Ponte Vedra porkfest
Posted: March 27th, 2016, 9:31 pm
My neighborhood has a lot of hogs and they’ve again started rooting up more yards to include re-rooting some common grounds that the neighborhood just re-sodded from a previous rooting. Getting em one at a time isn’t making a dent so I borrowed a pig trap to help correct the problem.
(I think it’s OK to have a little fun with your kids as you’re working on a neighborhood pig problem………)
After carting it out to a spot with some help from a neighbor the kids baited the area.


One hour later I went back to set up some game cameras and there already was a hog snacking on the bait. Looking good…..
After four days of baiting the hogs were comfortable entering the trap. With 3 different sounders and a couple of singles coming at different times of the day/night it looks like there are approximately 20-25 pigs.





This trap is open on the top and dere can jump out



With the hogs committed to entering the trap the rootstick was set and the trap made ready. The idea behind the rootstick is that the hogs enter the trap and first feed on the two thick rows of bait (one on each side of the interior edges of the trap). As more hogs enter some get displaced off the large piles and one pig will find/move to the small pile of corn that’s covering the rootstick. As that pig eats the small pile it “roots” the stick off it’s 2 points of contact thereby releasing the door trapping them.

Trap & rootstick set

Rootstick ready to be tripped
Next morning:
As I walked up to the trap I could see the door was down and as I walked up to the trap the smallest of the 3 pigs hit the hog panel HARD and got its head and front shoulders out but it became stuck. With it’s excited LOUD squealing a large pig ran out of the woods and charged the trap and I started backing off. The pig unstuck itself & stopped squealing and fortunately the pig (sow?) ran back into the woods.

3 hogs


Kapn Skinny & future sausages
--------------------------------------
A week later………….Over Spring Break my daughter & I spent a week in the Key West sailing so I secured the door OPEN and while we were in the Keys my son kept the trap rebaited every couple of days…… now baiting only inside the trap to get them acclimated to entering without fear and concentrating their numbers in the trap:









Now that the hogs are comfortably entering the trap…… the trap and the rootstick is set for tonight..................

Brian
(I think it’s OK to have a little fun with your kids as you’re working on a neighborhood pig problem………)
After carting it out to a spot with some help from a neighbor the kids baited the area.


One hour later I went back to set up some game cameras and there already was a hog snacking on the bait. Looking good…..
After four days of baiting the hogs were comfortable entering the trap. With 3 different sounders and a couple of singles coming at different times of the day/night it looks like there are approximately 20-25 pigs.





This trap is open on the top and dere can jump out



With the hogs committed to entering the trap the rootstick was set and the trap made ready. The idea behind the rootstick is that the hogs enter the trap and first feed on the two thick rows of bait (one on each side of the interior edges of the trap). As more hogs enter some get displaced off the large piles and one pig will find/move to the small pile of corn that’s covering the rootstick. As that pig eats the small pile it “roots” the stick off it’s 2 points of contact thereby releasing the door trapping them.

Trap & rootstick set

Rootstick ready to be tripped
Next morning:
As I walked up to the trap I could see the door was down and as I walked up to the trap the smallest of the 3 pigs hit the hog panel HARD and got its head and front shoulders out but it became stuck. With it’s excited LOUD squealing a large pig ran out of the woods and charged the trap and I started backing off. The pig unstuck itself & stopped squealing and fortunately the pig (sow?) ran back into the woods.

3 hogs


Kapn Skinny & future sausages
--------------------------------------
A week later………….Over Spring Break my daughter & I spent a week in the Key West sailing so I secured the door OPEN and while we were in the Keys my son kept the trap rebaited every couple of days…… now baiting only inside the trap to get them acclimated to entering without fear and concentrating their numbers in the trap:








Now that the hogs are comfortably entering the trap…… the trap and the rootstick is set for tonight..................

Brian