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Kansas winning the war against wild hogs

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Salter sometimes uses night-vision gear to check areas where hogs have been reported. By special permit, he has a semi-automatic rifle with a sound suppressor to work on herds.

“I generally have a rule of half when I find some pigs,” Salter said of night shooting. “If I think I can get half of the herd, I’ll shoot. If not, I’ll probably try to set up a trap.”

Importance of patience

Unlike traps laid for most animals, wild hog traps aren’t one-night affairs.

Salter has invested many consecutive nights of scouting without a hog being seen. Well-scouted hog herds have been scattered when an illegal hunter with dogs pushed through an area.

Salter estimated he had about two months invested in a trap near the Arkansas River.

“When that trap goes I want them all inside, and that takes patience,” he said.

What began as a pile of corn with some fence panels scattered about was eventually formed into a pen about 20 feet across.

Remote trail cameras monitored the size of the local herd, plus how they were reacting to the setup. When the camera showed all seemed at ease inside the trap for a few days, Berding set the trip wire.

Rifles ready, Salter and Berding approached the trap carefully.

The good news was the trap had been sprung. The bad news was it held just four pigs, two of which were sows due to give birth any day.

“I really wanted them all,” Salter said after the hogs had been quickly killed. “Now we have eight other pigs out there that will probably be trap shy.”

Berding was optimistic as they began taking blood samples to be tested for diseases.

“We know where they are,” he said. “We’ll keep an eye on them and get them with the helicopter this winter.”

But even if all upcoming flights and set traps work perfectly, Salter said the work will never be done.

“As long as they have (growing) populations in Oklahoma, we’ll have pigs coming over our border,” he said. “We’ll have to do some annual maintenance, trapping and maybe flying.

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