Hello I am Posting this notice to Inform anyone interested in Hog erradication on their property. Me and my partner will respond to your inquiries immediately, and hunt these nuisances by night and leave by morning. You will have the option to keep the hogs dead or alive (if kept alive it is recommended that they stay on your property to avoid having these animals spread disease). We will hunt them and kill them for you or setup traps and catch them alive.
We accept any and all donation to pay for food and gas. furthermore we ask that you allow us to hunt your property for the purpose of training our dogs and our personell, and any hogs that you dont want will be donated to local food banks to help feed the needy. We want to train our Dogos to hunt these animals and that is why we are placing this announcement. We breed and sell the Dogos and occasionally take out our buyers to see the dogs in action.
We dont do this as a means of living, we do this to help out property owners keep this menace to a minimum. Regardless of how you much you try to erradicate these animals, they will keep coming back and destroying property, unless you have constant measures in place to help you. We will use traps, hunting dogs and some firearms depending on the severity of the problem.
If anyone is interested in this service please call Me or my associate @
or or you could send me a text. ask for Jesus or Patrick.
Please serious inquiries only, because we have a limited amount of time to perform our services. first come first serve.
The following information comes directly from the Texas Parkd and wildlife department. This information will give you a better understanding of what type of animals these are and if they actually pose a threat to you and your property.
Description
Feral hogs may appear basically the same as domestic hogs and will vary in color and coat pattern. A mature feral hog may reach a shoulder height of 36 inches and weigh from 100 to over 400 pounds. The extreme larger hogs are generally not far removed from domestication. Males are generally larger than females. European wild hogs are about the same size; however, their legs and snouts are usually longer and they have a larger head in proportion to the body. Their body is covered with long, stiff, grizzled colored hairs, long side whiskers, a longer straighter tail, and a nape on the neck giving the European hog a razorback, sloped appearance. The crossing of European and feral hogs often produces an offspring with some European characteristics. Feral hogs are more muscular than domestic hogs, and have very little fat.
Additionally, the hairs of European appearing hogs and their hybrids frequently have multiple split ends. The young are born a reddish color with black longitudinal stripes. As they mature, the coat color becomes predominantly dark brown or black.
Hogs have four continuously growing tusks (two on top, two on bottom) and their contact causes a continuous sharpening of the lower tusks. They have relatively poor eyesight but have keen senses of hearing and smell.
Distribution
Feral hogs are distributed throughout much of Texas, generally inhabiting the white-tailed deer range, with the highest population densities occurring in East, South and Central Texas. North and West Texas have very low or no populations. However, reports indicate that populations are beginning to expand and increase in these areas. There is currently an estimated population in excess of 1.5 million feral hogs in Texas.
The increase in population and distribution is due in part to intentional releases, improved habitat, increased wildlife management, and improved animal husbandry such as disease eradication, limited natural predators, and high reproductive potential. There seem to be very few inhibiting factors to curtail this population growth and distribution although extreme arid conditions may impede it.
Location: Webb county and surrounding areas