s lead author and a research fellow at the University of Queensland, said over email. “Knowing how important soil is at storing carbon, we wanted to assess the risk of wild pig soil damage on carbon emissions.”
Piggies can be really cute, sure, but they’re pretty bad news. Feral hogs put endangered native species at risk of extinction. They also tear up crops, causing between $1.5 and $2.5 billion worth of damage in the U.S. (A group of feral hogs even killed a woman in Texas in 2019.)
“Wild pigs are essentially farm animals gone rogue,” O’Bryan said. All that crop destruction isn’t just bad for business—it’s bad for the planet. Soil is packed with carbon dioxide, and it’s been well documented that human agricultural activity that disturbs the soil—like the very common practice of tilling—brings up carbon stored underground and encourages its release into the air. But there’s been surprisingly little research on how invasive species can also stir stuff up when they disturb the soil. It would stand to reason that hogs, which are basically little tractors, would have a similar effect: Their whole deal is rummaging around in the dirt for food, meaning that they can really root up a bunch of dirt. O’Bryan said that while other research has looked at the carbon dioxide footprint of hogs locally in Switzerland, China, and the Americas, this is the first study to “connect the dots at a global scale.” In order to fully calculate the impact of wild hogs all over the world, O’Bryan and his team created three models: one that predicts wild pig densities, one that converts pig density into soil area disturbed, and one that estimates carbon emissions. They then ran 10,000 simulations to account for the potential uncertainties in each model.

According to the models O’Bryan and his colleagues developed, wild pigs are uprooting anywhere between almost 14,000 square miles (36,214 square kilometers) to 47,690 square miles (123,517 square kilometers) in their non-native habitats. And all this digging has serious consequences for the carbon dioxide stored in soil. Around 5.37 million tons of carbon dioxide each year are released due to wild pig activities. Even though we may all enjoy a hog joke every once in a while, this research shows that the problems wild pigs pose are becoming more urgent to address. Scientists have called wild pigs, or Sus scrofa, “one of the most prolific invasive mammals on Earth.” In the U.S. alone, hog populations have gone from being present in 27 states in 2000 to now being found in 48 states; their population ranges between 6 to 7 million in the U.S., and experts say managing this big group of pigs might mean a mass killing of between 60% to 80% of them. (Ironically, part of the reason they’re spreading in the U.S. so fast, experts think, is that people love to hunt them—Succession, anyone?—so some are driving hogs to new areas and then allowing the population to expand.) The new findings show their impact on the climate is one more reason to end feral hogs’ reign of terror.

“Invasive species are a human-caused problem, so we need to acknowledge and take responsibility for their environmental and ecological implications,” Nicholas Patton, a University of Canterbury PhD candidate and coauthor of the study, said in a release. “If invasive pigs are allowed to expand into areas with abundant soil carbon, there may be an even greater risk of greenhouse gas emissions in the future. ... Wild pig control will definitely require cooperation and collaboration across multiple jurisdictions, and our work is but one piece of the puzzle, helping managers better understand their impacts.”
BOTTOM LINE: Keep killin' them wild hogs BBY; but really, get a PigBrig and do it on an extermination scale...taking an occasional backstrap for the BBQ of course; but have an exterminator handy for carcass removal! EGAD!: Even My daughter reported a dead hog in the middle of the road to Santa Rosa on her commute home last week! The situation is out of control
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Old 07-20-21, 11:24 PM   #100
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Pig brig... there's no fun in that. I'm waiting for them to return... waiting...
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Old 07-21-21, 02:20 AM   #101
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What do you do with the pigs, disembowel them and deep-freeze the parts?
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Old 07-21-21, 06:41 AM   #102
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Yeah, sometimes, depending on how fat they are and how big. I don't dress them out fully, just the shoulders, hams, and backstrap.
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Old 07-21-21, 12:37 PM   #103
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One of my favourite meals atm....pork and Mediterranean peppers.
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Old 07-21-21, 01:07 PM   #104
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^ that

@Neal thanks, so you really can use them for BBQ
-> so "dress them out" would be a better term than "disemboweling" i guess?
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Old 07-21-21, 02:22 PM   #105
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I'll stick with the occasional field rat that shows up at my bird feeder and takes residence under the deck. Caught one last night. The missus witness his little arse out back physically going after a bird on the ground.

I use a no harm trap. I then drop them off as far away as I have time to drive.

I once caught a flying squirrel. I let them go in the yard again.

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