
Friday Mar 13, 2026
Pig Brig Trap Systems Cattle Con 2026
Welcome back to the American Cattlemen Podcast and our series at Cattle Con 2026. Just ahead, we have Kaid Panek and he chats with Aaron Sumrall, with Pig Brig Trap Systems.
Feral hogs pose a widespread and often underestimated threat to agriculture, livestock production, and broader natural resources across North America. Aaron explains how feral hogs impact virtually everyone who relies on food, fiber, or land, regardless of whether they see pigs locally. He emphasizes that the belief that cold climates or northern regions are protected is dangerously misleading, noting that several Canadian provinces already have established feral hog populations that can move southward.
A major driver of feral hog expansion is not natural migration but illegal transportation. The scattered “freckles” on hog distribution maps are clear evidence that pigs are being hauled across state lines and released, often to create local hunting opportunities. Once on the landscape, their adaptability, intelligence, and reproductive capacity enable populations to establish and grow quickly. While common myths overstate their ability to have three litters per year, their reproduction is still extremely high compared to other large mammals, especially when they benefit from good nutrition intended for domestic livestock.
Economically, feral hogs cause significant damage to crops, pastures, hay equipment, and stocking capacity. Studies in states like Texas and Oklahoma have estimated hundreds of dollars in damage per pig per year, and those figures are likely increasing as agricultural land shrinks and commodity values rise. Land fragmentation and inconsistent management between neighboring properties create sanctuaries where hogs can avoid pressure and then move out to damage surrounding lands.
Aaron argues that effective response requires accurate information, early action, cooperative landowner efforts, and supportive policy that removes financial incentives around feral hogs. He describes Pig Brig’s role as both educational and practical, offering research-based net trap systems that are lightweight, adaptable to difficult terrain, and suitable for users ranging from small producers to national programs. By integrating trapping with other tools like shooting and dogs, and by aligning wildlife agencies, soil and water conservation groups, and private landowners around shared goals, he believes feral hog populations can be meaningfully reduced before they become unmanageable in new regions.
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