Rancho Loco

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 29, 2002
Messages
5,546
Reaction score
3
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c...25/BA194992.DTL

Henry Coe State Park rooting out wild pigs
Tom Stienstra, Chronicle Outdoors Writer
Saturday, May 25, 2002
©2002 San Francisco Chronicle

Some 300 wild pigs have been killed in the past two weeks at Henry W. Coe State Park east of Morgan Hill, as rangers try to halt the spread of an animal reviled by many naturalists as "rats with hooves."

It's one of the biggest efforts ever undertaken to rid a state park of wild pigs, officials said.

The state Department of Parks and Recreation hired a trapper to try to rid the sprawling wilderness area, the largest in the state park system, of an estimated 2,000 pigs.

"We're maybe one-sixth of the way there," said Kay Robinson, superintendent at Henry Coe. "We expected a steep curve at the beginning because they haven't wised up yet. We're really happy."

Feral pigs and their rooting activity are blamed for causing severe erosion and silt problems from storm runoff in watersheds. At Henry Coe, the soil in some valleys is so heavily uprooted that after it rains, the water pouring downstream into ponds resembles pure mud. Uprooted soil is vulnerable to catching the airborne seeds of exotic plants, such as star thistle.

Pigs also damage many native wildlife species, including deer, squirrel, quail and other birds, by successfully competing with them for food, especially acorns. They rototill habitat where amphibians and reptiles live and can wipe out oak saplings.

"Five years ago, we could count on seeing them in just a few of our parks," said Joe DiDonato, wildlife program manager for the East Bay Regional Park District. "Now they're in more than 10 of our parks. They just keep on coming."

In the past five years, more than 2,000 wild pigs have been killed by professional trappers in the Bay Area foothills, primarily in watershed lands and parks. Yet the pigs have been contained only in Marin County. They're continuing to advance on the Peninsula, especially near Memorial County Park near Loma Mar, and in the East Bay hills.

The pigs are prolific breeders and are turning up in odd places as their population expands, including an Antioch golf course and in the backyard of a home in Pacifica. A herd of 12 pigs was trapped last year near the Pulgas Water Temple in Woodside.

Some parks are "like a house full of rats," said Dick Seever, a professional trapper who has been brought in with his son to try to get rid of the feral pigs at Henry Coe.

The problem is magnified at Henry Coe because of the size of its wilderness habitat. The park is south of Mount Hamilton and covers 134 square miles, more than twice the size of San Francisco. The landscape consists of oak woodlands, grasslands and canyons, with 150 ponds and small lakes -- ideal habitat for pigs to breed and expand their population.

Seever is paid roughly $150 for each pig he catches, usually by setting traps and catching the pigs at night when they are active. Once captured, the pigs are sent to a tallow factory.

Robinson said Seever would continue hunting pigs at Henry Coe for three or four months, "until the money runs out." A proposal is in place to try to finish the job next year.

Some critics of eradication programs say habitats and watersheds can be saved without killing the pigs. At public hearings, they have suggested fencing parklands or capturing the pigs live and relocating them to fenced lands.

Just such a fencing project is being attempted at Pinnacles National Monument near Hollister. But it has been 18 years since the project was started at a cost of $9,000 per mile, and it still isn't complete.

Seever said he would provide pigs he traps to anybody who has a fenced home for them and the required transport permit. So far, he said, there have been no takers.
 

Speckmisser

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 12, 2001
Messages
12,900
Reaction score
27
I know, I know.. it's de rigeur to say it...

But Dang!  All that open land out there around Henry Coe, and NO HUNTING.  Of course, hunting would just push them into the safety zones within the more heavily used parts of the park, but there'd be some super hunting in the outlying canyons.  

Ah, well... my daydream of having decent hunting within an hour drive is yet to come true.  
 

rusman66

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 18, 2001
Messages
773
Reaction score
6
Wow they give that trapper 150.00 a pig.  They would have hunters lined up to give THEM  150.00 bucks a pig.     too bad.
I have a barbaque grill that looks like a fence, would that be good enough. A pig tag is almost like a permit.  Hmmmmmm?

(Edited by rusman66 at 10:05 am on May 26, 2002)


(Edited by rusman66 at 10:09 am on May 26, 2002)
 

Speckmisser

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 12, 2001
Messages
12,900
Reaction score
27
Hey Rancho,

When's the last you heard on that Coast Dairies property?  I heard it come up a couple of times at a party up in the Santa Cruz Mtns, and the pig problem was definitely mentioned.  No one could tell me then (about a month ago) if there'd be hunting or not.
 

Rancho Loco

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 29, 2002
Messages
5,546
Reaction score
3
The last meeting they had to map the general plan didn't specifically say "no hunting", but it wasn't a priority either.  My feeling is...There is more concern with allowing and ensuring existing use, both ag and rec.
I did talk to a DFG warden a couple of months ago, and asked if he knew anything, or had any feelings.  He rolled his eyes and scoffed.."Hunting?  Santa Cruz?.."
There is a general perception that any hunting here will be immediately met by a phalanx of "save the pigs" protesters.  Yeah, there might be a few, but every environmentalist and "greenie" I know and talk to recognize the problem with the pigs around here, and know what needs to be done.  There is lots of pig hunting around here on private property, I guess I have to cultivate some contacts to get some trespass rights....
 

shooter44

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 26, 2001
Messages
117
Reaction score
0
It is exasperating.  You'd think they would at least allow bowhunting, but instead they spend our tax money to pay these guys to do what we would line up to do for free.  There are lots of wild pigs in the Santa Cruz mountains up Los Gatos creek above Lexington Reservior too, but it's all water company land, and again, no hunting.
 

shaginator

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 2, 2002
Messages
1,001
Reaction score
0
Henry Coe Park has 87,000 acres, many remote and only accessible by foot or mountain bike. You'd think they'd at least allow hunting in those remote areas. Depressing.
 

Cahunter

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2002
Messages
806
Reaction score
2
I live in gilroy and iits stupid that you can't hunt in coe park.  Its the biggest waste of land in the state.  I've been hunting with friend who have ranches behind Coepark and we drive though the park to get there.  I see more deer and Pigs then you can count.  There are roads to access at least 75% of the park, open it for hunting!  There needs to be a pettition to open the park.  the fact that they are paying someone to trap the pigs when people would pay to hunt there is just a good example of you GOV at work.  
 

QEU

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 9, 2001
Messages
347
Reaction score
2
Rancho Loco: I live in San Jose and would love to take my first HOG locally. Let me know if you are successful with any local contacts.
 

Bigman

Member
Joined
Apr 1, 2002
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
I live in Morgan Hill, right next to the park.  I was at the bank on my way to shoot skeet on Saturday and there posted by the ATM is a "Stop The Killing" flier.  So I read it as I am doing my buisness and its some animals rights group talking about how terrible it is that they are killing the pigs in Henry Coe.  They talk about how the pigs are a natural part of the park and how they take the place of the Grizzly Bear and how they pigs squeel when they shoot them.  Then they listed that Park Manager and the Park Rangers names and numbers and asked people to call.  What nuts!!  I took the flier and posted it at my gun range to make sure people called to say that they should stop the trapping and start allowing people to hunt them legally and ethically.
 

Cahunter

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2002
Messages
806
Reaction score
2
I live in morgan hill as well, and I saw the same flyer.  These people need to get there head out of their ass.  I sure the cows that died to make there leather show went quietly.  I email someone and fish and game and asked why they would let people hunt these pig instead of paying someeone to trap them.  His responce" there is no hunting instate parks"  Oh well.  Good luck to everyone in the drawing this month.
 

Bigman

Member
Joined
Apr 1, 2002
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
I sure you all think this as well, but I cannot get over the fact that our government will pay $150 per pig for someone to catch them, when they could easily get $150 per pig payment to allow people to hunt them.  I have been to Henry Coe.  Its huge and unless you are close to the main enterances there are very few people.  I have asked rangers and gotten some that say they wish people could hunt and others that think you are some kind of psyco for even mentioning the killing of animals.  How did they get the Channel Islands hunt approved?  Is there some way to get that type of action here?
 

Rancho Loco

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 29, 2002
Messages
5,546
Reaction score
3
Pigs all over the place...

On the trail of Bay Area's destructive pigs

Tom Stienstra    Sunday, June 16, 2002
 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



High on remote Phegley Ridge, we stopped and scanned across miles of canyonlands, set on the edge of the 140-square mile wilderness of Henry W. Coe State Park.

The steep-canted foothill slopes were criss-crossed with lined trails from the march of wild pigs, hundreds of them in every canyon. The riparian habitat on the edge of Redfern Pond, as well as at dozens of other ponds we had seen, had been trampled, muddied and generally plundered. Off to the north, the soil of a steep, shaded hillside appeared rototilled, the damage muted by summer's golden tones of the foothill grasslands.

A breeze out of the west helped cool the sweat on our foreheads, as we left the ridge and hiked off toward the shade of a grove of oaks. It was edged by an extended, steep-sloping briar patch leading down into Coon Hunter's Gulch. It seemed a million miles away from San Jose, located a short distance over the far ridge to the northeast.

It was here that Dick Seever, the Bay Area's nonpareil trapper, led the way to a metal trap, about 12 feet long, 4 feet high, well hidden under several oaks.

"We had 22 pigs in this one trap," Seever said. "We've already caught 400 at Coe in a month. We've caught a thousand of them in the Bay Area this year."


BEATING OUT NATIVE WILDLIFE
In the past five years, Seever and his sons, Kyle and Ronnie, have trapped more than 3,000 pigs at some 20 Bay Area parks, open space and watershed lands.

At areas where Seever has yet to work a full year, such as Big Basin Redwoods State Park, the pigs are rampant, multiplying and quickly expanding their range up the Peninsula -- an invasive species that is destroying wildlife habitat, killing trees and outcompeting native wildlife for food.

"Most people in the Bay Area have no idea what lives right next to them," Seever said. "A lot of parks are like a house full of termites. You've got to get rid of the termites or they'll destroy the house."

Professional wildlife scientists agree with that assessment, including Jim Swanson of the state Department of Fish and Game, Joe DiDonato of the East Bay Regional Park District, and many others. These scientists have identified how wild pigs can quickly expand their population and range, and then dominate wildlife habitat.

The pigs disturb the habitat of mice and ground squirrels, reducing a primary feed for hawks, golden eagles, fox, bobcat and other wildlife. By feeding on carrion, pigs can monopolize food sources that otherwise would be left to bald eagles, turkey vultures and other flesh eaters. In the fall, wild pigs can outcompete deer, squirrels and other animals for acorns, the key offseason food source.


DESTRUCTIVE TO LAND
They chop up riparian areas, endangering amphibians, and causing massive soil erosion in watersheds, muddying lakes and ponds.

The chopped-up soil is then vulnerable for airborne seeds, such as from invasive star thistle, which can outcompete native plants and choke off wildlife migration routes. The pigs also destroy oak saplings, and at Big Basin, they have killed redwoods by rubbing against the trunks and stripping the bark in a ring around trees.

Seever is the only trapper who has had success in controlling the pigs, especially in the Bay Area's critical watershed lands, and in turn, minimizing environmental damage.

"If I can get 80 percent or better of a herd, the coyotes and the mountain lions can keep the numbers down because they'll eat the babies," Seever said. The adult boars, however, have no such natural predator control.

And that's where Seever comes in.


BAIT AS SMELLY AS CHUM
From the back of his truck, Seever opened a three-foot plastic jug, and the reeking stench coming forthwith just about knocked me over.

"What a nasty smell," Seever said with a big grin. "Yum, yum. If the pigs don't smell it, they won't come to the bait." This bait is a goopy mix of corn mash, molasses and other goodies that is allowed to ferment in the heat and create bacteria.

The trapper then poured the crud along the bottom of the trap, which looks like a 12-foot metal rectangle. He showed how a trip wire is connected to a guillotine-type door on one end, so when a pig trips the wire, down comes the door.

Yet part of the roof is open, so wild turkeys, raccoons, mountain lions and other non-target species can easily escape if they trigger the trap door.

As you watch him work, you realize that Seever, 56, is an anomaly among Bay Area residents. He grew up in the Bay Area, is married to Karon and has three children, yet is otherwise out of the mainstream, spending all of his time afield.

Big and rawboned, he was once a commercial fence builder and a hunting guide, and is something of a backwoods maverick. He refuses to interview with other media or be photographed. Yet there may be no trapper in higher demand in California. He is now contracted for each job in a bidding process, estimating how long and how much it will cost to trap the desired number of pigs.

The pigs are taken to a tallow factory, where they go through a process called reduction for use in soap products, bone meal, make-up and other uses. Seever would like to donate the pigs for charity, but the federal government prohibits that.


HUNTING ISN'T ENOUGH
Seever also suggests that hunters be first given an opportunity in areas where pigs are prolific. However, success rates for hunting pigs almost never matches the pigs' breeding success. That is why it takes professional trapping to reduce wild pig populations rather than sport hunting.

The success can be high, Seever says, but often fluctuates radically. In one stretch, there were pigs discovered in eight straight traps. On Thursday night, for example, his boys captured 60 pigs -- one of the highest single-day totals ever documented. The big boars, ranging to 350 pounds, jet black, with nostrils snorting and tusks flaring, will charge and run headlong into the traps' metal walls. You jump back, on instinct.

"I don't have anything personal against the pigs," Seever said, "But I love all wildlife. You can see what the pigs do to that wildlife. It's my job to stop the damage."



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------- Wild pig range Some places in the Bay Area where wild pigs are trapped:
-- -- S.F. PENINSULA: Crystal Springs Watershed, Pacifica and Montara foothills, Skyline Ridge near Skylonda, La Honda, Pescadero Creek County Park, Midpeninsula Open Space at Long Ridge, Skyline and Russian Ridge preserves, Big Basin Redwoods State Park.

-- EAST BAY FOOTHILLS: East Bay watershed lands, Mount Diablo State Park, East Bay Regional Parks District at Sunol, Ohlone, Las Trampas, Morgan Territory, Black Diamond Mines, Garin, Mission Peak, Briones and Huckleberry, and at Mines Road, Antioch foothills, Willow Park Golf Course.

-- SAN JOSE FOOTHILLS: Henry Coe State Park, Grant County Park, Mount Hamilton Range, Calaveras and San Antonio reservoirs.

-- MARIN & SONOMA: Mount Tamalpais State Park, Bolinas Ridge, Golden Gate National Recreation Area (all largely controlled), Annadel State Park.
 

Latest Posts

QRCode

QR Code
Top Bottom