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<blockquote data-quote="hk7686" data-source="post: 819295" data-attributes="member: 8629"><p>well legally we cant take the game if it's a control thing. I know of guys who still do it up there, Javelina are fun to hunt, and can be dangerous if you unknowingly happen upon em. Also Javelina not only share physical traits with pigs, but they are also just as much as a nuicance to some folks in the southwest, they keep the horses skiddish and have been know to attack tourists who get too close, or who happen to leave their cabins while the javelina are going through their trash.</p><p></p><p>one of the guys I hunted for up there owned a weekend ranch, where people could get out and take trailrides, and watch some of the cowboys herd wild mustangs and stuff, but he had literally hundreds of Javelina out on his land, and they had more than once disrupted trail rides and scared customers off. So he reported the incidents and was given the right to get em off the land.</p><p></p><p>It's the equivalent of the guys in texas who do controlled hog hunting clearing the pigs from peoples crops.</p><p></p><p>I didn't like having to leave the game there when I could get some awesome hams, and chops.(Javelina is awesome, and much leaner than your everyday pig)But legally we couldn't keep the game, it had to be disposed of, usually buried.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="hk7686, post: 819295, member: 8629"] well legally we cant take the game if it's a control thing. I know of guys who still do it up there, Javelina are fun to hunt, and can be dangerous if you unknowingly happen upon em. Also Javelina not only share physical traits with pigs, but they are also just as much as a nuicance to some folks in the southwest, they keep the horses skiddish and have been know to attack tourists who get too close, or who happen to leave their cabins while the javelina are going through their trash. one of the guys I hunted for up there owned a weekend ranch, where people could get out and take trailrides, and watch some of the cowboys herd wild mustangs and stuff, but he had literally hundreds of Javelina out on his land, and they had more than once disrupted trail rides and scared customers off. So he reported the incidents and was given the right to get em off the land. It's the equivalent of the guys in texas who do controlled hog hunting clearing the pigs from peoples crops. I didn't like having to leave the game there when I could get some awesome hams, and chops.(Javelina is awesome, and much leaner than your everyday pig)But legally we couldn't keep the game, it had to be disposed of, usually buried. [/QUOTE]
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