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- #11
- Aug 16, 2013
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Hope he has a million acres, because according to the studies they are going to travel for days after being released, so hopefully they will still be on his property while they slowly starve to death so they won't be a bother to anyone else. His spot might work out though, a lot of trappers stock their property with nuisance animals all summer and then whack them and stack them when the fur gets prime in winter. There could be some local population depression that would make food and den sites easier to find. A relocated raccoon is no different than a dumped dog or cat. It is lost.I'm glad I know someone that is a legal wildlife trapper. He has his own land that he recently purchased to turn into a sanctuary. I have not called him yet about my raccoon problem but I know he is part of he plan if needed.