Sunday, May 25, 2014

Here, piggy piggy

CHICAGO (Reuters) - The U.S. Agriculture Department is known for its army of statisticians packing yardsticks and calculators to measure wheat and count soybeans.
But the agency needs more firepower for another kind of rural reckoning and is gearing up with thermal imaging weapons.
 
 
In its crosshairs are aggressive feral hogs that can weigh more than 400 lbs (180 kg) and have been known to carry off newborn calves. They cause about $1.5 billion of damage every year to farm communities and fields, say department officials, and now there are worries they may help spread a deadly pig virus.
 
 
So the USDA wants to buy thermal scopes that snap onto high-powered rifles to kill the wild beasts.


"We're going to get them, oh yes we are," said Jason Wilking with USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS), which has put out bids for 11 scopes since April 7.

more..

Maybe that's what them night fighting 40 Smith Machine guns are for?

5 comments:

  1. 15 years ago Texas was the place to go to go Pigging. Now it sounds like half the country is prime piggin grounds.

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  2. Them .40 machine guns would be poor choices for hunting pigs. I think they have different targets in mind.

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  3. A relative of mine and his friend heard some hogs in the woods. So one entered on one side and the other on the other side. His friend scared the hogs and about 20 of the came charging right by him (one grazed his leg) and he emptied a 9mm pistol never hitting one. Scared the heck out of him. I laughed when he told the story.

    The 40 Smith MG's would work in dense woods. Ain't saying that is what they are for.

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  4. Outlaw, sorry to hear the news on your health. I'm praying for you too.

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