


A wild pig doesn't have to be
Hogzilla to be menacing, but when you add a
helicopter into the mix they don't stand a chance. Texans consider this a good thing, since feral pigs (a.k.a.
boars, hogs, or razorbacks) are an
invasive species that has overrun their state. An estimated 2 million wild hogs cause $52 million a year in crop damage. They eat everything - including each other, root up plants and turf, trample crops and fences, pollute water sources, and steal animal feed. Ordinary citizens can't pay to hunt from a helicopter, but the Texas Parks & Wildlife Department will issue a permit to
helicopter operators for aerial wildlife and exotic animal management. As long as the gunners aboard have a valid
Texas hunting license, and landowners agree to allow the helicopter shootings on their land, they can take aim at dozens of the beasts before they reproduce further. "
You can kill 300 in a day from up here in the Panhandle and you've just slowed them down is all," says the pilot of what some are calling a "pork chopper." The helicopter can be deadly for the hunted - and occasionally for the
hunters. But in
Bagneres-de-Luchon, France, on Monday, a helicopter was used not to shoot wild pigs, but to extricate a 30-year-old woman who had been chased up a tree by them!
Those wild boars are scary looking. I remember hearing about a car accident here in France in which a car hit a group of them standing in the road. Everyone in the car was killed. I don't know if any boars survived.
ReplyDelete