Hunting & Fishing Heli Hog Hunt Video

5RWannabe

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Minuteman
Jan 31, 2011
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if this is a repost sorry, it just looked to fun
 
Re: Heli Hog Hunt Video

I don't care how many times these vids get posted, i'll gladly watch them over and over. Damn, that looks like one hell of a good time!!!!!

Are there actually guide services that will take you up and do that for a fee???
 
Re: Heli Hog Hunt Video

RWG, I was wondering the same thing. I'm guessing the shooter was using something like 00 or maybe 000 buckshot because when he hit them it put them on their nose for a dirt nap pretty damn hard.

I think pigs are a disgusting, filthy, animal!!! I could blaze away at those things like that to the point of exhaustion. I would love to know if there are guide services that do this....
 
Re: Heli Hog Hunt Video

Yea, im pretty impressed with how hard its hitting them from a moving object. Dident realize it would do that. Tough to tell distance from the video, but some of those shots are not all that close. Even on a miss, it puts out a good impact even considering it is dry weather.
 
Re: Heli Hog Hunt Video

If I lived close to those guys doing that I would go broke buying ammo and paying for guided trips shooting those things out of a chopper!!!
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Re: Heli Hog Hunt Video

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: RWG818</div><div class="ubbcode-body">http://www.selectoutfitters.com/

heli's can only be used on your property but the bill is in the senate to be passed ? Puts a new spin on it i guess, not sporting but fun </div></div>

<span style="text-decoration: underline"><span style="font-weight: bold">God Bless Texas</span></span>

Texas "Pork Choppers" Soon to Be Open for Business

* by Becca Aaronson
* 5/13/2011

James Stone's ranch outside of Lockhart, TX on May 10, 2011. Hogs have hobbled Stone's property, ruining pasture land, killing trees and damaging fences. He estimates taking out over 500 hogs during the last three years.

When state Rep. Sid Miller, R-Stephenville, introduced a bill last legislative session to allow licensed hunters to shoot feral hogs from helicopters, Texas lawmakers jokingly passed out “pork chopper” buttons.

They're not laughing anymore.

More than 2 million strong statewide, hogs are increasingly encroaching on residential communities -- destroying any lawn or fence in their path and, with sharp tusks, occasionally injuring an unlucky person in their way. Even urban lawmakers are now taking the threat seriously.

“They're now uprooting tombstones in the city cemeteries, golf courses and coming into residential areas,” said Miller, R-Stephenville, who successfully shepherded the bill through the state House and Senate. “What we're trying to do is control the population.”

<span style="font-weight: bold">If, or when, the governor signs the bill into law, hog hunting from helicopters — a practice currently allowed only for some landowners — would be legal for any licensed hunter willing to buy a seat in the air.</span> Texas lawmakers say the legislation could curb the $400 million in agricultural damage feral hogs cause annually and deter their spread into urban areas.

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(Check out our analysis of Texas Parks and Wildlife data to track demand for helicopter hunting by landowners, how many hogs Texans have already killed from the sky, and landowners' reported reasons for needing to kill feral hogs.)

Feral hogs cause extensive damage to agriculture and the native ecosystem, say biologists at the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. The biologists maintain that sport hunting is beneficial because it brings in revenue for landowners, helps control overpopulation and, well, the meat is tasty.

They have almost nothing nice to say about the feral hogs: The animals uproot crops, pastures for cattle feed, fences and the native habitats of ground-nesting birds and reptiles. And the hogs will eat almost anything: corn seedlings, peanut plants, peach trees, bird eggs and baby calves. They can also spread disease to domestic pigs and humans, and they foul watering holes.

James F. Stone, a rancher in Lockhart, estimated that he had killed 500 hogs over the last three years on his property — 80 since January. And they are vicious.

“They're dog killers,” Stone said. “That's what we call them.”

A few of his kills have weighed more than 600 pounds.

As a non-native species, hogs can be hunted year-round in Texas with no limit, although a hunting permit is required. Texas landowners commonly capitalize on hog invasions by selling permission to hunt them — from the ground — on their land.

The helicopter bill would allow licensed hunters to pay for a helicopter and, with the landowners' permission, hunt hogs and coyotes from the sky.

Left unchecked, the number of feral hogs in Texas could increase 18 to 20 percent per year, said Dr. Billy Higginbotham, a professor at the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension. In five years, hog numbers could double.

The common — and illegal — practice of releasing feral and domestic hogs for off-season sport hunting, combined with hogs' increasing access to food left by ranchers for deer, has “created a perfect storm” for a population boom, Higginbotham said.

Jay Smith, a pilot and owner of Smith Helicopters, said he had seen a boom in property damage, too. “I've seen holes that they've done that you can bury a four-wheeler in,” said Smith, who has flown helicopters for 33 years, specializing in land surveying, cattle management and predator control.

Smith supports Miller's bill but said safety is a concern. “What we have to watch out for is the people that get in the helicopter with us and the way they handle the guns,” he said.

Prices for aerial hunting trips range from $300 to $600 per hour. Other species, like coyotes, can already be hunted by helicopter. Demand is greatest in South Texas, where hunters can easily aim over the open rural land as helicopters fly slowly and low to the ground.

Although using poison to control hog population is illegal in the state, the Texas Department of Agriculture is financing research on a toxin used to control feral hogs in Australia. Justin Foster, a researcher at the Kerr Wildlife Management Area in south central Texas, said Australian research showed that hogs were “uniquely sensitive” to sodium nitrite, and he added that researchers were investigating its effects on nontarget species in Texas, like deer and raccoons.

“But you also need to think safety,” Foster said. “Does it kill everything else that consumes it, or does it not?”
 
Re: Heli Hog Hunt Video

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Outdoorsman9</div><div class="ubbcode-body">HA! This one is better than the AR one, hands down </div></div>

AMEN
 
Re: Heli Hog Hunt Video

These creatures definitely need thinning. I was just causally chatting with a local guy here at the range just a while back who told me that they whacked 63 just in a few days through deer season. I have to say though, it does not seem very sporting to shoot them from a chopper, but it did look like a good time. Whatever he was shooting them with sure was laying them out.
 
Re: Heli Hog Hunt Video

Texas “Pork Chopper” Bill passes Senate, but raises serious concerns on Helicopter Hog Hunting Safety.

May 26, 2011

Houston, TX- For Immediate Release//

Texas State Senators joined with the House on Wednesday, May 18th 2011 and agreed to aid embattled Texas ranchers in performing “Aerial Warfare” against an estimated 4 million feral hogs that are destroying crops, endangering livestock, causing over $14 million in damages around the State. Under the legislation sponsored by Sen. Troy Fraser (R-Horseshoe Bay), landowners, or their agents, will now be allowed to rent helicopter space to hunters in order to hunt feral hogs and coyotes by air.

Hunters from all over the nation have been initiating contact with Texas landowners in order to secure valuable “hunting leases” so that they can rent a helicopter and hunt the feral hogs. This has raised serious concerns as to the future safety of the feral hog hunting program that is currently in effect throughout the State.

“We firmly support this legislation, because it will now give the famers and landowners a way to subsidize the Feral Hog Control problems here in Texas” states Mike Morgan, President of VERTEX Helicopters.

VERTEX Helicopters currently performs Aerial Feral Hog Control services under permit from the Texas Parks & Wildlife Department. Under this permit, helicopter operators are currently allowed to perform the aerial hog control for landowners for a fee. “Under the current laws, we provide the helicopter, the pilot, and the gunner.” states Morgan. “The new laws, however, will allow a landowner, or their ‘agent’, ie: a helicopter company, to allow private hunters to pay to shoot hogs from the helicopter. In the past this wasn’t legal.”

The change in law presents its own challenges, according to Morgan, “We have received around 10-15 calls each day since the bill passed the Senate from people who are wanting to charter a helicopter to hunt hogs. We try to make people understand that while the law may have changed to allow people to rent the seat, we aren’t about let ‘just anyone’ jump into the aircraft and punch off rounds at hogs. This isn’t a Helicopter Sport Hunting law. It’s a Feral Hog Eradication program. This law change just helps subside the costs.”

Many groups have begun to express concerns over the safety of hunters who aren’t trained to shoot from a moving helicopter, which has raised questions about liability, federal regulations and potential damage to helicopters.

“All of the gunners from our company go through an intensive helicopter weapons operations course that was developed based off of Military Special Operations tactics. We’re not about to let someone get into our aircraft, nor would any other helicopter operator in his right mind, unless that shooter has a strong understanding of helicopter hunting safety, let alone the legal and liability implications that go with it. ”

VERTEX has now leapt in front of the industry by offering a professional Helicopter Hog Hunting Safety Course that is specific to hunters who would be hiring a helicopter service to hunt feral hogs.

"This isn’t your normal ‘Hunting Class’, either." continues Morgan, "This is an intensive safety course developed using military special operations shooting tactics. Our course gives the hunter detailed guidance on everything from the type of helicopter to contract, pilot experience level requirements, the best choice of weapon, how to shoot effectively, how to communicate with the pilot, and all of the applicable state and federal laws governing hunting from a helicopter.”

Morgan adds, “This course will also prepare the hunter to be able to know about what do to in case of an emergency, and even helps them to understand the liability implications of worst case scenarios. What happens if they accidentally shoot a rotor blade? What happens if they drop a magazine and it goes through the tail rotor? Things like this can destroy a helicopter. These are all issues that need to be addressed before performing this aerial eradication service.”

“We are extremely happy to see this bill pass, but we feel strongly that there need to be very strict safety parameters put in place. If a hunter isn’t operating safely, or accidentally causes damage to a helicopter or injures someone, then it’s all over the news with negative publicity. Our goal is to help prevent potential accidents and to make helicopter hog hunting a safe venture.”

Vertex Helicopters offers their Aerial Hunting Safety Course two weekends per month at a cost of $350 per attendee. The course is an all-day course with 4 hours of classroom instruction in the morning and hands-on training in the helicopter on an active range during the afternoon. Each class is limited to 12 people to keep the instruction more concentrated, resulting in more interaction and additional time for hands-on training. Depending on the location, VERTEX Helicopters will travel with one of the aircraft to perform the classes for larger groups at remote locations when scheduling allows.

VERTEX Helicopters is a full service helicopter company located at 8888 W. Monroe Rd at Hobby Airport in Houston, Texas. They can be reached at (281) 616-5095 or you can visit their website at www.vertexhelicopters.com or email them directly at [email protected]
 
Re: Heli Hog Hunt Video

Been there done that in S. Texas on a cousin's large ranch. We used Remington #4 buck in 12 gauge. We killed about 60 and if they were near a road we called the ranch workers to come collect them and they were welcome to keep them and if in the middle of the ranch we let them lay. At that time Hunters for the Hungry did not accept anything but licensed and tagged deer. I'm not sure if that has changed in the past few years though.

It was a LOT of fun, but as I was shooting a Smith & Wesson 916A pump with no pad; my bicep, shoulder and chest were black and blue for a week!
 
Re: Heli Hog Hunt Video

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: head2h2o</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I have to say though, it does not seem very sporting to shoot them from a chopper, but it did look like a good time.</div></div>

Eh...

By that logic though, you could say its not sporting to shoot anything that is not equally armed and capable of shooting back.
 
Re: Heli Hog Hunt Video

I hate pigs and always thought that poeple should pay me for taking pigs off there land. This here..........I would pay many times over. I am going to google and find an outfitter.
 
Re: Heli Hog Hunt Video

Wow, I imagine they just leave a most of those pests out there to rot as I don't imagine they'd be able to haul many in that bird.

I'd Chorizo every one of those pigs, maybe some Hot Italian and some Maple/Sage Breakfast links. I'd be making sausage for months. Probably can a few hundred jars of Chili too
 
Re: Heli Hog Hunt Video

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Dr Scholl</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Guess what blokes? That video was shot in Australia, along with the pigs
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Australia, Texas, same thing