Posted by El Toro on August 11, 2013 at 08:27:44 from (108.3.143.3):
In Reply to: Groundhog Problem posted by John T on August 11, 2013 at 08:04:28:
I shot them until they filled the 55 acres behind me with homes. My former co-worker told me he uses a pellet gun. I use a have-a heart trap and I've had it for years. When I was still working on the military base I would haul them down there about 12 miles from my home. One of the civilian guards that checked your pass every morning asked me one morning what I was going to do with the hog. I told him I let them loose he said he ate them and every time I took one in on post I gave it to him. That's called recycling. They use to kid me about those hogs will beat you home. I don't think so. I caught one about 2 weeks ago and I carried him about 2 miles away and for him to get back he would have to buck a lot of traffic. I had one to make his home in my wood pile when I used my wood stove. He would stick up his head just above the wood and then duck down. I got a bead on him with that scope and plugged him. My wife said something stinks around that wood pile. I gassed one with a little gasoline and he never ate any more of my garden.
One of the men that lives in those homes behind me complained to my next door neighbor that groundhogs under his shed was eating his garden. Most of them are from the city. The neighbor told him to get rid of them, they weren't bothering him. Hal
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Today's Featured Article - Old Time Threshing - by Anthony West. A lovely harvest evening late September 1947, I was a school boy, like all school boys I loved harvest time. The golden corn ripens well and early, the stoking, stacking,.... the drawing in with the tractors and trailers and a few buck rakes thrown in, and possibly a heavy horse. It would be a great day for the collies and the terrier dogs, rats and mice would be at the bottom of the stacks so the dogs, would have a busy time hunting and killing, all the corn was gathered and ricked in what we c
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