Maugwa
Songster
I used to do a lot of trapping. When I was a teenager and halfway into my 20s, back in the 1970s to the mid 80s, prime winter Rocky Mountain coons were $40 - $50 each, Red Fox was about the same, but Coyotes were $80 - $100 each. We didn't have to go through all the skinning, scraping, stretching, and washing back then. You could just throw them in the back of a pickup, and sell the frozen carcasses to various fur buyers, who would be parked in certain places at certain times throughout the week. Most Wyoming and Montana small towns had several buyers a week if you knew when and where to catch them. Kids like me who got pretty good at it, could almost always pick up a grand a week, or more, until it got warm enough for the fur to begin pulling.Thread for the people who trap predators.
Didn’t think one was on here so I made this one so people can show what they have caught and give ideas.
It’ll be my first time trapping.I have a red fox in the area that I desperately need to get rid of and I’m hoping I’ll trap it.I know how uncommon it is but I’ve been researching and have found it’s possible.I personally want to shoot it,HOWEVER,the family wants to relocate it, but I’m afraid it’ll just travel back to its original territory.We planned on taking it about an hour maybe hour and a half away more so to the city.I honestly don’t care what happens to it, as long as it’s outta of our area and gone.Any tips on trapping and relocation of animals?
Even if I don’t catch the fox I still am interested to see what I catch.
This is the second thread as I placed the other one in the wrong section and would like this thread to become something, and it’ll probably be more noticed in this area!
We trapped what we could, but also used every other means we could to get even more. Even though coyotes were top dollar, we still made more on the coons. It was easier to get more. Foxes were a nice bonus if you came across one, but there weren't as many. Bobcats were real nice, up to $350 each, but they are extremely smart, hard to trap, and hard to hunt. 2 or 3 a season still made a nice chunk of change to a teen though - $350 would probably compare to $1000 now.
So what were the best ways to get them many ask. Well we trapped as stated above, but spotlighting got us the most coons. We sat our traps out a short walk off of backroads, but spotlighted the drive between areas where the traps were. We also used hounds at night to tree them. For coyotes, we set traps too, and wouldn't fail to shoot one if it turned up in a spotlight, but we got most in the daylight with speed. Speed is Greyhounds and Wolfhounds, dirt bikes and snowmobiles with scabbards, or a combination of the above. If the country was too rough, we called them too. If it was smooth enough, like a wheatfield, we'd just chase them with a pickup.
A lot of people ask what guns worked best. The right answer is a combination. The passenger needs to have 3 in reach at least, a 12ga with one ought for things that pop up close, or for when a chase is closing in. A small caliber .22Mag or .223 with a pretty quick action, pump, lever, or auto. for 100 yards and under, spot light range, or knocking a coon out of a tree (.22lr). And something flat and fast, .243, 250 Savage, .270, etc., something that will reach out to 600 - 800 yards. The driver just needs a reacher outer too, but if he has a second, then a quick repeater with some range, a mini 14, or AR in .223. A good dog in the back, my best was a Pit/Chessie, who if he knows his business will have the first coon or coyote faster than you can get out of the truck. A dog like this in your yard, that is trained to protect chickens, beats all the fences, traps, and firearms combined, hands down. The dog I have now is a 100lb Red Boned Coon Hound. I don't think he's ever seen a coyote or fox, but he trees coons, squirrels, possums, and housecats that get too close to his chicken friends. Friends who'll roost on him when he naps. The only official hunting he has ever done, is he has been on two Mountain Lion hunts as part of a pack, and helped my Son-in-law tree his Pope and Young (archery record) lion.
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