Kentuck

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 19, 2001
Messages
3,648
Reaction score
47
Wild pigs bulldoze golfers' greens
CLAYTON: Oakhurst Country Club's course, nearby neighborhood lawns being torn up by the foraging swine
By Elisabeth Nardi
CONTRA COSTA TIMES
A decade ago, to get rid of unwanted wild pigs at Clayton's Oakhurst Country Club, residents and hunters opened fire, killing dozens of swine.

The aggressive feral pigs in the hills surrounding the course have not been much of a problem since -- until a month ago. That's when the course started to become scarred with ruts and holes, a sign that the pigs were back.

This time, because development surrounds the course, a shootout is not a viable solution, said John Vest, general manager of the course.

But something needs to be done, because the pigs are destructive to the course and surrounding neighborhoods, Vest said.

"It looks like a bomb went off. It looks like a tractor was out there," he said.

At night, the wild pigs have been coming down from the hills above Clayton. They tear up the rough and fairways with their snouts trying to find food, such as grubs.

The wild pigs, ranging from 50 to 300 pounds, are digging up parts of the course to get to food underneath because low rainfall has meant less food in their normal foraging grounds.

Vest has not estimated the cost of the damage. Crews are fixing what they can, but a complete fix will not be done until Vest can be sure that the pigs are gone, he said. The course is playable, but the destruction is noticeable, he said.

Course officials received a depredation permit from the California Department of Fish and Game last week. It allows a licensed trapper to trap and dispose of the pigs.

That is good news for Clayton resident Joe Campbell. His front yard, located in the Black Diamond subdivision off of Oakhurst Drive, which surrounds the course, has been torn up by the pigs. There are at least eight other yards that have been stripped of a front lawn from the pigs, which no one sees, Campbell said.

With the course having the same problems, it means that residents may not have to solve the problem alone, he said.

"It's kind of good news for us (that the golf course is involved,)" he said. "If we were in this by ourselves we would be in trouble, but if the golf course gets in this they will get the permit ... I sort of think of it like the more the merrier."

Wild pigs were recently a problem for another foothill golf course, Walnut Creek's Boundary Oak. The city hired a pig trapper in November to dispose of those unwanted porkers at an estimated cost of $5,000. More than 20 pigs were killed.

According to Bob Boldt, Boundary Oak's golf director, there has been no new damage and no trapped pigs for the past three weeks. The city is considering putting up fences to stop the pigs from coming to the course.

That is what Oakhurst did years ago to combat the pig problem. But the one area of the course that is not fenced seems to be where they are coming in now, Vest said.

Wild pigs are the only animals that can be hunted year-round, and a homeowner can legally kill a pig if their property is threatened.

But local ordinances would preclude someone from killing a pig with a firearm within Clayton city limits, said Cathy Roybal, deputy agricultural commissioner for Contra Costa County.

The county has few options to solve the problem, she said.

If a resident has a problem with a wild pig, the county offers a list of professional pig trappers for hire, she said.

The pigs "are getting so numerous now that, to a point, these trappers are beginning to be few and far between," she said.

Reach Elisabeth Nardi at 925-952-2617 or enardi@cctimes.com.
 

oneshothunter

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 11, 2005
Messages
865
Reaction score
0
im in lets go kill some pigs and play a round of golf .. what a great weekend it would be .. one in one and a round of golf lol
 

dw33

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 8, 2006
Messages
2,123
Reaction score
30
Both are great suggestions. Hunting and golf? Can it get any better?
 

beastslayer

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 15, 2004
Messages
2,861
Reaction score
0
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (dw33 @ Dec 21 2006, 11:23 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div>
Both are great suggestions. Hunting and golf? Can it get any better?[/b]

Getting paid for it not good enough for you? LOL

Here is my proposed schedule:

Hunting 5:30 a.m. to 7:30. Breakfast (for free at the clubhouse-remember they begged us to take the contract of pig eradication). Golf 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 (free green fee and use of cart - excuse oops reason is scouting for remaining pigs). Lunch (again free - see reason for free breakfast). Interview clubhouse waitresses after lunch (intelligence gathering on pig sightings by staff).

Collect check before going home around midnight.
 

doghouse95

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 30, 2001
Messages
2,307
Reaction score
0
I'm ready, but don't tell my wife. I'll just tell her it's a side job.....
 

Kentuck

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 19, 2001
Messages
3,648
Reaction score
47
I'll have to check. I know a couple of people that live there. My Mom's old neighborhood near there was getting hit hard a few years ago. I told one of the home owner's associtation councilmen I would be glad to help get rid of them with my bow. They hired a trapper. The pigs were coming off of Mt Diablo State Park. What a waste.
 

SFHOGWILD

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 13, 2006
Messages
168
Reaction score
0
Good luck fellas, I grew up out there and all it will take is one big mouth and the next thing you know they will be paying an out of state trapper to come in and promise the hogs will be released somewhere else.
 

dw33

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 8, 2006
Messages
2,123
Reaction score
30
Beastslayer, when do we start up our business? LOL.
 

Rumpled

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 24, 2001
Messages
206
Reaction score
0
While I think it would be great if some JHO'ers could get paid to take care of this problem; it's ridiculous that the city and golf course are paying to have this done.
I think a Walnut Creek JHO resident should complain to the city council of this waste of funds.
There have to be dozens, if not hundreds, of people who would pay an access fee to archery hunt these pigs.
Problem solved and the city makes money instead of wasting it.
And some kids get fed some pig - it's for the children after all.

Also, who right now is breaking out their maps trying to figure out how to get at these pigs (I know, there isn't gonna be any public land)
 

oneshothunter

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 11, 2005
Messages
865
Reaction score
0
paid i will do that job for pigs no need to give me money just the ok to get as many pigs as me and my jho friends can eat lifes so good .. and in my world its sunny and pigs are all over the place and hunting is free .. click ........... the door is locked to my world .. only friends are welcome ..lol
 

beastslayer

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 15, 2004
Messages
2,861
Reaction score
0
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (dw33 @ Dec 21 2006, 12:14 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div>
Beastslayer, when do we start up our business? LOL.[/b]

You are no. 1123 in the interest list already forming.
<
 

Kentuck

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 19, 2001
Messages
3,648
Reaction score
47
oneshothunter,

I know both areas well. Grew up in Clayton. Maybe we can fletch some arrows, which I haven't done yet, and then try 'em out. How about that?

Kentuck
 

hogwild757

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 22, 2006
Messages
248
Reaction score
0
I'm interested I have time after christmas. I build traps also and have one ready.
 

Rancho Loco

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 29, 2002
Messages
5,546
Reaction score
3
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (SFHOGWILD @ Dec 21 2006, 12:07 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div>
Good luck fellas, I grew up out there and all it will take is one big mouth and the next thing you know they will be paying an out of state trapper to come in and promise the hogs will be released somewhere else.[/b]

Trapped hogs in California are only released from their earthly vessels.
<
<
 

SFHOGWILD

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 13, 2006
Messages
168
Reaction score
0
Sure enough but , some of the opposition can get pretty vocal around here. Like Santa Cruz Island (I am sure that is the Island) bringing in an Australian professional hunter to remove the hogs rather make money here by selling accsess...
 

CAjackrabbitWCP

Well-known member
Joined
May 4, 2005
Messages
492
Reaction score
1
Down on the central coast where I live, we have this problem too. Two golf coureses that I play have pigs that tear it up; costing the GC's hundreds of dollars.

One of them traps them. They successfullly solve the problem, one hires hunters, unsuccessfully solving their problem and costing them even more damage to the golf course.

People that hunt with the bow are HUNTERS, they chase or search for (game or other wild animals) for the purpose of catching or killing and for the sport which is invloved.

What Golf courses need, weather us hunters like it or not is, KILLERS, one that to deprives of life in any manner; cause the death of; slay. to destroy; do away with; extinguish

They have a problem that is costing them a lot of money and they need to stop it.

Traps are the answer.
 
Top Bottom