mex
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« on: December 08, 2009, 10:26:49 pm » |
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Guys I am sorry if I offend any by that but I watched some videos today and cant stand this crap!
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« Last Edit: December 09, 2009, 08:17:27 am by Mike »
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"it's not the dying im afraid of.....it's the living" -lonesome dove
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raider54
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« Reply #1 on: December 08, 2009, 10:32:25 pm » |
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Im not offended
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I TALK ALOT OF SMACK-COME GO WITH ME AND I'LL SHOW YOU IT ISNT ALL SMACK Facebook Check Out-Hog Hunting Texas Style See our web site www.XXXtremehogdoggin.com
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Silverton Boar Dogs
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« Reply #2 on: December 08, 2009, 10:56:48 pm » |
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Shooting from choppers is a necessary part of hog control in this part of Texas, nothing wrong with it in my book.
Matadors flew their Russleville camp last year and shot 2,600 hogs in 30 days. Indian creek in Brisco county killed 1,200. What else are the farmers and ranchers supposed to do?
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mex
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« Reply #3 on: December 08, 2009, 11:02:03 pm » |
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Silverton you are correct and I do not run land like that but the guys in the videos were jack asses guess thats what made me upset.
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"it's not the dying im afraid of.....it's the living" -lonesome dove
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Eric
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« Reply #4 on: December 09, 2009, 07:18:12 am » |
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I think you could change the title. Plus, as dog hunters we need all the allies we can get.
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matt_aggie04
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« Reply #5 on: December 09, 2009, 07:56:55 am » |
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I could be wrong and I am not trying to be diagreable with you Eric but I am pretty sure I don't see the guys in helicopters as allies. Maybe landowners can see them as such but everytime I hear about them they are coming in to save the day and fix what "we" could not. I agree that the title could probably be changed, as much as it pains me to to be PC it is not good to insinuate a persons sexual orientation based on their occupation....
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"No man's life, liberty, or property are safe while the legislature is in session" - Mark Twain (1866)
"I hate rude behavior in a man, I won't tolerate it"~Woodrow F. Call
"Those who hammer their guns into plows will plow for those who do not."~Thomas Jefferson
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cantexduck
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« Reply #6 on: December 09, 2009, 09:05:08 am » |
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I could be wrong and I am not trying to be diagreable with you Eric but I am pretty sure I don't see the guys in helicopters as allies. Maybe landowners can see them as such but everytime I hear about them they are coming in to save the day and fix what "we" could not. I agree that the title could probably be changed, as much as it pains me to to be PC it is not good to insinuate a persons sexual orientation based on their occupation....
Matt, On the same hand have you ever talked to a landowner about trapping vs. running dogs? I know I have. We have the same goal in mind. Too take out hog numbers. Lucky for us not alot of landowners will not pay the 300 plus an hour to have the helicopter people fly over. I would jump at the chance to be the shooter on a fly over.
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There's a coon, nevermind, thats Buster.
"So I pawned my lacy off to my girlfriend. That should teach her to meet men off match.com" Rich.
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leifbarnes
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« Reply #7 on: December 09, 2009, 09:05:42 am » |
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I got motion sickness watching the video. There aint no way in H$LL I could ride in one!
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Eric Barnes
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t.wilbanks
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« Reply #8 on: December 09, 2009, 09:17:25 am » |
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Shooting from choppers is a necessary part of hog control in this part of Texas, nothing wrong with it in my book.
Matadors flew their Russleville camp last year and shot 2,600 hogs in 30 days. Indian creek in Brisco county killed 1,200. What else are the farmers and ranchers supposed to do?
Just think what the hog population would be if all those hogs were still out there reproducing!! I would also jump at the chance to get to go on a fly over! But luckily in this part of east texas, you cant do a fly over for all of the trees, and brush, so its all up to my traps and dogs!!
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matt_aggie04
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« Reply #9 on: December 09, 2009, 09:21:22 am » |
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I just know of a couple places that feel like the choppers take care of the problem and won't allow any type of hunting because they are affraid someone might have fun while they are doing it. I know of one place personally I would like to run dogs on but never will be able to because they feel the choppers kill nearly all their hogs when they fly over. How do you compete with that? You don't! And I used the word compete because that is what this is, I don't like it but we all compete where land and resources are available. With each other, with other hunters, with trappers, with non hunter etc always competing for that opportunity to have a great place to hunt and catch hogs. We may need to all play nice with one another but we are all in competition at one level or another for pigs as stupid as that sounds its true....
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"No man's life, liberty, or property are safe while the legislature is in session" - Mark Twain (1866)
"I hate rude behavior in a man, I won't tolerate it"~Woodrow F. Call
"Those who hammer their guns into plows will plow for those who do not."~Thomas Jefferson
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cantexduck
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« Reply #10 on: December 09, 2009, 09:25:02 am » |
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Matt, I agree 100%. Hunters out number land avail. To hunt we have to show that we can get the job done. I have picked up places b/c the land owner was never able to get other people on the phone when he called them to come out. I have also picked up land b/c other people left trash out or always seemed to bring 5 or more people out with them.
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There's a coon, nevermind, thats Buster.
"So I pawned my lacy off to my girlfriend. That should teach her to meet men off match.com" Rich.
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Bryant
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« Reply #11 on: December 09, 2009, 09:29:49 am » |
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That's easy, Matt.
Just make a deal with them. Tell them you'll come bring your dogs the same afternoon that the chopper flys and if you catch a hog, you get to hunt. If you zero, there will be no further discussion. That should get the place lined out for you.
I have one place that they fly each year new Rosebud. I have done just as described above and caught hogs the same day they flew.
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A truly rich man is one whose children rush to fill his arms even though his hands are empty.
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matt_aggie04
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« Reply #12 on: December 09, 2009, 09:35:01 am » |
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Bryant, there is no way I would put that much pressure on my dogs, they have enough problems finding them for fun much less with something that important riding on the line I am still working on them though and maybe I will try to make that proposition to them and see if the will take me up on it. Around here for the most part they are not going to do any good and throughout east texas for that matter becuase of the thick cover and dense canopy....
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"No man's life, liberty, or property are safe while the legislature is in session" - Mark Twain (1866)
"I hate rude behavior in a man, I won't tolerate it"~Woodrow F. Call
"Those who hammer their guns into plows will plow for those who do not."~Thomas Jefferson
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Bryant
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« Reply #13 on: December 09, 2009, 09:45:44 am » |
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That's no problem, either...just give me a google earth coordinate, and I'll have one ready to turn loose when you come blowing by!
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A truly rich man is one whose children rush to fill his arms even though his hands are empty.
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Bump
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« Reply #14 on: December 09, 2009, 10:03:35 am » |
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Do yall really think they are going to kill all the hogs? There are plenty of hogs to be hunted.
They fly my best hunting ranch every year. The hogs are just as thick in there a month later as they were before the flight. It is not affordable to fly the whole ranch. There are neighboring properties, boundaries etc...that limit where and how many hogs killed.
Depredation control in large numbers is a necessary method for many farmers and ranchers.
While the guys in the video may not have the most humble attitude...they are still hunting and doing a job with the same intentions as most hog doggers.
If we put them down and talk crap and try to believe dogging is the only method...then we are just like the morons on bowhunting website and owners of other hog hunting websites who dont agree with hog dogging.
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Rex Bumpus
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Goatcher
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« Reply #15 on: December 09, 2009, 10:09:36 am » |
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No sweat guys, calm down. I hope what I write here eases some of your anxiety over helos and hogs. I have over 1,000 hours in helicopters doing all kinds of wildlife work. Just Google my name and you will see some of it, videos too. I also do helicopter hog control. I know the Texas USDA helicopter team has taken out over 250 hogs in a single day. Private helo contractors maybe more. I have done a lot of wild boar live captures from helicopters, shooting, bird captures, wildlife surveys, moose, brown bear, seabirds, marine mammals, etc. and I am currently researching the use of helicopters for ultra low level marsh bird surveys. I also use night vision and thermal imagery to shoot hogs. I have been at this since the 1980's.
I know helicopters and I know hogs. In spite of the massive numbers a helicopter shoot team can knock down in some situations, they cannot get them all. For a comprehensive wild pig control program, you need all the tools you can get. Helos, traps, shooting over bait, snares, specially trained dogs and more.
I have killed and caught/tied enough hogs over the last 35 years to say I stopped counting at about 5,000. But guess what? If I learned one thing, I have learned that feral pigs can adapt through behavior and maybe genetics and natural selection faster than any creature on earth. They do learn to avoid helicopters very fast and then will breed and perpetuate their own kind. Helicopters are not a panacea to pig control by any measure. Anyone that has been in the military knows you can hear that rotor chop a long ways off well before the people in the helicopter can see you. Ask thousands of vietnamese and afghans. Hogs figure it out and rather than run out where you can shoot them, they crawl under a bush. I have had big boars in excess of 300 pounds hide in a clump of marsh grass no bigger than they were and no amount of rotor wash would flush them. We either dropped a cur dog out the helicopter on them or when safe, we nudged them with the helo skids to make them run.
In Florida I was priveleged to run dogs on ranches east of Okeechobee Lake where few people have run dogs on the hogs. The hogs were just standing in the pastures and would move off if your truck stopped in to what the cowboy with us called "brakes" (lines of brush, palmettos and cabbage palms). We ran our dogs on these poor suckers and had 17 tied and moved into a trailer before noon. The ranch owner hauled them to a sale barn in Miami. That got old fast, great for training pups, but work. I would rather go in where they have exhausted all other methods and there are only a few remnant hogs left and use trained dogs. My experience is that many of the last few are the big "coyote" boars. That is the real test of your knowledge and your dogs.
Buddy Goatcher
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« Last Edit: December 09, 2009, 05:06:37 pm by Goatcher »
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TexasJ
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« Reply #16 on: December 09, 2009, 10:12:40 am » |
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If I were the manager of a large property, the only way I would bring in a helicopter is if the fencing around the entire perimeter was hog proofed (if there's a such thing). Then I would bring in the bird to wipe out the hogs inside the property. I have seen this approach successful in ridding the property of hogs effectively. So without the ability to keep the hogs from coming back, using dogs or flying a bird are only measures to mitigate the population.
There is undoubtable a cost vs value that property managers will decide upon their approach to mitigate hog populations whether it is to fly a bird or allow hog dogs. This depends greatly on the characteristics of the property. I don't believe there is any reason to get upset at using helicopters to kill pigs. The right to use dogs to hunt is a HUNTING RIGHT. Helicotors aren't threatening your right to use dogs to harvest pigs. For the majority, I would speculate that most hog doggers and the places they hunt will be uneffected.
I believe that some hog doggers get into the sport and believe that because hogs are destructive, they are the saving grace to all property owners. While evidence supports the facts behind hog numbers, destruction, and hog dog effectiveness, some hog doggers may become threatened by helicopters. Threatened because helicopters ARE more effective at elliminating hogs and defeat the self -asserted right that hog doggers are the saving grace.
So that leads to the insecurity question that what if hog dogging was left solely up to be classified as "sport" for havesting pigs. Would our right continue to exist? If helicopters came in and removed all the hogs off all the propertys that a hog dogger was hunting in a population mitigation position, and was left only the propertys that allowed the sporting havesting of pigs, could the hog dogger survive? The cost vs hunting/harvest opportunity would begin to take a toll on hog doggers when it actually starts to effect them. While I have not personally experienced any loss of hunting because of helicoptors, I would share on the support for other hog doggers who have. I believe that there are not enough hog doggers being effected to gather a non-supportive position towards helicoptoring that could mount agianst the reasoning for allowing helicoptoring in the first place.
Hogs can not be totally eliminated in Texas and everyone in Texas can not afford to fly a bird on their property, therefore, there is no true threat agianst our right to hunt hogs with dogs in the State of Texas. I am completely neutral towards flying a bird and actually only hope that one day I could be the trigger man...
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Real men love Jesus.
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Monteria
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« Reply #17 on: December 09, 2009, 10:12:50 am » |
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Choppers are very effective in many parts of the state but they will never get every hog, just like traps won't, nor will dogs. And they have their draw backs just like any other method. I think that most land owners understand that and I don't see why it should be a competition. If a land owner wants the most effective means of control, they will implement all three methods. And yes, I have run properties that get flown. And yes, we do catch pigs after the shooting is done. Maybe if we would not consider it a competition, and worked with the helo pilots, they would express the same opinion to the land owners they fly for, helping us get our foot in the door.
PS: Unless you get motion sickness or are afraid of heights, there is not much more fun than zipping around in a little 22 size chopper with a case of #4 or 0 buck shot and mowing down sounders. Fasten your seat belts boys, it is going to be a RIDE!
Steve
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LionandBoarHunter
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« Reply #18 on: December 09, 2009, 10:14:26 am » |
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Do yall really think they are going to kill all the hogs? There are plenty of hogs to be hunted.
They fly my best hunting ranch every year. The hogs are just as thick in there a month later as they were before the flight. It is not affordable to fly the whole ranch. There are neighboring properties, boundaries etc...that limit where and how many hogs killed.
Depredation control in large numbers is a necessary method for many farmers and ranchers.
While the guys in the video may not have the most humble attitude...they are still hunting and doing a job with the same intentions as most hog doggers.
If we put them down and talk crap and try to believe dogging is the only method...then we are just like the morons on bowhunting website and owners of other hog hunting websites who dont agree with hog dogging.
XXX2
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They Call It The Hill Country I Call It Home ! The more people I'm around the more I like my dogs !! ROOT HOG OR DIE
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matt_aggie04
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« Reply #19 on: December 09, 2009, 10:30:50 am » |
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I can safely say that I haven't lost any land to helos and I am not really worried about losing any due to the area in which I mostly hunt. The place I mentioned I would like to hunt but don't consider it a loss since I have never hunted it to begin with. I am not affraid of the helos killing all the hogs and I think there have been some very good points made here by folks that have experience hunting on and around properties that have been flown. But if there is no competition call a helicopter pilot and see what he thinks about you helping him, I would like to know of one that would like "help" getting rid of the animal that he chases around for $300/hr I think all means are necessary to properly control hogs bla bla bla but I think it would be interesting to see what would happen on this board if say the state of Texas set aside a few million dollars to pay these hellicopter hunters to come fly your honey hole on a regular basis. I am not arguing with anyone, just playnig devils advocate here....
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"No man's life, liberty, or property are safe while the legislature is in session" - Mark Twain (1866)
"I hate rude behavior in a man, I won't tolerate it"~Woodrow F. Call
"Those who hammer their guns into plows will plow for those who do not."~Thomas Jefferson
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