PordFrefect wrote:Pigs are not naturally aggressive until they feel they are trapped.. in my extensive experience. Unless Aussie country kids hunt in packs, I think this would be hugely impractical 'snipe hunting'. I assume the real hunting is done with bows and arrows, as mentioned in the article, while the children are allowed to also carry hunting knives.
From personal experience, I know what kids are like with weapons.
They do mental things when they are not supervised.
I was really into archery as a kid, along with my friends. We were members of an archery club, and strictly observed all the safety precautions.
But we used to go hunting rabbits and rats in our spare time, on our own, and safety just went out of the window.
We had powerful bows, and one game was to shoot an arrow vertically as high as you possibly could, and see how close you could get the arrow to land to where you were standing. It was usually a reasonable distance away, and we could watch it come down.
But then we started playing the same game as it was getting dark, and you couldn't see the arrow coming down. You just heard a whizz and a thump, to tell you where the arrow landed.
We stood there like idiots, with our hands over our heads, waiting for the arrow to come down. It was playing chicken in a really lethal way.
I get the heebie jeebies now whenever I remember it.
But that's the sort of thing that kids will get up to when they go out on their own.