Red, long time, no talk. Been busy and haven't logged in here in a while.
That Belgian .410 is neat in how it folds, and I can understand your reasoning for it, considering where you live.
For your little Belgian .410, if I may make a suggestion, look for a sub-caliber insert for it. They are just a rifled steel tube with the strength of a gun barrel that you drop into the open breach of the shotgun barrel just like it was a cartridge. I don't know if they sell such a thing to shooters over there, but there is a company in Anchorage, Alaska, that you can order them from. Legally they aren't a firearm here, just a steel tube, so they can send it through the mail no problem, but on your end though, I'm not sure of the laws that might apply.
http://www.mcace.com/shotguninserts.htm
They come in 2-3/4", 10", and 18" lengths. For the .410, they come in .22LR, .22mag, .22 Hornet, and .218 Bee.
They also make sub-caliber adapter cartridges.
http://www.mcace.com/adapters.htm
One great combo which should be compatible with your gun laws, is a .223 or a .22-250 with sub-caliber cartridges that you can drop in and shoot .22LR. These look just like cartridges that you pre-load with the smaller rimfire round and then use them just like they were the proper caliber for your rifle. The .223 and the .22-250 have a bore close enough to a .22LR that they typically work surprisingly well. For example, on my 5.56mm AR-15, using a Ceiner semi-auto drop in .22LR adapter, even though the .224" bore was just a bit bigger than the .223" of the .22LR bullet, and the rifling was 1:9 instead of the native 1:16 twist of a .22LR rifle, I could still accurately kill rabbits at 75 yards.
The bush in the area I'm currently in, a hardwood forest with thick undergrowth, is infested with wild pigs. Pigs really aren't native to N. America, only their distant cousin the javelina (peccary, aka 'skunk pig'). The wild pigs can sometimes get very aggressive and mean, and they sometimes get very large. It's open season on them, 24/7/365, kill as many as you want, any time you want. So, for wandering around in the bush around here, I prefer something with a bit more punch than a .22LR or a .410 and preferably something with some extra follow up shots rapidly available.
We also have as common game animals around here lots of white tailed deer (they are a road hazard in town at night), ducks, and alligators, but there are specific seasons for those. A while back a 7ft alligator somehow found his way into the garden department at the local Wal-Mart and was wandering around freaking out the shoppers. Alligator is very tasty.