Raccoons Coming During Rains

centrarchid

Crossing the Road
14 Years
Sep 19, 2009
27,552
22,236
966
Holts Summit, Missouri
Biggins (at least 2) and proving hard to get. Primary target has been sweet corn, but tonight gamecock. Trap line of dog proof traps (4 units) baited using sweet corn kernels was passed up. Rain heavy, like I am soaked after 30 seconds. Dogs penned to prevent them from cleaning traps or running off coons not yet trapped. Game cameras show both those go on. I was asleep at 0220 when dogs started chuffing then when balistic trying to get passed door. I got up with flashlight and out barefooted and shirtless to release them. Soon as rounded house corner I could hear rooster squalling (raccoons had him and trying to pull him through pen) and another step I could see at least two adult raccoons with flashlight. Dogs had gone silent and were almost on raccoons when bolted and went into the heavy brush. Dogs were briefly fighting at least one raccoon as all ran down the hill. Underbrush too heavy and everything to wet. The raccoons got away and would not tree, or at least dogs could not line them out if the did. Rain real heavy and I cannot see my feet in the stuff. German Pointer got dinged up a little, but I think that may have been caused by the very thorny vines. I can see no actual wounds on her. She is licking legs and shoulders a lot. We may have gotten into nettles too. If so, then I just got into the edge of them. Also must remember not to leave muck boots at work.

Rooster released from pen so he can be taken into core area. He would not let me pick him up so he had to walk with dogs back to garage on his own. He followed light beam real well. Long walk in the rain. Garage door open so he could walk in and jump up on a cooler. He is too wet to fly. He will be tended to at dawn. Right now he is not keen on being handled.

Tomorrow a second trap line will be set further down the hill and baited with protein / fat rich materials. Pathway will have to be mowed so I can run traps even when raining like last couple nights. It is no fun trying to fight way through very wet and often thorny vegetation when rain already so high you cannot see. These raccoons I want to kill rather than simply run off. They have been coming in whenever we get a couple night of heavy rain and dogs cannot cut them off from woods or culvert between house and woods.

I may setup hot-wire as well. Too many patches to adequately defend from raccoons. Next year corn will be planted closer to apple orchard. They must know all the corn patches in the county.
 
In addition to Red Fox running trap line, something else that looks like a corn-fed Banshee was out messing when and where not supposed to be very much during bed time. Based on hair rain had not started yet. We have a date issue on camera again.

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I may try another brand / design, but trapping is not a major endeavor for me. Too many other things to do. Also the predators I deal with are easier to catch than somebody going after them as furbearers. I can successfully use approaches for Red Fox that real trappers probably cannot because critters away from poultry yard are much more wary. A relative protecting a much larger garden and game chickens has taken out close to 100 raccoons this year alone by trapping a very small area. Under such conditions the equipment needs to be durable and work easily even when weather / seeing bad. Arming traps during downpour after dark makes you look for simple. At least I am not tangling with mink and otters.
 
Yup, had been dodging the bullets, but we got a piece of that one. Only got 1/2" or rain, and it only lasted 10 min or so, but it came with some quarter sized hail and straight line winds from violent downdrafts.....end result.....sweet corn patch that had been looking so promising took a hit....

corn e.jpg corn w.jpg

Have a row of 8' tall miscanthus grass near this to protect from normal wind blasts, which usually come from W or SW. Wind from this storm blew N to S......highly unusual. I think coons have conspired with mother nature to help them out.

Corn had fence grounded out, and some of the netting may have been immersed in standing water, but corn has silked and is at it's most vulnerable to coons right now, so left fencer on last night. It was still on this morning and corn was as it was at dark, except it went ahead and fell on over. Soils are fertile and will support good growth, but also shallow, flat and poorly drained. End result is a tall plant with a poor root structure and vulnerable to wind damage. May get half a crop from what might have been 25 to 30 dozen ears.

BTW, chickens will normally shrug off a lot of rain events. Started out that way with this one, but when the hail started, a river of chickens flowed off in the direction of the Woods house. Pop door isn't that big, but they went through it 3 abreast to get out of the weather. Five min later, were all back out like nothing ever happened.
 
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More fun just before a made short jaunt to work to open up. As son and I ran trap line with dogs, fox came in behind us and went after Aseel chicks. I do not know how long fox invested in effort but could only see hen trying to flog fox through wire. Fox wanted her. Dogs were on it in a flash running fox off hard. It sounded like they almost got him.

When son and I looked for chicks we could find none. Son assumed complete loss. Not enough time for fox to catch all. We looked all over for about 5 minutes and found none. So I said let hen out so she would calm down and start clucking. As soon as she started clucking the chicks started coming out of grass. Some more than 30 away. Lost only one.

All three broody hens at house now penned up with broods over flat cock pens that have been pulled together.
 
My son wants to help make a nasty trash panda bait made from black licorice and sardines. Traps will be arranged in two lines, first of three along route we are pretty sure they take from woods to south. The other made up of four is very close to southern row of pens along path between house and barn.

Bait ingredients will be minced and mixed so as to make boy want to puke. The bait will be applied to traps and immediate surroundings. Dogs will again be penned to allow raccoons time to check out traps. All chickens will be penned at dark. Young (juvenile) birds currently out foraging to clean up spilled feed.
 
Traps armed and baited. Both my kids got a kick out of the whole process. Bait is truly nasty, yet chickens and dogs had to be denied access to it. At first the chickens had no interest in the licorice, then they did. Female English Shepherd had to be confined as she was going hardcore after the sardines.
 

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