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Author Topic: True stories from the trap line.  (Read 11391 times)

Offline Blue

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True stories from the trap line.
« on: November 05, 2013, 08:08:49 AM »
This happened to me. I think it was about the 1987-88 trapping season. I was trapping beaver on the Yakima river when I found a perfect spot to set a trap. I made what I thought was the prefect set and tied the wire to a tree branch that was about eight inches through that the beavers had fallen. The next day when I came back I had trapped a beaver but what he did was he chewed the branch on both sides of the wire and swam off. A week later I was still trapping in the same area when I came to a set that I had made and low and behold the beaver that got away the week before still had the trap on it's foot and drug the trap across the other trap and it snapped on the chain of the trap the beaver had on it's foot. What's the odds. That's my story and I'm sticking to it.

Offline Jonathan_S

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Re: True stories from the trap line.
« Reply #1 on: November 05, 2013, 08:43:19 AM »
I've got some lengthy ones involving specific animals but here's a few short ones.

I was trapping a series of beaver ponds several years back and had a swim-through set below a dam in a spot that didn't require hip waders to get to.  I got three big black-pelted beavers in three days and then somebody started checking it for me   >:(  a set of 13 size boot prints provided proof for my theory.

I considered pulling the trap and moving it out into a different pond but then I decided to trap the person.  I took about 45 minutes wallowing out a huge hole in the bottom of the dam by digging with my short shovel and shifting peeled sticks.  It was about 4' deep and 3' wide   :yike:  then I disguised it with weeds and reeds.  Perfect deadfall.

It snowed about 2" that night and I came back at about 0700 before work.  To my elation, there were a set of bootprints just like before   :tup:  I walked along the dam until I could see the scene... there was a huge area splattered by mud and black water and hand prints and boot prints when my unseen animal thief had scrambled out of the freezing muck and headed back without taking the 50 lb beaver in the trap  :tup:  I then moved the trap and continued to catch beaver.


Another time involving a jack@$$ person:
I caught three beavers in my first spot and left them in the cattails while I walked down the dike to my mink sets.  About twenty minutes later I was a half mile down the dike, headed back with a bucket full of mink and muskrats.  I saw two duck hunters stop and look down at the spot where my beavers were  :yike:  their dogs were down in there sniffing out my furs.  I wouldn't have minded all that if they hadn't shot up my catch before walking down another trail   >:(

I considered payback options.  None of which included confronting two people with bad judgment and 12 gauges.  I finally landed on removing the castor and smearing it all over the inside of their truck door handles and dropping them through the crack of the window into the backseat   :tup:

Kindly do not attempt to cloud the issue with too many facts.

Offline bob maier

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Re: True stories from the trap line.
« Reply #2 on: November 05, 2013, 11:57:25 AM »
Snaring coyotes on a long fenceline on winter, had a coyote break a snare and get away. Later on that week i catch a coyote alittle further down the fence from the one that got away. im skinning on the line and i cant for any reason get the hide pulled over the head area, i mean i was pulling for all its worth. Checking inside id caught the escapee with the snare securely around his neck! Just wasnt that coyotes day. Next time the story of watching a coyote get caught in a snare.

Offline Blue

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Re: True stories from the trap line.
« Reply #3 on: November 05, 2013, 05:36:50 PM »
 Jonathan_S that's a couple of good stories. I had someone steal all my traps one time. I flagged them so I could find them again, which is what you have to do sometimes. I was a young kid and saved my money to buy a dozen conibears and a dozen number 1 1/2 foot traps. I never did find out who done it. Strange things happen on the trap line.
 bob maier that is a good story about the coyote. Your right, It wasn't his day.

Offline Humptulips

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Re: True stories from the trap line.
« Reply #4 on: November 05, 2013, 07:12:14 PM »
Well, I'm elk hunting with no success so how about a snaring story involving elk.
This happened quite a while ago maybe around 1980 give or take a few years.

I was trapping the Promise Land mostly water trapping but I would put in a coyote/cat set when the oppurtunity presented itself. I set a few snares on an old grade on the way into a swamp. One of them was on a pole drag, good sized pole not apt to go anywhere. Running the line it was gone, pole and all. looked all over but  no where to be found. Pretty obvious some elk had come through so I had a pretty good idea what happened.
Three years later while elk hunting I came up on two lone bulls and shot one 5x5. It had a snare mark on it's hind leg so I found out where my snare went.

Only other elk I ever snared was alive and well at the set and caught by a front foot. It was quite the rodeo but I lassoed it around the neck and pulled it up to a bushy cascara and tied it up. Note: an elk is hard to lead if it don't want to go. Reached through the cascara and cut the snare off it's foot then cut the lasso off it's neck. Afterwards it would not leave the catch circle, still thought it was caught. Finally took a run at it and scared it out side the catch circle. You could see a look of surprise for a moment  and then it was gone.
Bruce Vandervort

Offline Humptulips

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Re: True stories from the trap line.
« Reply #5 on: November 05, 2013, 07:31:36 PM »
You'll be sorry you got me started. :chuckle:
One more snaring story tonight and a pictures as proof. This happened a few years ago when I was trapping in OR. I kind of invented a run pole set for bobcats that worked pretty good. Reason was I wanted to try conibears for cats but was afraid of catching a dog so came up with the run pole 4' or 5' off the ground to keep the dogs out.
After a while I started fooling around trying to adapt it to snares. Why? I don't know. I made it work but the strange catch was the one pictured. Snared that cat by it's tail. It was alive and active when I showed up at the set so I plugged it before taking the picture.



Here's a couple the way they should look.
Snared


And conibeared
Bruce Vandervort

Offline hardkorrhunter

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Re: True stories from the trap line.
« Reply #6 on: November 05, 2013, 08:22:32 PM »
That's pretty cool Bruce basically a marten set fur cats.

Offline Blue

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Re: True stories from the trap line.
« Reply #7 on: November 06, 2013, 07:38:34 AM »
Very cool stories from the trap line.

Offline bob maier

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Re: True stories from the trap line.
« Reply #8 on: November 06, 2013, 05:12:04 PM »
Running a snare line w my partner back in the day. We are up high looking down on a fence line going to the bottom of a draw. We have every crawl covered by a snare. All of a sudden we see a coyote on our side of the fence running for all get out towards the fence. Partner pulls his rifle and I say lets wait till he gets to the fence and see what happens. Sure enough he hits a hole covered by one of our snares. He hits the end and gets jerked completely off his feet. It's a picture I will never forget. Once in a lifetime!

Offline bob maier

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Re: True stories from the trap line.
« Reply #9 on: November 06, 2013, 05:16:49 PM »
Ever get bite by a dead muskrat? I did. Checking rat traps w del Kramer,see a dead rat floating w just a small spot of fur on his back above water. Reach down w two fingers to pick him up and that dead rat swings around and bite my darn finger. Those suckers have very sharp teeth, scar is pretty much gone but not the memories.

Offline Humptulips

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Re: True stories from the trap line.
« Reply #10 on: November 06, 2013, 11:40:25 PM »
Ever get bite by a dead muskrat? I did. Checking rat traps w del Kramer,see a dead rat floating w just a small spot of fur on his back above water. Reach down w two fingers to pick him up and that dead rat swings around and bite my darn finger. Those suckers have very sharp teeth, scar is pretty much gone but not the memories.

No, but I had a dead bobcat put me in the hospital not once but three times.

Cat Scratch Fever, Oh you laugh but seriously not a good thing to catch.
Bruce Vandervort

Offline bob maier

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Re: True stories from the trap line.
« Reply #11 on: November 07, 2013, 04:30:01 AM »
You need to elaborate on that story Bruce. Your elk in a snare story reminded me of the mule deer doe I caught in a foothold trap. Held above the hoof and not going anywhere. Thinking about tackling her and rethought that idea. So I talked calmly to her and moved in slow, reach down and open the trap and back away. She is just frozen in shock is all I can figure. Had to wave my hands to get her to move.

Offline Hannibal

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Re: True stories from the trap line.
« Reply #12 on: November 07, 2013, 05:20:31 AM »
Was fur trapping and caught a kit beaver

Opened the cage to release the Beaver and it walks out and stops....I grabbed a shovel and started slapping the ground to get it to move

He turned around and chased me....

Offline Blue

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Re: True stories from the trap line.
« Reply #13 on: November 07, 2013, 07:34:04 AM »
 Humptulips... Are you allergic to poison ivy or poison oak? I think that's what you are talking about. My brother and I were trapping bobcats in California and he came down with a case of poison Ivy and couldn't get rid of it. Come to find out he was getting it from the cats. It didn't effect me so I ended up the designated skinner for the rest of the season. 

Offline bob maier

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Re: True stories from the trap line.
« Reply #14 on: November 07, 2013, 03:25:09 PM »
I don't remember the facts but Bruce got really ill not poison ivy. Something a lot worse! Dave quit picking on the poor little beaver!

 


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