‘Super pigs’ took over the prairies. Now they’re spreading further, quickly

Vinson

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I'm sure hunters would like going after them and give the meat to the food banks. I was watching videos on youtube, these guys destroy entire areas with crops, grass anything.


For years, some researchers have been sounding the alarm, about the spread of wild boars—also called ‘super pigs”—on Canada’s prairies. A few years ago, the situation was bad. Now it’s critical. The pigs are multiplying and becoming harder to hunt or capture. They’ve now been seen in British Columbia and Ontario. And the US media is now reporting on the threat of invading Canadian super pigs.

Dr. Ryan Brook, a professor in the Department of Animal and Poultry Science at the University of Saskatchewan, says the response to the spread of the pigs, to this point, has involved too much talk and too little action. “I’ve sort of said, you know what, I’m not coming to a meeting anymore unless everybody shows up with at least four dead pigs in the back of their truck, because we can talk about this until the end of time, but we have to actually get serious and do something,” says Brook.

How did these pigs become “super” in the first place? What have we tried to do about them so far? And what’s the worst-case scenario here if we don’t get their spread under control?

 

xix

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Jul 27, 2002
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I could say many things.
Hero syndrome - a politician is trying to look like a hero and pushes a Bill to wipe them out.

If we allow hunters to hunt them, or anyone for sport or to learn how to hunt, do we have the infra structure to destroy or clean up the dead carcass?
Doesn't carcass create pollution or bacteria?
 

poorboy

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Aug 18, 2001
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I could say many things.
Hero syndrome - a politician is trying to look like a hero and pushes a Bill to wipe them out.

If we allow hunters to hunt them, or anyone for sport or to learn how to hunt, do we have the infra structure to destroy or clean up the dead carcass?
Doesn't carcass create pollution or bacteria?
Those pigs are an invasive species and cause BILLIONS of dollars of damage in the U.S., to the point it is 24/7 hunting on them by any means, including the use of night vision, drones and noise detection gear in some states. They have been called the most destructive pest in America. Hunting alone won't solve the problem, but it does kill thousands of them.

U.S. fighting to stop Canadian 'super pigs' from invading - YouTube

A rotting carcass is called fertilizer.
 
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xix

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Those pigs are an invasive species and cause BILLIONS of dollars of damage in the U.S., to the point it is 24/7 hunting on them by any means, including the use of night vision, drones and noise detection gear in some states. They have been called the most destructive pest in America.

U.S. fighting to stop Canadian 'super pigs' from invading - YouTube

A rotting carcass is called fertilizer.
I am fully aware of this. The Q is why haven't the Gov't pushed fast and hard to get rid of them?
 

poorboy

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I am fully aware of this. The Q is why haven't the Gov't pushed fast and hard to get rid of them?
Because there are people who don't like the idea that firearms are useful and killing animals is bad. The idea of no bag limit, no tag, 24/7 open season hunting using equipment otherwise banned for other hunting doesn't sit well with lefties.
 
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xix

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Because there are people who don't like the idea that firearms are useful and killing animals is bad.
Vs - the destruction of food for humans and the Agriculture industry will try to make money of it. While we pay 5x's for the food down the road that could have cost 3 % of a politician's and animal lobbyist group wages to save ourselves.

Illogical.
I am all for....proper balance. Wipe them out.
 
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kherg007

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Back in oz we had that issue and apparently the domestic breed that went feral is loved by Germans who enjoy wild boar, hence a lucrative market hunting them and shipping it off to Germany.

Hopefully the Canadian super pig, whom by day is a mild mannered petting zoo pig, doesn't jump into a phone booth and emerge in his cape to fly out and vanquish those Canadian hunters.
 
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onomatopoeia

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There was a Reality show about this on The Discovery Network in 2011 named Hogs Gone Wild. It was cancelled after a few episodes because it showed hunters actually killing the feral pigs.
 

Conil

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Years ago in Italy wild boar was a delicacy, they made prosciutto out of it, pasta sauce and stews. The meat is leaner than porks grown on factories.
 
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I'm sure hunters would like going after them and give the meat to the food banks. I was watching videos on youtube, these guys destroy entire areas with crops, grass anything.


For years, some researchers have been sounding the alarm, about the spread of wild boars—also called ‘super pigs”—on Canada’s prairies. A few years ago, the situation was bad. Now it’s critical. The pigs are multiplying and becoming harder to hunt or capture. They’ve now been seen in British Columbia and Ontario. And the US media is now reporting on the threat of invading Canadian super pigs.

Dr. Ryan Brook, a professor in the Department of Animal and Poultry Science at the University of Saskatchewan, says the response to the spread of the pigs, to this point, has involved too much talk and too little action. “I’ve sort of said, you know what, I’m not coming to a meeting anymore unless everybody shows up with at least four dead pigs in the back of their truck, because we can talk about this until the end of time, but we have to actually get serious and do something,” says Brook.

How did these pigs become “super” in the first place? What have we tried to do about them so far? And what’s the worst-case scenario here if we don’t get their spread under control?

They have been in Ontario for a few years. Some escaped from a farm near Bancroft a while ago. The problem with these things they are impossible to get ride of.
 

NotADcotor

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One would figure farmers would tend to hunt and have guns. Problem easily solved, free meat.
 
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Vinson

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They have been in Ontario for a few years. Some escaped from a farm near Bancroft a while ago. The problem with these things they are impossible to get ride of.
I think the government killed 14 maybe 6 months ago near Pickering.
 

Vinson

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Hogzilla !!! 800 LBS

When a photo of an enormous wild hog hanging from a backhoe went viral in 2004, the owner of the Alapaha, Georgia, farm where the beast was brought down by a hunting guide claimed the animal weighed half a ton and stretched 12 feet long. Hogzilla, as locals dubbed the internet sensation, caused such a stir that National Geographic sent a team of experts to exhume the carcass six months later for a documentary film. They confirmed Hogzilla was huge—“definitely a freak of nature,” according to the film’s producer, Nancy Donnelly—but not quite the monster it was reported to be. Making allowances for shrinkage that occurred during decomposition, National Geographic experts estimated the hog was more likely 8-feet long and weighed about 800 pounds. It’s 16- and 18-inch tusks, however, did set a Safari Club International record.

 
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