- Joined
- Apr 28, 2020
- Messages
- 818
- Reaction score
- 1,328
Have any of you tried the “Pig Brig”? Interesting concept and if there are no survivors they wouldn’t be educated pigs...
Have any of you tried the “Pig Brig”?
Holy Thread Drift Batman!!!According to reports the Pig Brig is a great hog trap.
i shot some more little pigs as did a neighbor. Also contacted the hog doggers in that area. Told them to chase the hogs into the Red River.
Steel foot traps wouldn't hold them anyway. If you have access to a chicken coop .save some of the bedding when it gets changed .put it around the trap in three places. With a little bit in the front and behind the trap in two bigger places are put bigger piles in the back . So you have a triangle with the trap in the middle.what it does is makes them come in and shuffle around from right to left over the trap trying to smell back and forth between the piles .works like a charm.i've used spring pole snares to catch hogs.
“All P.I.G.s want to become H.O.G.s”
(Professionally Instructed Gunmen/Hunters Of Gunmen)
I dont have the experience you do but the few I shot I would agree. We always laughed about getting a 25-30 pound sow and putting it over the camp fire with a few ears of corn. Or even several 4-5 pound piglets and eat them like grouse. YUM. Trouble is when a dozen or so show up I instinctively go to a larger pig.best eating is a sow between 90 and 100 pounds.
i don't now, never had them tested. The solution to trichinosis, be it domestic hogs or wild animals, is to properly cook the meat. i've read articles that state that 5-15 percent of wild hogs are infected with trichinosis.Do you find trichinosis in the Pigs you're harvesting??
Did a search on Goggles...Do you find trichinosis in the Pigs you're harvesting??
Enter your email address to join: