Hog Trapping | Permanent Hog Trap Site Capture | JAGER PRO™
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- Опубліковано 16 кві 2017
- This video will demonstrate the successful capture of a second sounder almost a year after this M.I.N.E.™ trap was built. To browse our hog trapping equipment, visit our site today!
Having a feral hog trap permanently erect in a high traffic area allows the farmer or landowner to quickly trap pigs that migrate into a property from adjoining areas.
Follow our feral hog control methods and technology demonstrations via our monthly video newsletter at www.jagerpro.com. - Наука та технологія
You Da MAN !!! Another successful day at the office. Your method is TRULY the only method to SOLVE the problem.
To watch those Hogs run into that fence full speed is crazy
I like this format of showing more than one capture. I wish you would upload more, though.
I think the PRO in JAGER PRO is well deserved. :)
Out of all of these Jager Pro videos, this one is the best! Reason is, you showed dispatching the feral hogs, could you please keep showing the dispatching, it helps show how tuff these pigs are! Because most people think feral hogs really don't damage anything except the ranchers/farmers feelings!
Thanks for the feedback.
That looks like so much fun! From gathering intel to building the trap and baiting them! Awesome, what a rush!
I've been following yall's product for a few years now. So hyped to get one once I get my land. I hope to stay in the south and where there's heat, theres pigs.
Excellent work. May the hog body count continue to climb even higher using your effective trap solution!
This city boy love this stuff👍🏽
Who asked?
this is so much better than a hunter shooting at a bunch of hogs, getting one or two before they have run away...I love to watch so many of them get caught in the trap knowing they will not be eating crops or reproducing.
In Missouri they made it illegal to hunt feral pigs for this same exact reason. The traps are way more effective and the hunters setting up feeding stations were teaching the sounders not to go for the feeders.
This is the easiest way to begin to eradicate em....becus they multiply so fast...love it.👌🏾👌🏾💯
Love the commentary!
Hispanic lady next door has too many kids that tears my backyard up ..crazy ideas comes 2 my head ...Jaeger pro !!
Fascinating stuff. I'm from the UK so we don't have this kind of problem but I can certainly say that the way you're dealing with it is truly professional. The only pest species I have to manage are grey squirrels and mink, kindly given to us by the Americans 😂, and red foxes and pigeons. I would love to get the chance to come to America to trap feral pigs it looks so fun and it's helping the environment, a win win situation.
Awesome video...need more footage!
NICE!! I like when you show you shooting them.
Hey I just saw your truck a few mins ago so now I'm a new sub
GREAT VIDEO. I LOVE IT.
Love your videos
Well done! We need more hunters in Texarkana, TX!
I’m from the arkansas side of town. Lol
Way to go brother!! OOh Rahh!
Just epic well done 🐷👍🏼
Nice work and thanks
good job, guys!!
Nicely done, very professional and efficient.
ibuprofenPill professional. .......yeah but should of carried a gun at all time's lol
Great job😀
Well done, thx!
Good video
Awesome!
What did these poor innocent creatures ever do to you?!? Oh yeah, destroyed crops, charged people, injured pets, bankrupted your farm, spread disease...
Levi Stanyer Bring home the bacon
Where do you want to start?
Wild hogs are vectors for various diseases that can affect humans. Rabies, brucellosis, tuleremia. I want you to imagine a 300 pound boar with rabies. Scared yet? You should be. They also carry diseases that affect domestic swine.
Wild hogs are destructive to farm crops. They also eat small livestock, house pets, infant livestock, and can and do infrequently attack children.
They root and trash ecosystems.
They dart out in front of automobiles, causing accidents.
An American lady was killed recently by a hog or hogs.
Conclusion: they are big delicious rats.
WHAT?!?! I hate hogs because they look stupid and trying to kill a fucking human
Good work
Great, as usual!
You must to carry your service wepon with you all the time soldier ...
just great !
its always been my dream to go hog hunting
Superb
I would like to start a business like that.
I'll bring the beers looks like you got the BBQ lol
This video was awesome. Great job with removing those pigs.
Please make more videos
What happens to the meat?
Me pinkston, when do you think, tentative, have more videos ready?
Still waiting on the United States Patent & Trademark Office (USPTO) to approve our fourth patent before we release additional trapping videos. We will continue to post thermal shooting videos monthly until then.
If in florida sell captured pigs to alligator farms.
It is clear that the traditional trapping and shooting method of picking off singles or a fee at a time isn't working.
The whole herd strategy is much more promising. Are there any studies on how long sounder eradication suppresses hogs from a given area?
Wow, nice work. Have you ever been charged by a hog?
Yes, on a weekly basis.
Than, you're getting fun! Lol ...
Is it predictable that un-trapped sows (& perhaps boars) will return to a trap full of its kin and become convenient targets? Or is it just luck?
By definition, a "sounder" is a matriarchal family group consisting of adult sows typically related via two or three generations and includes their piglets. It is more predictable for nursing sows to stay near a closed trap enclosure than boars. Dominant boars are solitary creatures and do not usually travel with a sounder unless a sow is in heat.
@@JAGERPRO dominant boars are shot during autumn thermal operations?
@@FalconfromRF - Control strategies must continually change throughout the various seasons to target adaptive survivors. Trapping will always be more efficient in the winter to target sow and pig sounders when no other natural food sources are available. Thermal shooting operations will always be more efficient in the spring during planting season or fall harvest season to target boar bachelor groups who avoided winter traps.
That place is the pig black hole ally! When they get in, there is no way to get out!
mother's love
Top de mais
I getting my lettuce and tomatoes ready as we speak
I want to ask.What do you do with wild boar,following meat processing?
thank you for answer
Pigs are killed inside the trap enclosure because it is illegal in Georgia to transport feral swine alive. The US Department of Agriculture does not allow wild pork donations directly to food banks due to swine brucellosis and the pseudorabies virus. However, this does not mean wild pork cannot be eaten. It is fantastic table fare, but very important to thoroughly cook wild pork to 165 degrees. Most feral pigs harvested by JAGER PRO™ personnel are either processed by guests or donated (on the hoof) to local families and churches for food.
In our country Europe.There are strict veterinary examinations for each piece caught.
Each hunted animal gets its code.
After the veterinary examination, it is possible to use meat for own consumption,or the meat goes on sale.
Wild pork we can cook very well!
We can equate to food instructions.
so glad u guys donate - means the world to those folks
What do u do with the carcasses?
Pigs are killed inside the trap enclosure because it is illegal in most states to transport feral swine alive or sell the meat. The US Department of Agriculture does not allow wild pork donations directly to food banks due to swine brucellosis and the pseudorabies virus. Feral swine can be eaten, but it is very important to thoroughly cook wild pork to 165 degrees. Most feral pigs harvested by JAGER PRO™ Hog Control Operators™ are either processed by guests or donated to local families and churches for food. However, there is another perspective to consider. Mission success is based solely on removing the entire sounder from each property since whole-sounder lethal control prevents any pig from escaping, surviving, reproducing or being educated to the removal process. Whether a non-native, agricultural pest is eaten or not has no value in the "damage management" decision-making process. Just as removing all termites, rats and cockroaches from your home to stop future residential damage is more important than ensuring all captured pests are eaten. Insect versus mammal makes no difference to the legal definition of a pest or the Best Management Practices needed to control them. The total number of wild pigs we successfully donate has no bearing on the number of animals we must euthanize. The United States cannot BBQ our way out of the feral swine problem. Any carcasses NOT used for food are buried per Department of Agriculture regulations.
Are they safe to eat? The smaller ones looks ideal for a roasted suckling pig
Pigs are killed inside the trap enclosure because it is illegal in most states to transport feral swine alive or sell the meat. The US Department of Agriculture does not allow wild pork donations directly to food banks due to swine brucellosis and the pseudorabies virus. Feral swine can be eaten, but it is very important to thoroughly cook wild pork to 165 degrees. Most feral pigs harvested by JAGER PRO™ Hog Control Operators™ are either processed by guests or donated to local families and churches for food. However, there is another perspective to consider. Mission success is based solely on removing the entire sounder from each property since whole-sounder lethal control prevents any pig from escaping, surviving, reproducing or being educated to the removal process. Whether a non-native, agricultural pest is eaten or not has no value in the "damage management" decision-making process. Just as removing all termites, rats and cockroaches from your home to stop future residential damage is more important than ensuring all captured pests are eaten. Insect versus mammal makes no difference to the legal definition of a pest or the Best Management Practices needed to control them. The total number of wild pigs we successfully donate has no bearing on the number of animals we must euthanize. The United States cannot BBQ our way out of the feral swine problem. Any carcasses NOT used for food are buried per Department of Agriculture regulations.
Did you capture or shot the last bore was outside the perimeter?
We shot the last boar outside the trap enclosure.
It all seems rather cold, but I recognise that they are an overpopulated pest causing real economic damage to farms -- and they _are_ dangerous. And tasty. :)
Show all shots for next vid.
Do you guys have the meat processed or do you just toss the carcasses
Pigs are killed inside the trap enclosure because it is illegal in most states to transport feral swine alive. The US Department of Agriculture does not allow wild pork donations directly to food banks due to swine brucellosis and the pseudorabies virus. However, this does not mean wild pork cannot be eaten. It is fantastic table fare, but very important to thoroughly cook wild pork to 165 degrees. Most feral pigs harvested by JAGER PRO™ Hog Control Operators™ are either processed by guests or donated to local families and churches for food.
@@JAGERPRO Ok Thanks
Is there a market for the pork?
Pigs are killed inside the trap enclosure because it is illegal in most states to transport feral swine alive or sell the meat. The US Department of Agriculture does not allow wild pork donations directly to food banks due to swine brucellosis and the pseudorabies virus. Feral swine can be eaten, but it is very important to thoroughly cook wild pork to 165 degrees. Most feral pigs harvested by JAGER PRO™ Hog Control Operators™ are either processed by guests or donated to local families and churches for food. However, there is another perspective to consider. Mission success is based solely on removing the entire sounder from each property since whole-sounder lethal control prevents any pig from escaping, surviving, reproducing or being educated to the removal process. Whether a non-native, agricultural pest is eaten or not has no value in the "damage management" decision-making process. Just as removing all termites, rats and cockroaches from your home to stop future residential damage is more important than ensuring all captured pests are eaten. Insect versus mammal makes no difference to the legal definition of a pest or the Best Management Practices needed to control them. The total number of wild pigs we successfully donate has no bearing on the number of animals we must euthanize. The United States cannot BBQ our way out of the feral swine problem. Any carcasses NOT used for food are buried per Department of Agriculture regulations.
@@JAGERPRO the last sentence is what i was wondering about what you can't eat.
What is done with the dead hogs?
Pigs are killed inside the trap enclosure because it is illegal in most states to transport feral swine alive. The US Department of Agriculture does not allow wild pork donations directly to food banks due to swine brucellosis and the pseudorabies virus. However, this does not mean wild pork cannot be eaten. It is fantastic table fare, but very important to thoroughly cook wild pork to 165 degrees. Most feral pigs harvested by JAGER PRO™ personnel are either processed by guests or donated (on the hoof) to local families and churches for food.
Have your traps ever broken due operations ?
No. They are built specifically for feral swine impact.
So cute yet so destructive.
what if anything done with meat - dogfood?
The US Department of Agriculture does not allow wild pork donations directly to food banks due to swine brucellosis and the pseudorabies virus. However, this does not mean wild pork cannot be eaten. It is fantastic table fare, but very important to thoroughly cook wild pork to 165 degrees. Most feral pigs harvested by JAGER PRO™ personnel are either processed by guests or donated (on the hoof) to local families and churches for food.
E-fish-shent!
What do you do with the bodies?
Pigs are killed inside the trap enclosure because it is illegal in Georgia to transport feral swine alive. The US Department of Agriculture does not allow wild pork donations directly to food banks due to swine brucellosis and the pseudorabies virus. However, this does not mean wild pork cannot be eaten. It is fantastic table fare, but very important to thoroughly cook wild pork to 165 degrees. Most feral pigs harvested by JAGER PRO™ personnel are either processed by guests or donated (on the hoof) to local families and churches for food.
@nilsuthor - Which law do you believe must be changed? Why? Mission success is based solely on removing the entire sounder from each property since whole-sounder lethal control prevents any pig from escaping, surviving, reproducing or being educated to the removal process. Whether a non-native, agricultural pest is eaten or not has no value in the "damage management" decision-making process. Just as removing all termites, rats and cockroaches from your home to stop future residential damage is more important than ensuring all captured pests are eaten. Insect versus mammal makes no difference to the legal definition of a pest or the Best Management Practices needed to control them. The total number of wild pigs we successfully donate has no bearing on the number of animals we must euthanize. The United States cannot BBQ our way out of the feral swine problem. Any carcasses NOT used for food are buried per Department of Agriculture regulations.
where you go buy the trap at i want one?
Contact the closest Authorized Dealer to your location. www.jagerpro.com/dealers/
"I changed to my suppressed 22,and dispatched the remaining 18 pigs"-just like the CIA and FBI would say "We cannot deny or confirm the incident".
It's discourteous to keep the neighbors up with gun fire.
Do you eat them?
Pigs are killed inside the trap enclosure because it is illegal in Georgia to transport feral swine alive. The US Department of Agriculture does not allow wild pork donations directly to food banks due to swine brucellosis and the pseudorabies virus. However, this does not mean wild pork cannot be eaten. It is fantastic table fare, but very important to thoroughly cook wild pork to 165 degrees. Most feral pigs harvested by JAGER PRO™ personnel are either processed by guests or donated (on the hoof) to local families and churches for food.
So do you get the meat from the hogs or does the guy whose land your trap on?
Pigs are killed inside the trap enclosure because it is illegal in Georgia to transport feral swine alive. The US Department of Agriculture does not allow wild pork donations directly to food banks due to swine brucellosis and the pseudorabies virus. However, this does not mean wild pork cannot be eaten. It is fantastic table fare, but very important to thoroughly cook wild pork to 165 degrees. Most feral pigs harvested by JAGER PRO™ personnel are either processed by guests or donated (on the hoof) to local families and churches for food.
You knew that there were hogs outside of the enclosure. Why did you not bring your rifle wlth you when you first arrived? lucky the hog hung around.
Where does all that meat go?
Pigs are killed inside the trap enclosure because it is illegal in Georgia to transport feral swine alive. The US Department of Agriculture does not allow wild pork donations directly to food banks due to swine brucellosis and the pseudorabies virus. However, this does not mean wild pork cannot be eaten. It is fantastic table fare, but very important to thoroughly cook wild pork to 165 degrees. Most feral pigs harvested by JAGER PRO™ personnel are either processed by guests or donated (on the hoof) to local families and churches for food.
What happens to carcasses , just curios? I am not against hunting them , I just believe that you shouldn't waste food if it's good .
Pigs are killed inside the trap enclosure because it is illegal in most states to transport feral swine alive. The US Department of Agriculture does not allow wild pork donations directly to food banks due to swine brucellosis and the pseudorabies virus. However, this does not mean wild pork cannot be eaten. It is fantastic table fare, but very important to thoroughly cook wild pork to 165 degrees. Most feral pigs harvested by JAGER PRO™ Hog Control Operators™ are either processed by guests or donated to local families and churches for food.
JAGER PRO™ thanks
Mushrooms will catch more pigs than you can imagine. They cant resist.
Why not you captured and shift them for Hough farming.big source of wild meat.controled and confidential.
Pigs are killed inside the trap enclosure because it is illegal in most states to transport feral swine alive or turn them loose once captured. Feral pigs are NOT native to North America thereby harmfully impacting agriculture, native vegetation, vertebrate and invertebrate fauna, soil properties and water quality causing an annual negative economic impact of $2.5 billion dollars in the United States. Also, the threat of disease transmission from feral pigs to domestic livestock is a major concern to the farming industry. Several of these diseases are swine specific (both feral and domestic) but others can affect sheep, goats, cattle, horses, dogs, cats and several species of native wild mammals. Feral pigs carry at least 45 different parasites (external and internal) which pose a parasitic disease threat such as Toxoplasmosis and Trichinosis to wildlife, livestock, pets and humans. Removing a non-native, invasive pest from the landscape only improves the planet for the native plants, animals and habitat which do belong here. Letting feral pigs live is totally irresponsible and a perfect example of the negative impacts humans make on the world by applying their compassion instead of science and logic.
@@JAGERPRO yes yes I understand about its problems.. they are already numbers in free no need to produce.beside this other sources are important..
Do you understand the problems Europe and China are currently experiencing with African Swine Fever? The United states is making it illegal to transport feral swine alive so we do not end up like Europe and China. The threat of disease transmission from feral pigs to domestic livestock is too great. Also, there is no reason to create direct competition against farmers raising domestic beef, pork and poultry for the same purpose.
@@JAGERPRO absolutely...
Bacon....lot's n lot's of bacon.
LOT'S OF BAR BQ PORK THERE,,,,,,,,,,,,,, WHEN DO WE EAT ???????????
like shooting hogs in a barrel
You need help. Carrying out all those pigs must have been exhausting.
this make a lot of sausage
Their meat are diseased and has viruses.
These hogs look like huge Rats.
Trump 2020. His vision is perfect.
As a hunter I tell you: Shame on you. You´re nothing but a killer. Dishonorable what you have to do for a living.
The word "HUNT" does not appear anywhere in our description. This video demonstrates Integrated Wild Pig Control® which is the whole-sounder removal of a non-native, invasive species as a means of agricultural pest control and disease prevention. Feral pigs are NOT native to North America which means they do not belong in the United States and create a negative economic impact of $2.5 billion dollars annually. Human action led to feral pigs being released in our country and the man-made problem requires a man-made solution. Removing a non-native, invasive pest from the landscape only improves the planet for the native plants, animals and habitat which do belong here. Letting pigs live is totally irresponsible and a perfect example of the negative impact humans make on the world by applying compassion instead of science and logic.
@@JAGERPRO Sorry, your statement doesn´t convince me. These are animals, no "pest". And to kill them with a suppressed .22lr rifle is no "control", but slaughter. Just be honest and use the right term. Your business model may be successful, but as a hunter I call it dishonorable.
These are not game animals. These are pests that will literally eat you out of house and home while leaving you a few diseases that no one needs nor do their animals..
If you feel that this is dishonorable, you pay the farmers for all that the pigs destroy.
I doubt that you will feel the same after you see the damage or after you are broke due to the hogs.
If we had feral hogs where I live, I’d probably pay these guys double what they charge just to get rid of them. And while I no longer hunt, I just might join in the dispatching.
@@normascammell9885 You people can write whatever you won´t: It just sounds like an excuse for that slaughtering. There is no "pest" and no "control" at all. But that´s your problem - not mine.