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Sports
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Title: With Hands and Hounds, Stalking Feral Hogs in Texas
Source: NYT
URL Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/29/u ... 1&oref=slogin&pagewanted=print
Published: Oct 29, 2006
Author: TIM EATON
Post Date: 2006-10-29 01:30:37 by Morgana le Fay
Keywords: None
Views: 912
Comments: 18

ASPERMONT, Tex. — On a moonless October night, with the Milky Way staining the West Texas sky, a burly man in overalls turned off the engine of his mud-caked white Toyota truck. Yelps from coyotes and an owl’s hoot occasionally broke the silence. Then, from an open field, Bob Richardson heard the noise he had been awaiting.

Four of his short-haired scent hounds, which had been released earlier, began to bark from the darkness. Mr. Richardson jumped out of the truck and freed a black pit bull from a cage on the truck’s flatbed. He chased after his pit bull into the darkness toward the barking hounds.

He tripped in a wet ditch but kept running through the milo stalks. When he got to the baying dogs, the light on his miner’s hat revealed that the pit bull, trained for just this purpose, had clamped onto the face of a feral hog.

As he had done thousands of times before, Mr. Richardson, 58, pounced on the snorting beast and tied its feet together, immobilizing it. Within minutes, he had loaded the animal barehanded into a cage.

Mr. Richardson used to run through this brush land northwest of Abilene without any shoes, hence his nickname: Barefoot Bob. But when he worked for the fire department in Abilene, his bosses demanded he don footwear. Now, he wears sneakers, which he buys in bulk at Wal-Mart.

A lot of people in rural Texas catch wild hogs, which can grow to several hundred pounds, and Mr. Richardson traps them like most others. But there is sometimes a twist to Mr. Richardson’s hunts — he spends a few nights a week cruising the dirt roads of Stonewall County, a place with more hogs than people, to run down the wild animals using only his dogs and his bare hands.

“It’s for fun,” he said.

It has also become lucrative as Europeans and an increasing number of Americans clamor for wild boar. Mr. Richardson said he made $28,000 last year selling live feral hogs.

“I think it’s a great health-conscious niche market,” said Dick Koehler, one of Mr. Richardson’s customers and the vice president of Frontier Meats, based in Fort Worth. “It has real potential for growth.”

Mr. Koehler said that about 60 percent of the processed hog meat from his plant ended up on the tables of fancy restaurants in Europe, but that its popularity was growing in the United States. Each year, his company ships more and more hog meat to American restaurants and specialty supermarkets to feed the demands for organic food, Mr. Koehler said.

Even if the taste for wild boar gains a much wider following, there is little chance of overhunting the hogs any time soon.

The animals were introduced to North America as a food source in 1539 by the Spanish conquistador Hernando de Soto, said Billy Higginbotham, a wildlife specialist with the Texas A&M Agricultural Research and Extension Center at Overton.

During the 1800s and 1900s, escaped domestic pigs became feral, sprouted tusks and grew coarse black hair. They crossbred with Russian boars, brought to North America for food and sport. The resulting hybrid wild boar has spread across the country, increasing in number to an estimated four million in 39 states, Mr. Higginbotham said.

The population of feral hogs has ballooned for a combination of reasons, Mr. Higginbotham said. For one, he said, they are intelligent animals. Also, they will eat just about anything and are highly adaptable to changing food sources.

Wild pigs are prolific breeders. A sow can be ready for her first litter of four to six offspring within six months, and a mature sow can birth two litters a year, Mr. Higginbotham said.

In Texas, hunters bait deer with 300 million pounds of corn annually, he said, and the hogs eat a large percentage of the bait. Hunters sometimes capture feral hogs and release them into areas of the state where they had not lived before.

Wild hogs can bring new problems. In Texas alone, the aggressive, omnivorous and razor-toothed animals cause nearly $52 million in damage a year to farmland, livestock and pastures, according to the Texas Cooperative Extension.

Jerry Eddins, the owner of the 10,000-acre J. Duke Ranch where Mr. Richardson hunts, is a serious quail hunter. Every year, he spreads grain to feed the birds, but hogs eat the bird food, along with whatever quail eggs they come across.

“They eat anything. They really don’t have a natural predator,” Mr. Eddins said. “So, Barefoot Bob Richardson is the natural predator.”

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 10.

#1. To: Morgana le Fay (#0)

Outstanding article - thanks.

We have the feral hogs on our farm in north Texas and have witnessed them chasing the cattle - totally amazing.

After the first freeze this winter, my brother and I will attempt to thin the herd dramatically.

Lod  posted on  2006-10-29   11:29:41 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: lodwick (#1)

We have the feral hogs on our farm in north Texas and have witnessed them chasing the cattle - totally amazing.

After the first freeze this winter, my brother and I will attempt to thin the herd dramatically.

California hog killer I met was fond of the .257 Weatherby.

He just rolled them then loaded them up.

HOUNDDAWG  posted on  2006-10-29   14:01:40 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 10.

#12. To: HOUNDDAWG (#10)

California hog killer I met was fond of the .257 Weatherby.

He just rolled them then loaded them up.

Some of the ones we saw will require at least a 7MMmag and a tractor with a lift on the three-point hydraulic thingie - they were huge, and their tusks looked wicked.

Lod  posted on  2006-10-29 14:09:16 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 10.

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