The state and USDA have done a pretty good job trapping them on public land. Keeping them on public land where they can be managed by the state is probably the best hope for eradicating them. Once they get onto safe private land there's not a whole lot that can be done. Eliminating hunting pressure that might push them off public land is probably good for that, especially since hunting doesn't reduce the population in a meaningful way.I guess my big question on this is - can anyone name a state where hunting pigs IS allowed that has ALSO eradicated them? I don't know of any state that's managed to do that. But I haven't gone out and looked for the info. Maybe Ohio's approach will work, maybe not. I'm thinking about how leaving it up to private land owners could be problematic.....it could leave big pockets of land where the hogs could go for refuge if the landowner doesn't want to kill them. And what about public land? If they're on public land who is the landowner/lessee/agent? Is anyone going to kill them there?
Anyway, if eradication is the goal they might as well try a different approach from other states. I just listened to a hunting podcast that was talking about how lots of hogs have been moved around into new areas by hunters who want more stuff to hunt....seems like this bill is trying to get at that? Also who knows if whatever podcast ding-dong has good info, so I always take that with a grain of salt. I feel like some of those guys just love the sound of their own voice.
I hear ya, but in this case it seems like the private sector is just as much to blame if there is actually a correlation between the wild population and the shooting farms, which it sounds like there is. I think the big difference to me with pigs and wolves is that wolves were here first and pigs are introduced. Same situation in the end with people not wanting them, but there's something worse in my mind when it's a species that was never there to begin with.Hogs are in a sense like having the wolf controversy. You DONT want either. Ask those states that have them and they will tell you they wish they didn't. Not only are they destructive to food crops, but they forage on mass crops that support the deer and Turkey population.
I say if the government has anything to do with it then they will screw it all up. Oh, here's a good idea; trap them and send them to those sanctuary cities to feed those illegal imigrants.
That's an understatement. 4-6 per litter. I counted at least 20 on my place last spring, and they're like lambs - they run around fast in groups so getting a good count is next to impossible.Just wait, they breed like rats.
It's awesome!House Bill 503 | 135th General Assembly | Ohio Legislature
www.legislature.ohio.gov
This is a couple weeks old now, but the house unanimously passed a bill that introduces some pretty severe restrictions on hog hunting in Ohio. It's pretty clearly aimed at preventing the commercialization of hog hunting. It makes it illegal for anyone but a landowner, lessee, or their agent to hunt hogs. It imposes a prohibition on possessing, importing, breeding, or releasing hogs. It imposes a reporting requirement for anyone who has hogs on their property. It makes feeding wild hogs illegal. There's some other prohibitions in it too, but they're all things that would generally be covered under what I listed. It's been handed off to the senate and is in committee now.
Personally I think it's a good step in managing Ohio's hog population. As much as I enjoy hunting and eating hogs I recognize eradication is the proper management goal for any invasive species. Commercializing hog hunting creates a perverse incentive, and this law would keep that from happening in Ohio. Taking money out of the equation removes the biggest incentive to keep hogs around. It's not a total ban like other states have passed, but it should help keep money from becoming a major factor in how hogs are managed here.
X25If it truly restricts the for profit hog hunting, that is a great step, I hate hogs, but I also hate slobbish disrespectful hunters. I'll tolerate the hogs before I tolerate a non-appreciative hunter you allow to use a resource.
I for one...am the trust believer in Capitalism....until it has a negative effect on the welfare of not only National, but also International well being....Covid was a well planned and well played Socio- Economic test....but the Hogs are a true threat...they can't be eradicated with Greed!!!If it truly restricts the for profit hog hunting, that is a great step, I hate hogs, but I also hate slobbish disrespectful hunters. I'll tolerate the hogs before I tolerate a non-appreciative hunter you allow to use a resource.
This is absolute BS, the kind of grey-fallacy garbage that perpetuates this problem.I get that it's a different situation, but is it really all that different??? Or have we just been taught that pigs are horrible! In Europe they view pigs as a valuable game species and treat them accordingly.
It's the same animal (after a few generations in the wild), just different attitudes towards them based on what they/we have been told.