24 October 2003, 14:32
WillGuyHogs by helicopter?
Friend of mine has land in South Texas. Hogs are so thick that the tenant farmer rents a helicopter to fly around and kill hogs just to get rid of them.
Sounds like great fun to me.
Just curious. How much would you pay to fly around in a helicopter and shoot pigs for a couple of hours???
25 October 2003, 04:48
StonecreekI happen to know the Texas legislator who sponsored the bill to allow hog shooting from the air. He said his other finest legislative accomplishments were bills to allow you to drive faster on the highway and drink earlier on Sundays. Sounds like we could use a couple of hundred more like him!
28 November 2003, 08:14
AtkinsonIsn't that called anarchey
![[Wink]](images/icons/wink.gif)
28 November 2003, 08:36
LorenzoA chap (not a hunter) shoot them using his helicopter, I've been once in a hunt which involved the use of a chopper and NEVER again, makes something stupid of what we love more, stalk, track, shoot, etc.
It's not the correct way of killing such a sportive and noble beast!!!
Things like this plays against the real hunters.
Wow, just discovered I'm a radical
LG
28 November 2003, 09:48
Bob in TXStonecreek,
If it was your ranch getting destroyed by feral hogs, you might not be as quick to judge. This is no different than the aerial gunning of coyotes to control predation.
Bob
WillGuy,
To answer your question, no I would not pay to hunt hogs from a chopper.
Bob
[ 11-28-2003, 00:50: Message edited by: Bob in TX ]28 November 2003, 12:47
BakesThats done alot here in the top end of Australia, not by sporting hunters but by contracters who control pig/donkey/horse numbers in places like National parks. Your mainly paying for fuel so up here it'll cost around $6-700 an hour. Or there abouts.
29 November 2003, 13:27
Ninja HunterYea nothing wrong with getting rid of pest that way.
02 December 2003, 11:05
David WStonecreek,
I think Bob got you confused with Lorenzo...
Lorenzo,
I like to hunt hogs too, although they don't quite rise to the status of nobility in my mind. The issue for us is that in some areas, wild hogs are doing real destruction to property and they make it difficult at best to manage for other species, like whitetailed deer. A Texas game biologist quipped that they're the only specie he knows where a female will have a litter of six and eight will survive. I know guys who shoot hogs from helicopters, but it is not done for sport. It's a question of balance on some properties.
BTW, Congratulations on your ranch. Looks like a fine place. I would like to get down there some day.
David
02 December 2003, 11:38
Bob in TXStonecreek,
Your tongue in cheek humor was lost on me I guess. It sounded like you were be a bit sarcastic in your post. Sorry if I misunderstood what you were saying.......
Bob
03 December 2003, 05:26
StonecreekBob,
That's okay, my wife doesn't understand me either.
![[Big Grin]](images/icons/grin.gif)
10 December 2003, 05:15
M16A couple of friends and I do this once a year down in South Texas. We pay $250.00 an hour on average for the helicopter. The landowner supplies the property for free. We get to shoot all the coyotes and hogs we can find. Most use a shotgun but I use my M16. Shooting hogs and coyotes from a helicopter with a machine gun is the most fun I have ever had with my pants on!
11 December 2003, 04:58
LorenzoI�m talking about the animals we have down here, the russian wild boar and not those spotted varmints you have around there

. I believe is a noble, inteligent, fierce and difficult adversary for any hunter.
BTW, I love and respet any animal that allowed me to hunt him hard.
LG