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Getting hoggish [Massive wild boars muscling in on area farmers]
TimesLeader.com ^ | Sun, May. 28, 2006 | JOHN DAVIDSON

Posted on 05/28/2006 7:13:34 PM PDT by Excuse_My_Bellicosity

TUNKHANNOCK — Charles Kalinowski traipsed for decades across his 300-acre farm without much worry. A towering, bearded 60-year-old with massive hands and a weathered face, he never used to carry a gun when he worked the land.

Then the wild boars showed up.

“We never seen them before, we didn’t know nothing about them,” Kalinowski said last week as he pointed to a field where he first saw the hogs.

“I heard people talk stories about them, guys getting their legs ripped off and such, but I never seen anything like them.”

These days, Kalinowski keeps a loaded 30-30 rifle behind the seat of his tractor. Since 2002, when the boars first appeared on his land, he and his son and son-in-law have killed about a half dozen of the wily animals.

These weren’t escaped farm pigs; they were hogs with razor-sharp tusks and bristling, hairy backsides. They spread diseases, destroy crop fields and one time so completely devoured a deer only a bloodstain was left on the ground.

Experts say the animals are spreading through the country at an alarming rate. In fact, they’re becoming such a serious problem that the state Game Commission wants people to shoot them on sight.

“We encourage folks to take them out because they don’t belong here,” said Tom Hardisky, a biologist with the commission in Dallas.

Hardisky has a thick file folder of feral hog sightings in Northeast Pennsylvania. The first reported sighting was in 1995, but for years after that no one reported seeing the animals. Then, in 2002, a pack of 42 hogs was spotted in Preston Township, Wayne County. The last sighting of that group was in June 2005.

“They group together as a safety tactic. If 50 escape from a farm or a hunting preserve, they’ll all stick together in the wild,” he said. “That group of 42 has probably thinned out by now, but it’s also possible their numbers could grow in the wild.”

Local wildlife experts, farmers and hunters have different theories about why the animals have been turning up. Some say wild boars were brought in for sport hunting from Georgia and South Carolina and escaped from game preserves in Tioga County. Others say domestic pigs escaped from local farms and turned feral. Still others say the two types of swine are breeding in the wilds of Wyoming County.

What’s certain is that Northeastern Pennsylvania, like many other parts of the country, has a growing feral hog population.

Hardisky has records of hog sightings that include a pack of 12 in Wyoming County in 2003 and another in 2004 that was killed and tested for various swine viruses. It was clean. Another group was seen in Penn Forest Township in Carbon County in 2004. One of those hogs was also killed and tested negative for viruses.

Hardisky says he tests every wild hog he can for two diseases lethal to domestic livestock—brucellosis and pseudo-rabies.

But the real problem with the hogs, according to both Hardisky and Kalinowski, is what they do to the land. “The biggest concern is habitat damage,” Hardisky said. “They can root up entire crop fields and destroy woodlands.”

“I never seen anything like it”

Kalinowski’s 300-acre farm sweeps up the side of Osterhout Mountain near Tunkhannock, where cattle graze between crop fields and a thick forest lines the ridge.

The imposing, field-hardened farmer has lived on the land his entire life, planting crops and raising livestock. Over the last four years, he has unwittingly become something of a folk expert on wild hogs, battling them since the winter of 2002 when he first spotted signs of the animals tearing up his land.

Kalinowski first spotted a pair of hogs with a spotlight one night in the fields, and after that he started seeing them all the time. One fall evening during the 2002 deer season, his neighbors told him there was a line of about 30 boars on the side of the mountain, snout to tail, trekking across his fields. He ran to get his rifle but the hogs made it to the woods before he could get a shot off.

Nobody believed him at first.

People said he was seeing bears, not boars. But after pressing the Game Commission, Kalinowski says an official told him an archery camp had brought a truckload of boars in from Georgia and they somehow got loose. Gradually, he started hearing rumors that other folks in the area were seeing hogs in the hills, too.

Before long, word spread that Kalinowski had wild boars on his land and hunters started offering him $1,500 for the chance to find and kill one. But he declined the offers and set about trying to kill the animals on his own.

Kalinowski and his family have only managed to kill seven or eight boars out of the dozens they’ve spotted on the land in the past four years. He reckons one set of tracks he found must have belonged to a 500-pounder.

“Back in 2004 we tracked a big one across the mountain. It made tracks in the snow a foot-and-a-half wide,” Kalinowski said. “And he knew he was being tracked. He circled back around trying to shake us. That thing was smart—I never seen anything like it.”

An accomplished hunter, Kalinowski talks about the boars with a kind of awe. During deer season in 2004, he said his son-in-law shot a deer on the mountain but didn’t have a knife to dress the animal. He left it there overnight and when he came back the next day it was gone, “no bones, nothing. They ate the whole thing. There was just some blood on the ground.”

And there was the hog den he says he found in the woods. “A sow had snapped off two-inch thick green saplings to make that den. Just snapped them right off.”

Kalinowski has heard boar stories from people all over the Tunkhannock area in recent years. He said William Host, his former neighbor on the other side of the mountain, was rushed by six adult boars last spring and got away only after unloading a rifle at them. “I don’t go out in the fields without a gun now.”

Of the boars they did kill, Kalinowski says the biggest one was about 350 pounds with 4-inch tusks, and when his nephew shot it from 30 yards with a 25-06 Remington, “the bullet didn’t even go all the way through.”

The last boar shot by the Kalinowski clan was in December 2005. He thinks the hogs have since moved on. “Whatever they were looking for, tearing up my crops and fields, they must have stopped finding it.”

“Everyone thinks we shot them all, but we didn’t, they just moved,” he said. “And I know they’re breeding. Even in the winter, I’d see big footprints and right next to them I’d see little ones.”

From farm pig to feral hog

“These hogs are smart, especially if they’ve been pursued,” state biologist Hardisky said. “They learn what to do and what not to do. When one of their buddies gets killed, they remember it and adapt.”

In the case of domestic swine escaping from farms, Hardisky said their domestication quickly reverts and they become wild. Over time, as they breed, their bodies change. They grow tusks and long, coarse hair; their snout lengthens and their front legs get stronger.

Although most feral hogs will run from the sight or smell of humans, Hardisky said some can become more aggressive and territorial in the wild. “I’m not sure where the aggressiveness comes from. I guess they become as wild as they need to be to survive.”

Joe Corn, a biologist with the Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study, said according to one study it took about a dozen generations for escaped domestic pigs to revert completely into wild boars. Since the animals start breeding at 6 months and have about four litters a year, the process of becoming feral doesn’t take long.

But most feral hogs in Northeastern Pennsylvania are not farm escapees but wild boars brought up from the south for sport hunting, according to Hardisky. Since these animals were wild to begin with, they have no trouble surviving in the dense woodlands of Pennsylvania.

Whether farm pigs turned wild or wild boars turned loose, the result is the same: An animal that can survive in almost any environment, breed profusely and has few natural predators.

Among those who have had dealings with wild hogs, there is a kind of respect and lore associated with the animals. Kalinowski claims the eyes of a wild boar don’t shine, that “it’s easier to see a skunk at night.” He also says the hogs on his land “can’t be compared to pigs down south; these ones were different.” For years he tried unsuccessfully to lure them into traps, but never knew what exactly they were looking for.

“One time they ate two acres of planted corn, dug up my field so bad you couldn’t drive a tractor over it. Next I day I went back and planted cheap corn and waited for them, but they never came back,” he said. “These were smart pigs; they never touched any bait we set for them.”

“We could never figure out why.”


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Pennsylvania
KEYWORDS: environment; farming; hogs; hunting; pennsylvania; pigs; shoottokill
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To: cpdiii

Nothing wrong with a win-win solution.


41 posted on 05/28/2006 8:50:52 PM PDT by lastchance (Hug your babies.)
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To: Eagles6
A 25-06 will go right through a deer.

No and maybe, depends on shooter, got my first model 700 25-06 about 1978, killed several deers with it, never had a one go all the way through. Only had one run after I shot it. But then I roll my own and that makes a little difference.

42 posted on 05/28/2006 9:04:03 PM PDT by org.whodat (Never let the facts get in the way of a good assumption.)
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To: Mariner
Had that been a 30.06 with 200gr partition bullets...there would have been a hole on the other side:)

So true!

43 posted on 05/28/2006 9:06:07 PM PDT by org.whodat (Never let the facts get in the way of a good assumption.)
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To: RegulatorCountry

True love is a lab.


44 posted on 05/28/2006 9:07:28 PM PDT by TASMANIANRED (The Internet is the samizdat of liberty..)
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To: Mike Darancette
NOISETTE OR MEDALLIONS OF WILD BOAR WITH FRESH HERBS

Noisettes-Medallions 2-4 per person

Olive oil

Wine Vinegar

lovage, mint, chives, parsley

Yoghurt or single cream

Pack the meat into a dish and sprinkle with wine vinegar and olive oil so that they are barely covered. Add a small stalk and leaves of lovage, good sprig of mint, some chives and some parsley. All chopped not too finely. Leave to marinade for and hour or so, turning occasionally. Drain off as much marinade as possible, wet meat will not brown so easily.

Heat some butter in a large pan that is smoking hot and sear on each side, before reducing the heat and cooking to taste.

As steaks are done remove to warm serving dish. Pour the marinade and herbs into the pan and gently cook for a minute or so, until all the pan juices have been amalgamated. At the last minute check the seasoning and pour in the cream or yoghurt and serve

=================

And don't forget:

Sauce Poivrade
(Brown Game Sauce With Giblets and Cracked Black Pepper)
a la Julia Child

Serve this sauce with any kind of roasted or fried game, including venison, elk, moose, wild boar, or small game birds.

1 to 4 cups of giblets, bones and meat trimmings, raw or cooked

1/2 cup chopped carrots

1/2 cup chopped onions

6 tablespoons clarified butter (butter heated until liquid, with foam scooped off and remainder strained into a bowl, leaving white residue behind), lard or cooking oil, with more as needed

4 tablespoons flour

5 to 6 cups boiling brown stock or canned beef bouillon

Optional: 1 cup dry white or red wine, or 2/3 cup dry white vermouth or 1 cup marinade from game

3 tablespoons tomato paste

Herb bouquet of 3 parsley sprigs, 1/2 bay leaf, 1/4 teaspoon thyme tied in cheesecloth

1 tablespoon or more cracked black pepper

Brown giblets, bones, meat trimmings and vegetables in hot clarified butter, fat or oil and set aside. Slowly brown flour in the remaining fat and then remove from heat. Beat in boiling liquid, optional wine or marinade, and optional tomato paste if desired. Add herb bouquet and return browned ingredients.

Simmer, skimming off foam as necessary, for 2 to 4 hours. Strain through cheesecloth, skim grease from surface, add pepper, and taste and adjust seasoning as necessary. For venison sauce, add 1/2 cup red currant jelly and 1/2 cup whipping cream beaten into sauce just before serving.

Makes 4 cups.

45 posted on 05/28/2006 9:16:25 PM PDT by yankeedame ("Oh, I can take it but I'd much rather dish it out.")
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To: Mariner
Had that been a 30.06 with 200gr partition bullets...there would have been a hole on the other side:)

It does not take that much gun to drop a pig. I started with 165gr GameKings out of a .308 because that is what I had, but most of the time they went clean through 200-250 pounders. I wouldn't want to use that load on something much bigger or meaner, but I was surprised at how adequate it was after so many stories. I use a 6.5mm now (.260 Rem), which can drill a hole through most specimens of North American critter -- more than adequate for a monster boar.

46 posted on 05/28/2006 9:21:36 PM PDT by tortoise
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To: Eagles6
I think his comment referred to the size and toughness of the critter. A 25-06 will go right through a deer.

He shot the hog at 30 yards. A high velocity round like the .25-06 loaded with a conventional softpoint bullet designed for deer such as a Coreloct or a PowerPoint is used at close range like that the bullet will often expand violently and break up into fragments on impact, and fragments don't penetrate well. A premium bonded-core bullet or a solid copper Barnes X bullet would have stayed together after expanding moderately and passed through the hogs body in one piece. Anyway, the hog was apparently killed with one shot and that's what counts.

When I was still in FL I used to hunt feral hogs with an old Enfield .303 British SMLE surplus military rifle. It looked like it had been dragged through France and Germany in WWII by a British tank, but any hog that it hit went down and didn't get back up. Feral hogs are tough as nails and hard to bring down, it takes more gun to put them down cleanly than somebody who hasn't hunted them would think.

47 posted on 05/28/2006 9:38:36 PM PDT by epow (Outside of a dog a book is man's best friend, inside a dog it's too dark to read a book, Groucho)
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To: Excuse_My_Bellicosity

Plus they're faster than hell running from a dead stop. But they're fun to hunt. And they taste good.


48 posted on 05/28/2006 9:47:27 PM PDT by PzLdr ("The Emperor is not as forgiving as I am" - Darth Vader)
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To: tortoise
I shot a 250-lbs sow with a 30.06 165grn boat tail handload to 2700 fps at about 150 yds. It was a bump on the opposite side of her chest. I cut it with my pocket knife and the bullet was about 3/8 of an inch from going through. She ran about 60 yards with no lungs and a hole in her heart.

Hawgs are tough!

49 posted on 05/28/2006 9:59:42 PM PDT by chuckles
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To: Lurker

The limit on pigs in CA is 9 per tag. Buy as many tags as you like.

They charge 9 bucks a tag. Dollar a pig, and they are all made of Spam!


50 posted on 05/28/2006 10:01:00 PM PDT by Donald Meaker (Brother, can you Paradigm?)
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To: Mariner

I've heard the Hornady SST bullets work well on hogs, too. I'm anxious to find out for myself.

:^)


51 posted on 05/28/2006 10:01:24 PM PDT by Disambiguator (Unfettered gun ownership is the highest expression of civil rights.)
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To: lastchance
I believe that there are no wild hogs native to North America.

The ones in this area (California) were imported from the Ural Mountains via Tennessee/Kentucky.

52 posted on 05/28/2006 10:02:56 PM PDT by Coyoteman (Stupidity is the only universal capital crime; the sentence is death--Heinlein)
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To: tortoise

Like a lot of other creatures, it is an impedence matching problem. Too fast, and your round over expands. Too slow and you don't expand. I prefer "pre-expanded" bullets, at moderate velocities, like .45 Colt, or my old friend the .30/40 Krag with heavy for diameter rounds. Placement first, then penetration, and expansion is icing on the cake. At close range, headshots work best, but a pig's brain is pretty well protected from the front.


53 posted on 05/28/2006 10:04:43 PM PDT by Donald Meaker (Brother, can you Paradigm?)
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To: Excuse_My_Bellicosity
Sounds like good sport for the real hunters. They should advertise it and get some sports hunters up there. If they find a way to charge for it, they can make more money than they can by farming.
54 posted on 05/28/2006 10:05:36 PM PDT by Ronin (Ut iusta esse, lex noblis severus necesse est.)
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To: Coyoteman

You see this is what happens when you ignore illegal immigration.


55 posted on 05/28/2006 10:07:39 PM PDT by lastchance (Hug your babies.)
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To: epow
I've got an Ishapore SMLE in 7.62. I've got some of those Barnes Copper Solid 168 grain BTHPs loaded up to use on Wisconsin hogs.

The guy I talked to at Barnes said they ought to work just fine on 'em.

I'll let you know.

BTW I 'sporterized' that old SMLE a bit. It aint' pretty, but I can ring an 8 inch cast iron skillet every time at 300 yards with it. Good enough for pigs I expect.

L

56 posted on 05/28/2006 10:08:44 PM PDT by Lurker (Real conservatives oppose the Presidents amnesty proposal. Help make sure it dies in the House.)
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To: TASMANIANRED

"True love is a lab."

They can be a chore as pups, until the energy level settles down, but you're absolutely right. You couldn't ask for a more affectionate and gentle dog. My 13 yo is nearing the end of his life, I know, but he's still healthy, happy and getting around pretty well. It's going to hurt when he goes.


57 posted on 05/28/2006 10:08:45 PM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: RegulatorCountry

I have a lab and a lab mix.

Love them dearly as I did their predecessor.

You need to get your older dog a pup. Can bring new vigor to an older dog...

I was crazy enough to try and raise them both at the same time. Nearly lost my mind but they are 2 1/2 now and worth their weight in gold ( at least to me).


58 posted on 05/28/2006 10:11:52 PM PDT by TASMANIANRED (The Internet is the samizdat of liberty..)
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To: Donald Meaker
That's a pretty good deal. In Wisconsin it's $85.00 for an Out Of State small game license with no bag limit.

I'm what they call in Wisconsin a "FIB". You can figure out the meaning of the acronym yourself as it's not fit for a family forum. So they nick us pretty good.

But I figure $85.00 ain't bad if I can load up on a few in the 150 lb range.

BTW do you know what a large group of hogs is called?

It's a 'sounder'.

Yea, I'm full of useless knowledge like that. If you listen to a few folks around here that ain't all I'm full of.

L

59 posted on 05/28/2006 10:17:35 PM PDT by Lurker (Real conservatives oppose the Presidents amnesty proposal. Help make sure it dies in the House.)
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To: TASMANIANRED

2 1/2? They're just starting to settle into that laid back, slightly goofy persona that everybody associates with Labs, instead of running you in circles, lol.


60 posted on 05/28/2006 10:22:43 PM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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