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trapping adentures...

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  1. #1
    DakotaRog started this thread.
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    trapping adentures...

    I had brought up the fact that after about 3 dozen various locations for muskrat sets in a cattail or bulrush slough (marsh), I sometimes start to forget where they all are. This was a response to Patriot76's discussion of his various scrap piles at various old farmsites that are waiting for spring. I mentioned that a guy can always flag a mrat hut that has a set but risk the possibilities of theft.

    Army Grey Truck said this:[QUOTE] Hey DakotaRog, this year was the first I used GPS and took my flags down...twice as many in the traps now as last year, won't be flagging ever again, I know now I had poaching going on.[QUOTE]

    Full article at Scrap Metal Forum: http://www.scrapmetalforum.com/day-l...#ixzz3OOInWVpB

    My question back would be, were the guys stealing from you taking the mrats and resetting the trap like nothing had been around or were just dropping the set off trap back down in the water?? Do you mostly water trap or do you go after just about everything?

    Marking wetland sets with GPS is a good idea and if we ever get rats back around here in large numbers and get set out 50 sets, I'll make sure I'm marking them with a GPS.

    Last edited by DakotaRog; 01-09-2015 at 10:55 PM.

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  3. #2
    sawmilleng's Avatar
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    Dumb question: do you eat the rats or just go for the fur?

    Jon.

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    I know a guy that eats them but I've yet to try it. If I get a fairly fresh one I think I'd try it. I have tried bobcat and beaver.

  6. #4
    DakotaRog started this thread.
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    I've eaten muskrats. If you like wild duck, they taste a lot like that. But I don't eat them on a regular occasion (would if I had to no doubt!!). Some furbearers are good table fare, some not. I don't think I would eat any of the mustelids unless I was in a serious protein bind.

    Why, are you opposed to trapping?? If you are, I can tell you right now that you're not going to change my mind and I'm probably not going to change yours. So, if you and anyone else is going to use this thread as a running gun battle about the rights or wrongs of trapping, I'm not going to play that game.

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    sawmilleng's Avatar
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    Dakota, are you asking me about opposition to trapping? Not at all!! I don't think I said anything about that. I got no problem with trapping.

    Jon.

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    DakotaRog started this thread.
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    Cool!! But from experience antis usually start with "do you eat them?" or "what else do you do with them besides the fur?" and it goes down hill from there. I view game animals (including furbearers) as a renewable resource and if managed wisely will be around probably for as long as we are. If I dispatch a furbearer, such as a raccoon, as quickly as possible, what's the difference if it dies by my hand, gets greased by a car, or dies a lingering death by distemper, it still is a wild animal that dies. I, and several other people down stream get to use part of it as a resource. End of my story.

    Here's a pix of my last coon before winter returned with a vengeance and all the rest have denned up until it warms up again...


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    Trapping and scrapping work well together. When I'm out cleaning up scrap at an abandon farm, I find places where coon are living and come back after them later. The yard I haul scrap to is 30 miles from home, so I check traps on the way back, sometimes with a 35 ft gooseneck trailer behind the pickup.
    Always trying to kill two birds with one stone.

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    I never had an opportunity to trap, but I have been going after coyotes on my farm. They are pretty cagey, though and you gotta be able to shoot them from a couple hundred yards at least.

    We've been having better luck since we got a couple of big dogs. They draw the b*stards out in the field where we can nail them. But they have also got torn up pretty good, too. They're getting better at it, though. Learning the coyote tricks. There are some wolves here, too. Or some sort of wolf/dog/coyote cross that is quite a bit bigger than a coyote and more bold.

    I didn't realize Dakota had such a short fuse!! No intention at all about razzing anyone about what they do. And I'm OK with trapping, anyway. We have enough of that shzt up here with tree huggers and oil haters and other d*ckheads who want to stop everything and go back to the stone age. Ever heard of David Suzuki? Yeah, he's from BC.

    My wife spent some of her teenage years on a ranch near a lake where lots of guys fished. She saw a chinese guy there all the time who trapped muskrats. He was part of a family in town who ran a restaurant, and she always wondered if some of the specials had extra protein from the 'rats.

    What are the pelts worth? What is a raccoon pelt worth? I thought the fur buz was just about dead...

    Jon.

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    The fur biz pretty well is dead, I averaged $5 a piece last year on coons, although the year before I averaged $22 so who knows. Dakota will probably have better prices than I do

    Here in nb our coyotes are generally bigger than the western ones because they came from the west and bred with wloves in Quebec

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    Ibscrapin hit it on the head, furs are a commodity just like scrap metal, gold, silver, oil, etc. The price fluctuates based on supply and demand. Those that have read my posts know my choice of lifestyles.

    I have read enough of Saws posts to know he is not against trapping, hunting, or fishing. I have asked the same question to all the trappers I know because I am curious, not questioning their lifestyle. Some people in Louisiana eat Carp. When I was little we use to give the Carp we caught to locals that thought it was a delicacy. I have no desire to eat it because I am spoiled with Walleye, Trout, Northern Pike, and Bass.

    Trapping is hard work that I have tried with limited success. I wish Dakota good luck on his trapping and commend him on being open minded to the advantages of modern technology. GPS is not needed on my scrap piles because eventually the farmers will call me to get the stuff out of their way. No intention to throw a left hook into the thread, so a new thread will be started based on part of this conversation.

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    Next season I'm planning to eat more of what I catch, I've never had any real fresh catches that I'd consider eating, but next year I plan to check more often. There's some things I've always wanted to try but my mom thinks they're not fit to eat, like coon and crow but I've done lots of reading about it, and really they eat similar to bears so I don't see problems with it.

    I am trying to use more of the animals I catch so now I'm going to be trying to clean all my skulls to sell too

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    fresh Beaver is good!

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  22. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by hobo finds View Post
    fresh Beaver is good!
    If you know what I mean

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    No problem with trying different meats. Just have to be careful about how you cut and cook them. Some animals, like deer and elk, can have wasting disease so you need to watch the animal before you shoot it, for odd behavior. And know what to stay away from when cutting it up for the meat.

    Bear and other things that occasionally eat other critters or carrion can have some undesireable buddies riding along in the meat. Trichinosis and the like.

    I'm no expert, but I believe the bottom line for most of this stuff is to know what parts to eat, what to look for when preparing meat, and to cook the h*ll out of what you do eat. Eating a tapeworm is one thing, better to eat a dead one. (Just kidding)

    My wife just about had a rectal hemorrhage when I came home with some smoked bear meat sausage from a guy at work. It wasn't cooked, just smoked. Needless to say, I didn't get to eat it!! She used to shoot small birds and whatever else they could nail when she was growing up to get enough protein on the table. They didn't take chances!

    I'm still amazed at the number of guys around here who hunt deer and elk and never have heard of wasting disease. So they don't know how to minimize the risk when cutting the animal for meat. D'oh!

    Jon.

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  25. #15
    DakotaRog started this thread.
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    Sorry sawmill (jon), I should have let the thread develop a bit more Yeah, I'm semi-jinxed as well with yotes. They are our "trophy" critter a round here when it comes to trapping, the now current apex predator for the Dakota farmlands and probably our highest priced fur given the right color (the paler the better) and condition. We don't have bobcats in the eastern part of the state (except maybe along the Missouri River) and for North America top bobcat pelts, especially from out West, bring the highest price per fur when all the regions are averaged out. Pine martins (sable) for their size have also brought nice coin but are much more of a Canadian thing with only limited areas in the lower 48.

    No, the fur industry isn't dead, and I really don't catch much as a lot of guys because 1) I'm in a peri-urban area, and 2) have a full-time job elsewhere. For guys who have down time during the later fall and winter and have access to a good amount of land and are willing to put a lot of effort into it, trapping can earn some coin but its work. A person would be better off with a decent stable every-2-week pay check but there's other aspects to it that keep some people coming back year after year. For me, its something I can't do from sitting at my desk...

    as has been mentioned, fur is a commodity and so as with commodities it can boom and bust. Its also much more high-end (typical final-product) consumer good and also the current big retail markets (China, Russia, Korea, Eastern Europe mainly) are much less evenly spread around. Early 2013 was fantastic year for price wise but by May 2014 things had softened considerably and a lot of no-buys at the auctions below the opening bid. The last sale of the auction I'm now associated with in Sept. things strengthened a bit but a lot of people had Feb. 2013 in their heads and grumbled out the door. The first auction of NAFA (North American Fur Auction) the largest of the big fur movers in NA is at the end of the month so we'll start to see how 2015 shapes up.

    I'm going to go eat some supper and talk with my hard working RN wife and I'll get back with prices and where trappers sell their furs...
    Last edited by DakotaRog; 01-10-2015 at 08:30 PM.

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  27. #16
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    With the coyotes around here, we are just happy to nail them. The last one we got, my son cored it with a .30-06 so there wasn't much pelt left. Well, not much of anything else, either. I've been using a .204 Ruger...like the flat shooting and very low recoil.

    We have something out there, more greyish coloured, that took a run at our horses late last fall. We had two moms out on the field, each with a 3 month filly, accompanied by a yearling gelding. It came out of the bush, separated a filly off the group, and was moving it away. Here's the amazing thing: The little gelding went after the wolf(?) and a few seconds behind him came my larger dog. The dog took over dealing with the wolf and the gelding brought the filly back to the herd. The filly had a couple of fang holes in her neck--we had to get the vet out to treat it cause they infected but otherwise is fine.

    I didn't see it but my wife watched the whole thing and was amazed at the coordination between the dog and gelding. They are pretty good buddies and the dog will run with the horse and the two of them will goof around from time to time.

    I've borrowed an electronic coyote caller gizmo that you set out in the field and can remotely control it. It gives off young coyote distress calls so might be pretty effective in drawing them out of the woodwork, especially in the spring.

    Jon.

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  29. #17
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    Done some trapping in my years. Bobcat, beaver, raccoon and skunk (by mistake). My favorite was calling coyotes with my son in law. He was a dead-eye shot and I got pretty good at the calling so we made a nice team. He's moved too far away now to remain doing that but he's teaching my grandsons the trade. They're into wild hog hunting in Oklahoma now. Moved some wheat bales into the farmyard and now I have varmits.......this might get to be a common thing for awhile.

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    Yunkman
    That is one fat rat! I thought the sewer rats in milwaukee were healthy.

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    That's a nice trap their (Dakota) here in CA I might get life in prison for using a trap like that these tree huggers I tell you. One more reason I don't consider CA part of the United States. I run dogs on coon now a lot more than I use to do to another law here in CA out lawing dogs on bear. but every time I set a trap I feel like a kid again on Christmas opening a present cant wait to see what I got. last house I set traps at I caught 9 coons in a week best for me yet. coyote here look like they got mange there all skinny scraggly looking but once in a while you get a nice fluffy one. ill have to post a picture the last coon I caught he bent the cage enough to get out its one of the drop door type. that's why I need a trap like Dakotas then I wont have to worry about anymore.

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  35. #20
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    I haven't seen the real McCoy Norway rat...with the scaly tail like the one in your trap. We are "blessed" with pack rats here, aka bush rats...the only difference is these have a furry tail. And are just as entertaining.
    Having two big dogs kinda ended their reign around here. Once they discovered one, it would take about 3 days of unrelenting harassment by the dogs...they'd either move out or make a slip and get eaten.

    Jon.

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