Fair
72°
Morris, IL
Fair|Forecast »

Kansas winning the war against wild hogs

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

Between aerial gunning from helicopters and trapping, Salter said around 2,600 feral Kansas hogs have been killed since 2006.

That’s also the year Kansas took a huge step toward solving its growing problem by banning sport hunting for feral hogs. Landowners can still shoot them on their property.

Though it works well with deer, sport hunting does little to control the number of the highly intelligent, mostly nocturnal and very fertile wild hogs.

“It’s just not an effective way to control pig populations,” Salter said.

“If (sport hunters) get on a group of 20, they may get three or four. After that the pigs take off and become someone else’s problem. When they come back, there’ll be more of them.”

Salter has seen Kansas wild sows with 10 or 12 piglets, and said a half-dozen per litter is a safe average. Unfortunately most sows have two litters per year.

In addition to preventing a faster spread of feral hogs, the sport hunting ban slowed a major problem – Kansans buying wild hogs from trappers in Oklahoma or Texas and releasing them in Kansas for future hunting opportunities.

Help from landowners

About the same time, the wild hog eradication program began working closely with Kansas landowners to get populations located and eradicated. It took very little arm-twisting.

“I’ve had good friends lose entire crops of corn, soybeans and even milo to hogs,” said Tom Berding, a Cowley County landowner who often volunteers to help Salter. “Sometimes they seem to tear things out as fast as the fields can be planted. They’re also tearing up a lot of fields so bad you really can’t drive (farming) equipment over them.”

Salter said biologists in other states are envious when they hear that nearly 100 percent of Kansas landowners have agreed to allow trapping and gunning on their lands. So far, about 550 Kansas landowners have opened about 750,000 acres to the project.

The lone exception is about 3,000 acres in Bourbon County where landowners want the pigs around for personal hunting.

Though the late winter aerial gunning program often kills scores of pigs in a day, it’s expensive and takes huge chunks from the about $170,000 furnished by the Kansas Department of Agriculture for the program. So, that leaves Salter to other means the rest of the year.

Comments


Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all