I know some Vietnam vets who would love to do that, because it would bring back the memories that others have alluded to in this thread. I would do it simply because I know the hogs are a huge problem. I would be helping out while getting to enjoy a chopper ride shooting full auto weapons. Very few people get to do that.WildBill wrote:Why would you paid a couple of grand to eradicate hogs on somebody else's land?baldeagle wrote:The purpose of a helo hunt is eradication, not meat supply.WildBill wrote:Do you want a hunt or a massacre?couzin wrote:I'm waiting for one of these companies to put a huey in the air, doors off, and shooters hanging out the door on bungees cutting loose the "pig" while flying at treetop. Yeeeehaaaa!
Helo hunt for feral hogs.
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Re: Helo hunt for feral hogs.
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Re: Helo hunt for feral hogs.
Now you are talking!!!CoffeeNut wrote:Can we blast Ride of the Valkyries as we open up on them?couzin wrote:I'm waiting for one of these companies to put a huey in the air, doors off, and shooters hanging out the door on bungees cutting loose the "pig" while flying at treetop. Yeeeehaaaa!
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Re: Helo hunt for feral hogs.
I have a helicopter rating (previous R22 owner) and am going to give some very rough estimates. Fuel for an R44, perhaps 20 gph at $5.50 per gallon $330 ( my estimate), insurance probably $50/hour (my estimate), engine and repair per hour $50 (my estimate), pilot salary ($30/hour- my estimate). Perhaps they can do it for $870 per 3 hours assuming, not figuring interest on the loan to buy one of those things which is probably close to a million. My figures are just a rough guess at raw cost if they own it outright, perhaps dad bought it with oil money or something. $2,000 an hour is more like a reasonable figure for someone that has a banknote to pay off.cb1000rider wrote:I'd pay $500 for a few hours in a helicopter time.... That's probably not shy of what it costs to operate a piston (low end) helicopter for about 3 hours....cyphertext wrote: I wouldn't pay $2000, but I could see $400 - $500 for a couple hour helo hunt, with the ability to go gather a couple up for meat.
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Re: Helo hunt for feral hogs.
Or for someone who is trying to run a for profit business.rotor wrote:I have a helicopter rating (previous R22 owner) and am going to give some very rough estimates. Fuel for an R44, perhaps 20 gph at $5.50 per gallon $330 ( my estimate), insurance probably $50/hour (my estimate), engine and repair per hour $50 (my estimate), pilot salary ($30/hour- my estimate). Perhaps they can do it for $870 per 3 hours assuming, not figuring interest on the loan to buy one of those things which is probably close to a million. My figures are just a rough guess at raw cost if they own it outright, perhaps dad bought it with oil money or something. $2,000 an hour is more like a reasonable figure for someone that has a banknote to pay off.cb1000rider wrote:I'd pay $500 for a few hours in a helicopter time.... That's probably not shy of what it costs to operate a piston (low end) helicopter for about 3 hours....cyphertext wrote: I wouldn't pay $2000, but I could see $400 - $500 for a couple hour helo hunt, with the ability to go gather a couple up for meat.
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Re: Helo hunt for feral hogs.
Civilian Insurance for letting people hangout and shoot things has to pretty high ...
Assume the policy starts at the cost of main rotors and goes up
Assume the policy starts at the cost of main rotors and goes up
Re: Helo hunt for feral hogs.
I was wondering if it was even available. This is probably considered pretty high risk flying and perhaps the R44 is insured but the occupants? I can just see the underwriters trying to figure out how to compare the risks on this commercial venture. This might be THE limiting factor. I mentioned that I used to own an R22. Insurance is what got me out of flying small helicopters. Or rather lack of money to pay for the insurance.92f-fan wrote:Civilian Insurance for letting people hangout and shoot things has to pretty high ...
Assume the policy starts at the cost of main rotors and goes up
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Re: Helo hunt for feral hogs.
Trade for Cherokee time? Which runs about $75/hr actual cost :-)rotor wrote: I have a helicopter rating (previous R22 owner) and am going to give some very rough estimates. Fuel for an R44, perhaps 20 gph at $5.50 per gallon $330 ( my estimate), insurance probably $50/hour (my estimate), engine and repair per hour $50 (my estimate), pilot salary ($30/hour- my estimate). Perhaps they can do it for $870 per 3 hours assuming, not figuring interest on the loan to buy one of those things which is probably close to a million. My figures are just a rough guess at raw cost if they own it outright, perhaps dad bought it with oil money or something. $2,000 an hour is more like a reasonable figure for someone that has a banknote to pay off.
I'm looking for a ride. My wife is afraid that I'll pursue the rating.
Re: Helo hunt for feral hogs.
Listen to your wife cb1000rider. I figured once that when flying my R22 if I had a significant problem and didn't make the right corrective decision within 1-2 seconds I would be a brick falling from the sky that perhaps helicopters (small gasoline ones) were not for me. Now in that Cherokee you can drop your maps on the floor, bend over and pick them up, no big deal, let go of things, sneeze, swat that bug on the windshield, etc. Not in a helicopter. Changing the radio was a major job and looking at a map was about impossible. GPS was unheard of (I did have Loran). I just sold my last plane and am out of aviation. Helicopters were the most difficult (and expensive). My last plane was a C150 aerobat. A true gem.cb1000rider wrote:Trade for Cherokee time? Which runs about $75/hr actual cost :-)rotor wrote: I have a helicopter rating (previous R22 owner) and am going to give some very rough estimates. Fuel for an R44, perhaps 20 gph at $5.50 per gallon $330 ( my estimate), insurance probably $50/hour (my estimate), engine and repair per hour $50 (my estimate), pilot salary ($30/hour- my estimate). Perhaps they can do it for $870 per 3 hours assuming, not figuring interest on the loan to buy one of those things which is probably close to a million. My figures are just a rough guess at raw cost if they own it outright, perhaps dad bought it with oil money or something. $2,000 an hour is more like a reasonable figure for someone that has a banknote to pay off.
I'm looking for a ride. My wife is afraid that I'll pursue the rating.
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Re: Helo hunt for feral hogs.
A few years ago (03-11) I lived in San Antonio and owned and flew a powered parachute. Greatest flying experience I've ever had! Lot's a very cool Youtube videos showing take-off, landing and the whole experience if you're interested in see more.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powered_parachute
At the time all you needed to fly one of these was $6k for the machine and ~$150 for the instruction and a sport pilot's license. Upkeep cost was parachute lines and fabric repair, the occasional prop blade and fuel. (~$1k/yr) If you were handy, and I am, you could do you own annual or time based maintenance. So flight cost per hour was very low. That all ended in 2010 when the FAA took anything with wings under it's sole control and the new regulations made it very cost prohibitive for most casual enthusiast like me. Now you have to obtain a "real" pilots license with all the added bureaucratic fees and requirements.
However, even with the lax regulations on flying one of these aircraft back then, the FAA has strict rules about anything (including projectiles, balls, beanbags, etc) from leaving the plane. We had to apply for a permit to hunt hogs and fire weapons from the air. I never got one but apparently they weren't hard to get because I had a couple of flying friends that had them and hunted on a regular basis. They made arrangements (signed waivers, etc.) with the local land owners around them and patrolled on a regular basis. Win-Win for both parties.
I really miss the flying part but like others have said, I can't really appreciate slaughters with no acknowledgement to what nature has provided. I'd like to see a coordinated effort between hunters and food banks. Again, I see that as a win-win-win in so many ways.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powered_parachute
At the time all you needed to fly one of these was $6k for the machine and ~$150 for the instruction and a sport pilot's license. Upkeep cost was parachute lines and fabric repair, the occasional prop blade and fuel. (~$1k/yr) If you were handy, and I am, you could do you own annual or time based maintenance. So flight cost per hour was very low. That all ended in 2010 when the FAA took anything with wings under it's sole control and the new regulations made it very cost prohibitive for most casual enthusiast like me. Now you have to obtain a "real" pilots license with all the added bureaucratic fees and requirements.
However, even with the lax regulations on flying one of these aircraft back then, the FAA has strict rules about anything (including projectiles, balls, beanbags, etc) from leaving the plane. We had to apply for a permit to hunt hogs and fire weapons from the air. I never got one but apparently they weren't hard to get because I had a couple of flying friends that had them and hunted on a regular basis. They made arrangements (signed waivers, etc.) with the local land owners around them and patrolled on a regular basis. Win-Win for both parties.
I really miss the flying part but like others have said, I can't really appreciate slaughters with no acknowledgement to what nature has provided. I'd like to see a coordinated effort between hunters and food banks. Again, I see that as a win-win-win in so many ways.
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Re: Helo hunt for feral hogs.
I did the same things when I was young and I feel exactly like you do about it.Abraham wrote:As I've aged, my interest in shooting critters has vastly slackened. Heck, I feed doves that once I shot by the thousands.
Would I shoot a hog to eat, not only yes, but I've done so in my own back yard, but the idea of simply slaughtering animals just to slaughter them really doesn't appeal to me where once it might have.
Yes, if they cause the kind of damage they can be known to cause, that is plowing up acres of land that cause grief for the land owner, then yes, an eradication program is necessary. But, flying around to shoot and not eat though makes me sad, even though necessary.
As a younger guy, I shot all sorts of critters (especially as a teenager with a .22 cal rifle) that I now regret shooting.
I know a lot of us older guys look back with some regret with our shooting histories...
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Re: Helo hunt for feral hogs.
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