A couple months ago I put up a protein feeder on the new place I’m hunting. It’s a cheap Banks feeder, a plastic hopper that slips over a 4x4 and it has four tubes. I have a coon guard that keeps the coons from climbing the 4x4 so I’m good…..right ? Wrong ! This bastage moved in, and I got several pictures of him scrounging on the ground getting the freebies. Then, a pic of him on his rear legs trying to reach a feed tube. The coon guard held him off for a month, then he started using it to rest his front feet on. For the last several days I’ve had pics of him with his front feet on the coon guard helping himself. I know he is eventually gonna tear the guard off, break the tube, or both. I first thought about getting in the blind and trying to kill him, but his hours ain’t mine, so I decided to fence him out. Loaded up this morning, got me two “migrants” to help me and from the time we got there until we loaded the tools back up was three hours. It helps when you’ve built several of them before ! What I couldn’t see from the camera was that he had already tore two of the three rivets out where the guard was joined, and one of the ears that are screwed to the post. I ran a couple sheet metal screws in the guard and screwed it into the post again and I think I’m in business. Eight panels gives them about a 40’ pen and I’ve never had a problem with that size.
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Only had 2 pigs in similiar pens in Goliad over a dozen years.
Almost all the time, sows and pigs or lone boars ran to the pens, went round and round, then left.
FWIW. My deer have almost stopped coming to my unfenced feeder around the house here
Great spring so far. They simply feed nearby on all the new green growth
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Well, it didn’t take them long at all. They really like the roasted soybeans/corn mix. I’ll feed that until the first of June then probably let it run out. There’s an acre and a half food plot on the back side of that camera that will have some groceries that hopefully will last through most of the summer. When it starts playing out I’ll start feeding them again.
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