Standard Operating Procedure. Did anyone really expect otherwise?very soon....
Saagar Enjeti: 26 MILLION UNEMPLOYED, Corporate Elites CHOSE To Make You Suffer
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•Apr 23, 2020
They not just in Texas, we're having a hell of a problem with them, just glad we don't have the numbers Texas does, but, if we don't hunt them day and night we will have. A sow can have 2 and sometimes 3 litters a year, 10/12/14 per litter and even with helicopters it's all but impossible to kill them all. We lost 40 acres of corn to the pigs last year and when we plant they will follow the seed row out of site rutting up every corn seed. We've built traps, bring in dog hunters and hunt them at night.When you combine scaring the daylights out of Mexicans with a pandemic, does anyone think the food supply is not affected? I have an idea though. Feral pigs are a problem. Get thousands of gun nuts in helicopters to waste them and then have people collect the carcasses and distribute as needed. I confess to being addicted to watching videos of hunters in helicopters mowing down pigs in Texas. It is astounding how many of them are out there.
This virus is a convenient (manufactured) excuse to perform the operations on the work force the globalists envisioned... in order to compete with China for implementation of artificial intelligence...Standard Operating Procedure. Did anyone really expect otherwise?
I know, it kind of staggers the mind to realize just how many of them there are and how quickly one sow can turn into hundreds of pigs. Check out youtube for heli hunting videos, they get addicting. Some of them are night hunts with guys on foot but the ones that really get rid of them are the dudes in choppers. they charge the hunters a fee to do it and people come from all over to mow them down. Still doesn't make a dent in them. They will fly over a field near Corpus and the herds will be 40 or 50 of them, all over the place. Its incredible.They not just in Texas, we're having a hell of a problem with them, just glad we don't have the numbers Texas does, but, if we don't hunt them day and night we will have. A sow can have 2 and sometimes 3 litters a year, 10/12/14 per litter and even with helicopters it's all but impossible to kill them all. We lost 40 acres of corn to the pigs last year and when we plant they will follow the seed row out of site rutting up every corn seed. We've built traps, bring in dog hunters and hunt them at night.
I know, it kind of staggers the mind to realize just how many of them there are and how quickly one sow can turn into hundreds of pigs. Check out youtube for heli hunting videos, they get addicting. Some of them are night hunts with guys on foot but the ones that really get rid of them are the dudes in choppers. they charge the hunters a fee to do it and people come from all over to mow them down. Still doesn't make a dent in them. They will fly over a field near Corpus and the herds will be 40 or 50 of them, all over the place. Its incredible.
youtube has videos from pro trappers which might give you some tips on how to get the whole herd of them. You need to feed them and wait until all of them are in the trap, sometimes a couple stay out. but it also means late nights watching the cameras, not fun.yes, it's amazing how quick they can multiply, at one time we had 4,000 domestic pigs in hog houses, so I know how fast sows can turn into hundreds/thousands. I've saw the heli-hunts, we may have to resort to those type hunts, as I said presently we're trapping, dog hunting and hunting at night with night scopes and have all the state permits to do it. Hopefully they never get as bad as Texas and Tennessee mountain forest are being destroyed. What pisses me off is some hunters brought the damn pigs here to hunt (illegally) just as coyotes, our second biggest problem now.(at least they don't destroy crops, but, they sure killing small games and family pets)
We have 7 traps we built and cameras on all and so far this week I've only seen 4 on my phone and all trapped/killed are donated to a slaughter house that processes them for food banks, or we allow friends to have the meat that need food.
Ordered a case of Hog Oil in many flavors and it's worked well, all our traps have gates they walk through and fall back down and all cameras are connected to our cell phones...………..thx for tipsyoutube has videos from pro trappers which might give you some tips on how to get the whole herd of them. You need to feed them and wait until all of them are in the trap, sometimes a couple stay out. but it also means late nights watching the cameras, not fun.
don't know whyLink is broken
Ever watch videos on ratting? go check out Ratting with Terriers.Ordered a case of Hog Oil in many flavors and it's worked well, all our traps have gates they walk through and fall back down and all cameras are connected to our cell phones...………..thx for tips
Not Americans. Urban Americans. Those of us in The country will be just fine.
Yep, majority of neighbors have gardens, pigs/beef/chickens/eggs and there's plenty of wildlife and I enjoy fishing. We may have a problem with starving city folks, but, hounds will take care of that or neighborhood...……….we have a well armed watch group.Not Americans. Urban Americans. Those of us in The country will be just fine.
Very, very real even for food stampersThe supply chain is under severe stress. I have food. But New York? San Francisco? If this doesn’t lift soon, shit will get very real very fast.