Insights, Tips, and Stories on Wild Boar Management

Welcome to the Boar Blanket Blog, your go-to source for everything wild boar management. Whether you're a landowner, farmer, wildlife manager, or just curious about the challenges and solutions surrounding feral hogs, you’re in the right place.

At BoarBlanket.com, we don’t just talk the talk, we’re in the field, testing, learning, and leading the charge in humane, effective, and innovative wild boar control. Our blog is where we share that experience with you. We believe that solving the wild boar problem takes more than tools, it takes knowledge, partnership, and real-world results. That’s why we’re proud to share what we learn, every step of the way.

Take a look around, dive into a topic that speaks to you, and if you have questions or ideas, we’d love to hear from you. Together, we can protect what matters.

Because when it comes to wild boars… nothing works like a Boar Blanket.

Bob the Boar

Silent Hog Trapping: Reducing Noise and Scent Pressure

February 26, 2026

Hogs Learn Fast When You Make Noise Most landowners blame “trap-shy hogs” on intelligence alone. In reality, hogs are responding to what they experience around your setup: loud equipment, disruptions to natural hog scent patterns, strong human scent, bright lights, truck patterns, and sudden changes in their environment. Over time, sounders learn to avoid specific […]

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Pre-Spring Hog Trapping Checklist: Prep for Sounders

February 24, 2026

Spring Success Is Built In February By the time spring green-up arrives, most landowners feel behind. Hogs are already hitting fields, food plots, and feeders. Cameras start lighting up, and hog trapping becomes reactive instead of strategic. A better approach is to treat late winter as your prep season. When you walk into March and […]

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Hog Tracks After Rain: Mud and Fresh Rooting

February 18, 2026

Rain Resets the Ground and Reveals the Truth For trappers and landowners, a soaking rain is not just weather. It is a reset button. Old prints soften. Dust layers disappear. Fresh hog tracks, wallows, and rooting show up in sharp relief. If you know what to look for in hog tracks after rain, especially in […]

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How to Choose a Hog Trap: Net, Cage, or Drop Systems

February 11, 2026

Introduction: You Do Not Need Every Hog Trap, You Need the Right One Most landowners are not trying to build a hog-control business. They want one hog trap that works reliably on their ground, with their schedule, and their budget. The challenge is that hog traps are marketed in very different ways. Steel cage systems […]

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Winter Hog Movement: Why Pigs Shift Food Sources

February 4, 2026

Winter Is When Patterns Get Honest January and February reveal hog behavior and hog movement more clearly than almost any other time of year. When acorns are gone, crops are harvested, and green vegetation is thin, hogs must work harder to find calories. That pressure forces them into more predictable travel routes, tighter bedding cover, […]

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Hog Tracks & Travel Patterns: Predict Where Hogs Go Next

January 28, 2026

Introduction: Tracking Hogs Is a Skill Every Landowner Should Learn Hogs often move silently and mostly at night, which makes their travel behavior easy to overlook. Yet they leave behind a predictable set of signs that reveal where they feed, bed, wallow, and travel. Learning how to read hog tracks, trails, and movement patterns helps […]

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Hog Rooting Explained: Why Pigs Destroy Fields & Forests

January 21, 2026

Introduction: Rooting Is the First and Most Costly Sign of Hog Activity Hog rooting is the behavior most landowners notice first when wild pigs move onto a property. Overnight, a pasture that looked normal can resemble a freshly tilled field. Farm roads develop deep troughs. Garden edges lift and roll. Saplings are uprooted in small […]

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Hog Populations: Why Hunting Doesn’t Control Them

January 13, 2026

Introduction: The Hard Truth Behind the “Just Hunt Them More” Mindset Across the South and Midwest, hunting is one of the most common responses to rising hog damage. Many landowners assume that if enough people hunt, hog populations will decline over time, but field data tells a different story. Hunting is valuable for recreation and […]

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Wild Hog Diseases: What Landowners Should Know

January 7, 2026

Introduction: The Hidden Risk Behind Every Hog Encounter Feral hogs are well known for rooting damage, crop losses, and aggressive behavior, but many landowners and trappers are less familiar with the diseases these animals carry and the risks associated with hunting, handling, or trapping wild pigs. Wild hogs can carry dozens of pathogens that affect: […]

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Population Growth Explained: Why Wild Hogs Reproduce So Fast

January 2, 2026

Introduction: The Fastest Growing Invasive Mammal in North America Hog populations across the United States continue to rise despite decades of hunting pressure and state-level removal efforts. What surprises many landowners and new trappers is not just how destructive feral hogs are, but the speed of their population growth, even after consistent removal. Across Texas, […]

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