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Feral cows to be gunned down by shooters in helicopters in US national forest​


Feral cows roaming wild around southwest New Mexico will be gunned down by shooters in helicopters beginning next week, according to a planapproved by U.S. officials.

About 150 feral cattle, which authorities say “are not domesticated animals and pose a significant threat to public safety and natural resources,” will be hunted by “aerial shooting” and will take place over four days beginning Thursday, Feb. 23 at the Gila National Forest, according to the U.S. Forest Service.

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A closure order has been issued in the area of operations of the 3.3 million acre reserve in southwest New Mexico and the public has been asked to avoid the area completely while the culling takes place.

“This has been a difficult decision, but the lethal removal of feral cattle from the Gila Wilderness is necessary to protect public safety, threatened and endangered species habitats, water quality, and the natural character of the Gila Wilderness,” said Camille Howes, Gila National Forest Supervisor. “The feral cattle in the Gila Wilderness have been aggressive towards wilderness visitors, graze year-round, and trample stream banks and springs, causing erosion and sedimentation. This action will help restore the wilderness character of the Gila Wilderness enjoyed by visitors from across the country.”

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Authorities say that this is the most “efficient and humane way” to deal with the animals and that Gila National Forest officials are working closely together with the USDA Animal and and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) on this operation.

“All dispatched cattle will be left onsite to naturally decompose,” read a statement detailing the confirmation of the cattle removal from the U.S. Forest Service. “Forest Service staff will ensure no carcasses are adjacent to or in any waterbody or spring, designated hiking trail, or known culturally sensitive area. A wilderness minimum requirements decision guide has been completed and approved before using any methods otherwise prohibited under the Wilderness Act.”

Forest officials say that some cattle growers have expressed concern to them that non-feral branded cattle could have strayed into the Gila National Forest due to fences and water gaps that were damaged during an unusually strong monsoon season over the past several months.

“The Forest Service is committed to continued efforts toward collaborative solutions and will continue to coordinate with permittees in their efforts to locate, gather, and remove their branded cattle from areas where they are not authorized,” officials said.

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The issue regarding the feral cattle has been ongoing since the 1990s, according to the official decision memorandum released on Thursday, and several hundred cattle were destroyed between 1996 and 1998 in an effort to control the growing population.

In fact, in the past 25 years, the forest has issued a total of nine contracts that have resulted in the removal of 211 cattle, with the last order coming a year ago in Feb. 2022 when 65 feral cattle were lethally removed. Authorities estimate that around 150 will be eliminated during the cull set to take place next week.

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If branded cattle are lethally removed during gathering or aerial operations, U.S. Forest Service officials say the owner may request compensation by contacting the U.S. Forest Service, Southwestern Region or the Gila National Forest.
 
What a waste. Why not hire someone to go round them up, take them to a slaughterhouse, and give the beef to the poor? Even gunning them from the ground and packing the meat out would be less wasteful.

If these were wild animals, this would be considered wanton waste.
 
What a waste. Why not hire someone to go round them up, take them to a slaughterhouse, and give the beef to the poor? Even gunning them from the ground and packing the meat out would be less wasteful.

If these were wild animals, this would be considered wanton waste.
There's nothing the government loves more than shooting defenseless animals. Even if a posse of ranchers showed up and started to wrangle them, the feds would move in, flash their badge, thank them for the work, then put a bullet in every cow.
 
There's nothing the government loves more than shooting defenseless animals. Even if a posse of ranchers showed up and started to wrangle them, the feds would move in, flash their badge, thank them for the work, then put a bullet in every cow.
also there's precedent, IIRC you can hunt wild pigs in Texas with automatic weapons and helicopters or some shit.
 
I don't know where exactly they're doing this. but the Gila NF has some pretty rugged terrain. There's a good chance it's not practical to herd them out. Plus, a lot of it is wilderness.

They need to redefine "open range" so I can cull any "feral" cows I find on my land. Ranchers can get fucked.
I considered that, but all the range cattle I've seen spend half the day loafing by the water source. We're not talking about goats who will scale a sheer cliff and flip your lumbering, gravity-bound ass the bird with every leap.
 
What a waste. Why not hire someone to go round them up, take them to a slaughterhouse, and give the beef to the poor? Even gunning them from the ground and packing the meat out would be less wasteful.
I expect they considered the liability if some jackass they hire to round them up gets gored by some feral bull and decided against rounding them up.

I would love to see someone try to field-dress a cow in the middle of the desert. Hang it from a cactus?
 
What a waste. Why not hire someone to go round them up, take them to a slaughterhouse, and give the beef to the poor? Even gunning them from the ground and packing the meat out would be less wasteful.

If these were wild animals, this would be considered wanton waste.
I know of places in Texas that waste >200 deer a season on culls as a matter of course. Nobody's worrying that much about cattle deemed feral. You've got 22,000 acres per head. As docile as cattle tend to be when you start killing a herd they will run and scatter. From a simple man-hours perspective it's probably way more efficient charter an R44, rent a FLIR rig, and you'd probably have fierce competition in the office for the chance to be the trigger man. One "turn" for recon and starting work, another "turn" for mop-up, and you're done in a day or two max. Covering that much space on the ground is either going to be very damaging or too slow for viability.
also there's precedent, IIRC you can hunt wild pigs in Texas with automatic weapons and helicopters or some shit.
There is a fair amount of red-tape to navigate to not run afoul against FAA rules about weaponized civilian craft. Assuming it's something you've set up correctly and you're flying over/shooting into land you have permission for, you're good to go. If it's designated cull animals you can pretty much use anything that won't end with the ATF waiting at your helipad. Although usually if you've got the mobility of a helicopter it's usually better to play into it and use something smaller and semi-auto so you're maximizing ammo and shots-on-targets.
 
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