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Home » City Of Lafayette Hires Trapper To Help Control Destructive Wild Pigs

City Of Lafayette Hires Trapper To Help Control Destructive Wild Pigs

by CLAYCORD.com
24 comments

The city of Lafayette has called in a trapper to help ease the city’s problems with wild pigs tearing up sports fields and posing a danger to people and dogs on local hiking trails, city officials said.

The city’s Parks, Trails and Recreation Department is coordinating efforts with the Lafayette Police Department and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to make sure the pig population is controlled safely.

In addition, the city also is closing some nature trails to minimize possible exposure of people and pets to the pigs. The trails will be reopened when it’s deemed the wild pigs no longer pose a notable threat.

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The wild pigs, fairly common in Contra Costa County and elsewhere throughout California, are a mixture of European wild boars, hybrids (crossbred domestics) and feral domestics.

Though accounts differ, one story is that boars were first introduced into California by George Gordon Moore, who brought them from North Carolina to the Carmel Valley at the San Francisquito Ranch in the 1920s for sport hunting, and spread rapidly from there. They are the very definition of “invasive,” destroying wildlife habitat and competing with native species for food.

That food can be almost anything — nuts, grubs, acorns, seeds, roots, fruit, rodents and small reptiles. Their search for food often involves aggressively tearing up the landscape, turning up soil for grubs, moles, seeds or anything else under the surface that’s edible.

The feral pigs have caused that kind of damage in many parts of the Bay Area, notably in and around Alamo, Diablo, San Ramon, Dublin, Morgan Territory, the Sunol Wilderness and other communities near Mount Diablo. In past years, they also have been reported in San Jose’s East Foothills and in the hills of San Mateo County.

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While having poor eyesight, they have keen senses of smell and hearing. And as they can be vicious, people should stay away from them.

photo credit: wildlife.ca.gov

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Life in semi-rural Lamorinda.

Who’s hungry? 😉

It’s so strange when you buy your house up in the hills to be close to nature and then Nature eats the lawn. DUMB! Move back to the city

While I typically agree with this argument, it doesn’t make sense here…

They are an evasive non-native animal introduced by the dude mentioned in the article for hunting and what not. This can easily be an issue in Concord as well.

Maybe we need a similar plan to get rid of the wild turkeys…

In Texas it’s open season on ferral pigs. No rules. They can’t control them, so one lone trapper isn’t going to do much I would think. Good luck tho because they are destructive.

Saw that in the paper today. These pigs are not native wild life, just farm life allowed to go wild for the past 150 years or so.

Boy, oh, boy!!
Bacon the hooves!! How about pork chops??

“That food can be almost anything”.. and they do mean ANYTHING. At summer camp in rural Mendocino County we had to keep our soap in the trees at least 5 feet up or they came through camp and ate it.

I will fire up the smoker!

RecTec baby. Whole suckling pig laying down overnight. Yum.

Mountain Lions have been protected in kalifornia since 1990, and yet the wild pig population has increased! are the Lions no match for wild Hogs?!!!

The problem is reproductive. Sows begin reproducing after one year, have on average 1.5 litters per year, and an average of 6 piglets, but can go up to 12. Only takes a few years, you’ll NEVER get them under control. Unless you take drastic measures. For more information, Google feral hogs in Texas.

Feed the homeless.

Wow, that is a really great idea! One problem becomes a blessing for another problem.

I have extensive photographic evidence of the pig damage on Mount Diablo if the mayor wants a photo essay over the last 4-5 years of wandering around the mountain.

I hope they don’t plan on relocating them. They should let a bunch of archers go after them. You can eat the sows but not the boars.

Why the cruelty? Archers…really????

Uh….allowing for hunting would cull a good portion of this pig population.

That’s what I was thinking casky Could be really fun too but this place is run by sellout soy bois

I’m definitely not a soy boi, nor am I against guns or hunting in any way. But I could see some potential problems with a bunch of hunters shooting high-powered rifles in Lafayette.

In Texas they hunt them from helicopters with automatic weapons. We should do that here. But our socialist overlords are likely too cowardly to allow it.

Tastes great, so why not have a community Pig-Out? I love animals and have a large BBQ to show that I care!

Just shoot all of them dead. Where do I sign up?

Btw, a mature sow can have three litters a year. Do the math.

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