• giveaway ENDS SOON! Cutest Baby Fowl Photo Contest: Win a Brinsea Maxi 24 EX Connect CLICK HERE!

caught in a live trap

Possums are transients, meaning they do not "home." They are not territorial.

You can take it 5-10 miles away, to a place where there are no poultry (possums are only pests around poultry and sometimes fruit, they are not very troublesome animals otherwise) or horses (they can carry zoonoses of concern to horse owners) and release it. They are quite docile if you don't try to poke them with a finger in the face. This is an animal whose only superpower is going catatonic when frightened. Just open the trap where the possum can see cover (bush, fallen log) and he or she will leave. Don't be intimidated by the hissing and toothiness -- it's a show. Wear leather gloves when you open the trap if it makes you feel better. A little real knowledge about the behavior of different animal species goes a long way. Possums are interesting, if not very bright, native animals whose specific habits make them fairly easy pests to control with non-lethal means.

There's no reason to kill the animal. They are not major agricultural pests, they are not rabies vectors, they are not the embodiment of Satan on Earth. Just another guy trying to make a living. If you can only feel good once you've got "revenge" on an animal, then that's about you, not about pest control. (The generic "you," not addressed to the OP.)

I release in state gamelands or state parks, gas company lands, and other non-agricultural spaces.

Oh, and it's a lot safer than playing around with guns at short range, something best avoided. And the summer pelt is worthless. I'm not sure I'd eat it this time of year either, though I'm sure some people do.

At least be humane and put the trap into a cool dark place until your husband gets home. If you insist on shooting it, please be sure to hand-kill any babies in the pouch, rather than letting them slowly starve on their mother's corpse.

I do like the maggot-farm idea, and will use that when the dogs kill a groundhog or I have to kill something around here. Strikes me that if the chickens eat all the maggots, it will help cut down on the overall fly population, too. Not very practical for people with small acreage. I don't think it justifies an otherwise unnecessary revenge killing of a simple creature.
 
Ok after reading all the posts and researching the animal it was relocated to a statepark.......
I did keep it in the shade and offered it water although it did not seem to want anything else from me.......
Although it was quiet stinky and not the prettiest animal I have seen I did not have the heart to kill it...........
If all the info I found on the net and here is reliable then It should not return here...............
Any way thank you all for your help....
Mary
 
If I may interject here, I'm glad you released the opossum but more than likely you still have a coon out there reaching through the bars of your chicken pen and ripping their heads off. Opossums don't dig and they don't have the strength to rip a chicken's head off. The only time I've ever had a problems with opossums is with chicks or ducklings and only when they were penned up and couldn't escape. They leave the adults alone for the most part since they are too much trouble for the opossum to go after. The opossum is most likely going to eat whatever food is easiest to obtain unless it's starving and that opossum didn't look like it was starving in the slightest. Try baiting your trap with a donut and see if you catch a coon. From the description of the attack I'm almost 99% sure it wasn't an opossum that killed your chicken.
 
brandywine, well said ~
MaryT, well done ~
LV426, important point. Sounds like a coon to me, too.

MaryT, please keep us posted on how this develops. I do hope you don't have any more pred problems.
 
After reading about how each animal attacks we thought maybe it was a coon and the opposum just showed up for the free food......
 
I might be wrong but if not careful the coon will try to come back home if you catch him. Might want to go futher so it might be harder. My possom I took off was I think 15miles. And he never been back coons are differant
 
A better way really would be to just place hardware cloth around the bottom of the pen so nothing can reach through. Trapping the coon and relocating it will just open up a niche for another coon to move in. Not to mention there are probably several coons around there and one of them will find the place too. Sure you could stake out the hen house every night and shoot raccoons but do you really want to sit up all night waiting for them? Raccoons are a nuisance and I've had them go after my ducks but after I put the hardware cloth up and beat the raccoon over the head with a broom as he ran off it hasn't been a problem.
big_smile.png


I've got a family of coons in my neighborhood and 3 resident opossums. Ducks are herded and locked up by sundown and their pen is secure from wildlife and dogs and no one gets hurt. Chickenwire is pretty useless stuff on the whole so stick with hardware cloth, it costs more but is soooo worth it in the long run.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom