By: Bears Butt

YuckyStuff

I’ve said it before…Trapping is more than just setting traps and collecting the money.  After the trapping season ends, there is usually a ton of things that needs to be done to make sure the traps, equipment and shed are in working order for next year.  This year I told Bob I would take care of the stretchers and clean them up a bit.  You see the hooks at the bottom of the stretchers get clogged up with parts from the animals and after a few years it gets really hard to get the teeth to bite into the hides.  This year he cussed a ton about the stretchers.  So, since he handles the traps, I took on the stretchers.

I started by pulling all the stretchers out of the skinning shed and laying them out by the BBQ cooker…my heat source.

AllReadyToBeCleaned

We have over 200 stretchers and I needed to clean each and every one of them.  Each is in its own way needing a cleaning.  I like to use my BBQ because it’s convenient and the propane bottle is nearly full.  I pull out the grills and the covers over the flame tubes and place an old grill from another BBQ I had years ago that spans two of the three burners and give my big pan a place to rest while it heats up.

I filled my big pan to about 3/4ths full and started it to heating.  In the meantime I counted out 25 stretchers and placed them into the pan of heating water.  If I would have thought about it a bit, I think I would have added some liquid dish soap to the water, but I didn’t and it really didn’t make that much of a difference.  You might want to add some however.

It’s been my experience that the stretchers need to boil about 15 minutes in order for the “gunk” to come off.  Especially if you have stretchers that have never been cleaned before…and we had some of those this time.

What do you need to clean the stretchers?  A heat source, a large pan deep enough to cover about 1/3 rd the the length of the stretchers, water, a wire brush and perhaps a rag.  The objective is to get the hooks on the stretchers clean, which will allow them to grab onto the flesh of the raw hide and stretch it.

So, in the first picture you saw the yucky stuff I needed to clean off of the stretchers, here it is again:

YuckyStuff

NeedCleaning

YUK!

So into the pot they go for about 15 minutes:

BoilingAway

They boil away and make a really nasty smelling soup.  I suppose if you were really hungry you could eat it, but not me…I’d rather die.

When adequately cooked, the yucky stuff looks sort of like this:  It’s soft and pliable and will come off easily with the wire brush.

BoiledAndReadyToComeOff

A little elbow grease and a wire brush and it doesn’t take long for them to be nice and clean:

Clean

That is all there is to it.  It takes time to do, but next year when we are in the shed putting up furs, we will say…Sure is nice to have sharp fur hooks to stretch these here furs.

I cleaned them all and put them on the hangers in groups of 25.  One of the hangers only has 20 on it as we have 295 stretchers.  Just right for our small time operation.

Keep them babies clean and they will give you years and years of service!

Bears Butt

March 31, 2014

Written on March 31st, 2014 , Daily Trapping Events
By: Bears Butt

WP_20140306_001

When an old guy like me is looking at the big picture, it is sure nice to see there are some young folks still liking to hang around and do things like I did in my younger days.  Here my 8 year old grandson Cody is learning how to skin a muskrat.  I think during the entire season he skinned about 5 and he did very well considering his mother didn’t like the idea of him playing with a sharp knife.  Well, mom, he could have cut himself, but he was very careful and managed to only cut on the muskrat….relax!  And even if he had of cut himself, he was well protected with the rubber gloves that were WAYYYY too big for his hands….I joke!

Anyway, here he is and has a lasting memory implanted in his brain that nobody can take away.  Thanks for the good job Cody!  Next year maybe you can come up and skin some more.

This carries on with a young man forever and even if he never picks up another muskrat, his bucket list now holds the fact that he skinned a few.  He was fun to watch and it was equally as fun to listen to his dad coax him through the tough parts.  There were no nicks in the hides and every one ended up with all their ears, clean eye holes and noses intact!  How can it get any better than that?

So, 733 rats went up in the shed this year and 733 rats went out the door last night.  The auction house now has them and from this point until after the auction in May, we wait.

I didn’t catch the young men’s names that accompanied the pick up man, Corry Hatch, but we met them at a pre-determined spot last night and loaded up all the furs.  I really didn’t think they were going to fit in the car, but they did.  Does this picture show a tradition that will be handed down to these two youngsters?  Time will tell, but they sure were there and very much a help in loading the furs.

CorryHatchAndHisBoys

Thanks Corry and Thanks Boys!  Drive safely!

Bears Butt

March 29, 2014

Written on March 29th, 2014 , Daily Trapping Events
By: Bears Butt

ReedsPictureOfTheGradingProcess

This picture is one that Reed took with his smart phone while we were grading our rats by size.  It becomes obvious it takes a lot of people to make short work of a project of this size.  Can you imagine being at the auction warehouse where they are dealing with hundreds of thousands of furs from all over the country.  Grading, sorting, inspecting and trying to keep them all organized by “ownership”….I’d like to go see that sometime.

Well, today is our day to take the furs to market.  We meet up with the pickup driver this evening and off they go.  I have sent him a text message making sure the meeting time is still on, but have not heard from him as yet…..

Speaking of “heard from”, Bob got a call yesterday while he was away and the person left him a message, the message went something like this:

“Bob, this is _____ (I won’t say his name), I think I can get you $9.75 for your rats!  Give me a call, Bye”!

What did I say?

Bears Butt

March 28, 2014

Written on March 28th, 2014 , Daily Trapping Events
By: Bears Butt

ButtsGoingToNafa

So, What’s a Bears Butt worth at auction?  Bag ‘im, Tag ‘im!

Boy what a day!  It took a whole lot longer to get things done than I expected today.  When you think about it, pull down the rats on the stretchers, take them over to the garage, pull down the hangers full of furs, take them to the garage, pull the furs out of the freezer, dump them….Easy huh?

Well, sure it’s easy, but it took a long, long time to do it.  I started at 10 a.m., Bob and Reed showed up around 11 a.m. and the rest is history…I got back into the house about 5 p.m.

So, it’s not an issue of pulling down the rats and taking them off the stretchers…after all we only had 175 of them…..

But the fun began when we moved them over to Bob’s garage and piled them all up…YEEEHAAAA!

BobDumpingRats

ReedDumping Rats

And the pile grew and grew!

AndThePileGrows

That pile is all the rats we caught this year.  It doesn’t look like much does it…but I’ll tell you it is a LOT to us who had to go out and catch them and then deal with them back at home…we discovered two more than we thought we had…733!!!!  That is always a good thing to find out and much better than finding out you miscounted by two less!  More is always better!

So, here we are with piles of rats sitting on the tarp.  Now it’s time to organize them by size….Small, Medium, Large, Extra Large, 2X Large, 3XLarge ect.

We use the ruler with the grades marked on them in order to do that.

ASolidXL

In order to be “critical” of our measuring, we decided to measure the “belly” side of the fur and of course measure from the saddle to the nose.  A tie (or line measurement) went to the lower grade by length.  Here is a solid XL, no mistake about that one.  All the tough calls come from those that hit “on the line”, do you toss it in the bigger size or the smaller?….Hey!  What did I say?  A tie goes to the smaller pile!

We were very critical about our grading into size!

SortingBySize

ButtAndWeaselMeasuringSize

As we neared the end of the grading by size, Weasel broke away from his busy computer business in order to help.  A welcome addition, as Bob was beginning to interrupt and question how I was doing the measuring.  Yes, I was being critical, Yes, I was being partial, Yes, I was measuring the belly side and not the back…At least I was consistent!  What’s more is I wanted our count to reflect a tough grade, not an easy grade.  If I had wanted an easy grade I would have insisted that Bob grade them!

So, when we are all done we have several piles of rats, all sorted by size!

SortedBySize

NOW, those are good looking piles of rats!  Guess which one has the most rats in it?…..Large of course!  Which has the smallest number of rats in it?  2X large…that’s to be expected!  What about the next smallest group?  In this case the “smalls”!

It sort of goes like your school days grades…a certain percentage of the students are over achievers, a certain percentage or under achievers, the majority are average and the rest sort of just fill in between the over guys and the under guys.  And so it is with our rats.  What about the counts by sorted sizes?

PilesByNumber

Let’s start with the Pile farthest to the left <– Those are the Smalls…18 of them!  Next to them is the 2X Large…8 of them!  Behind those two piles are the Mediums….84 strong!  Behind us are the Xtra Large…119 of them!  (Yeaaa) and the big pile is for the average size,  LARGE!  504!!!!  Add them bad boys up and you have a total of 733!  It’s no wonder we carry side arms out in the field when we are trapping!

So, I’m sure you are interested in the percentage of big, medium and small we have in our catch…here are the numbers!

Small 2.45%, Medium 11.46%,  Large 68.76%, X Large 16.23% and finally 2X Large 1.09% (2.45+11.46+68.76+16.23+1.09 = 99.99)

I have told you that without knowing how many, I was guessing that we had over 90% large plus…well, I was wrong…we have 86.08% that are Large or bigger!  My bad.  But to be so close…I pat myself on my back…OOOOOOO, that feels good!

So, next is the breakdown as to how many DAMAGED rats we have!  Damage is always a matter of who is looking at the hide.  A slightly broken skin for some is “bad damage” (“he” says that!)  Any mark at all is “BAD”!  (“He says that too”!)  And other graders look at the mark, the tear, the hole, the damage and consider where it is located, on the end, near the nose, near the tail, near the side, near the ear, near the edupus erangularis…where ever and will say…it’s a NO call…no damage or slight damage.

SO!  We decided to take the “He” side of things and grade our damage according to “him”…any mark was bad and any mark constituted a toss into the “damaged pile”!  And then once that was done, we went through and sorted that pile into what we called “Bad”  and “Slight”!  Oh how tough it was to remove ourselves from “his” way of thinking and into the reality of reality….NOT!

I would like to be a rat hide grader some day, but I am too old to get into that profession.  For now I’ll just have to be entertained by this method of having fun.  It’s going to be very interesting to see the results of this auction and how we graded and how they graded our hides.  It’s all so new, we can only speculate.

Speaking of speculating…”he” didn’t show up today.  Sorry…my bad…another expectancy of mine that did not come to fruition.

We began sorting the size piles noting any defect at all, and if we saw a tear, a rip, a mark, a nick, a “anything”, it went into a separate pile…no marks at all went into another separate pile, again keeping the sizes separated from the other piles.  Once that was done, we carefully went through and analyzed the marks, nicks, holes, tears etc., their placement withing the hide (front/back etc.), the size of the hole, tear, nick etc. and decided if it was a “bad” or a “slight” damage.  We leaned toward the “bad” side and came up with these numbers:

Small:  3 Slight/1 Bad:  Medium:  11 Slight/6 Bad:  Large: 93 Slight/45 Bad:  X Large: 17 Slight/12 Bad:  2XLarge : 1 Slight

When you toss the mathematics at these numbers you see there was a total of 25% damage factor in our mix…however, keep in mind we were VERY critical of our inspection and ANY mark was counted in the damage category.  A second look at all the “damage” yielded the numbers:  Bad = 64 and Slight = 125  (a total of 25%), but the breakdown yields Bad at 8% and Slight at 17%.  How the guys at the auction house grades them will be a different situation.  When you consider it the “run” time of year, a damage of 25% is very low…again we were very critical to count EVERY mark we saw on the hide regardless of where we saw it.

We feel VERY good about sending our hides off to auction and are looking forward to the end results!

When we were finished with our inspection and separating them by size and grading them via damage, we jumbled them all up and began to count them out for bagging.

JumblePile

We counted them out in piles of 10, and then bagged them 4 stacks of 10 each, across in the bottom of the bag,

PlacingRatsInBag

staggering the noses of the rats and stacked them 5 high…200 to the bag!  Marked the tags accordingly and they are ready to ship them off!

200RatsPerBaq

When you think about it, the amount of time it takes to put your hides in the bags and make out the paperwork that goes with them, WHY would you ever NOT want to ship your hides to the auction????  Why have WE sold ours to the local buyer when it is SO EASY to ship them off????

I guess we still have something to learn about all of this, but right now we are questioning our past intelligence.

Bears Butt

March 26, 2014

 

 

 

 

Written on March 27th, 2014 , Daily Trapping Events
By: Bears Butt

SONY DSC

A great day in store for us today…rat grading day!  The weather isn’t as nice as it was yesterday, but we can tuck ourselves inside a garage and stay dry and relatively warm.  The temp is supposed to be in the low 50’s, that’s better than low 40’s…gotta admit that!  Cut the wind and all is well.  Besides we will be busy sorting and bull crapping each other with our theories and such.

Yesterday I talked with another trapper who caught around 400 rats this Spring.  He was asking about the selling price of rats that I have heard was being sold and what I recommend he do with his rats.  My recommendation to him was to ask $10 straight through and to freeze them until next year if he didn’t get that amount.

He is OK with that as the money he gets from the rats he catches is just used as his slush fund to buy things outside the household budget and by stockpiling this years catch he would have twice as many to bargain with next year.  Again I cautioned him about the international political scene and the impacts that could have on the price paid for rats.  By that I mean, if the U.S. puts sanctions on Russia for whatever reason, then the Chinese will have to watch how and where they deal with the Russians as well.  And since the bulk of the finished fur products that China produces goes to Russia, that would directly impact the demand for furs the Chinese would want…thus buying price goes down.

Then again, the Chinese aren’t the only buyers of raw furs, the Greeks and others also buy them and perhaps with the Chinese out of the picture those smaller countries just might pick up the pace and buy the furs at a even higher price than the Chinese have been buying them…just not in the volume as the Chinese….It’s all speculation and nobody really knows how things are going to go.

HEY!  Are any of you restaurant owners is need of some Muskrat bodies?  I’ll even clean them before I sell them to you!  McDonalds?  Taco Bell?  Carls’ Jr.?  Wendys?  Ho Duk Mein?

Muskrat is much more rich in protein and assorted other nutrients than is cat….just sayin.

Basic Report:  17175, Game meat, muskrat, cooked, roasted

Full Report (All Nutrients) Statistics Report Download (CSV) Print (PDF)

Nutrient values and weights are for edible portion

Help
Nutrient Unit
Value per 100 g

oz
85g

piece, cooked (yield from 1 lb raw meat, boneless)
313g
Proximates
Water g 55.58 47.24 173.97
Energy kcal 234 199 732
Protein g 30.09 25.58 94.18
Total lipid (fat) g 11.74 9.98 36.75
Carbohydrate, by difference g 0.00 0.00 0.00
Fiber, total dietary g 0.0 0.0 0.0
Minerals
Calcium, Ca mg 36 31 113
Iron, Fe mg 7.10 6.04 22.22
Magnesium, Mg mg 26 22 81
Phosphorus, P mg 271 230 848
Potassium, K mg 320 272 1002
Sodium, Na mg 95 81 297
Zinc, Zn mg 2.27 1.93 7.11
Vitamins
Vitamin C, total ascorbic acid mg 7.0 6.0 21.9
Thiamin mg 0.080 0.068 0.250
Riboflavin mg 0.710 0.603 2.222
Niacin mg 7.190 6.111 22.505
Vitamin B-6 mg 0.470 0.399 1.471
Folate, DFE µg 11 9 34
Vitamin B-12 µg 8.30 7.06 25.98
Vitamin A, RAE µg 0 0 0
Vitamin A, IU IU 0 0 0
Lipids
Cholesterol mg 121 103 379

Sorry:  No data on “cat”…….

Bears Butt

March 26, 2014

Written on March 26th, 2014 , Daily Trapping Events
By: Bears Butt

dental-bartering

Just an update about our rats.

The other day Bob was visited by a local fur buyer who was just wanting to make conversation.  To me it was a spying method on his part to make sure we had not sold our furs.  Yesterday he had another visit from the same guy, who wanted to see the furs hanging in the shed.  Bob always likes to show off the good work we do and so they visited the fur shed.  The comment made by the potential buyer was: “You didn’t catch many big ones did you”?

Oh boy.  I don’t know what Bob said at that time, but they eventually went back into Bob’s house, where the spreadsheet of who caught how many was sitting on his desk.  The buyer picked it up and inquired as to what it was…Bob told him and he studied it for awhile and then, like usual, changed the subject…the conversation went on and as it did, he calmly folded up the paper and stuck it in his pocket….Now folks this is the kind of guy we are dealing with.

Did he ask if he could have it?  Nope.  Just took it and Bob sat quietly and watched him do it.  That is all just fine and dandy, it helps me support where I have been coming from for years…I just don’t like dealing with this type of guy.  His head is all wrapped around one thing…himself!  He cares not how hard we work to get the furs we have and he just wants to offer us a token of what the furs are worth, knowing all the while he is going to make a killing when he sells them….No we did not catch many big rats this year…We caught a TON of BIG ONES!  Over 90% of the 731 are over 14 inches and 14 inches are considered Large.  And while that probably doesn’t mean much to an outsider, of the 90%, 90% of them are over 15 inches!  Which means the majority of our rats will grade out at Xtra Large or Bigger.  Tomorrow we are going to sort them out by size and do our own grading.  Those results will be posted up on here and then you can see (pictures) of this 90% I’m talking about.

So, he steals the paper, which by the way has nothing of importance to him, except maybe bragging to his co-horts and telling them how much he knows about our trapping success for this year.  I’m Ok with that…Ones reputation for “Things”, good or bad, always precede you in whatever you do.

And the story goes on:

About 8 last night Bob called me to inform me that “he” had called and given a bid on our rats…$9.30 something…I didn’t really pay much attention to the amount as I know what we are doing and it just reinforced what I have told Bob would happen as the crunch time nears for sending rats off to auction.

Bob told him that was not near enough to peak our interest and that he would have to offer over $10 or we would not even consider the bid.  “He scoffed”.

So, what do I expect now?  You know he is having a hard time securing furs, especially muskrats.  All of the trappers had a bad time catching them, the year was an odd one, with a late ice melt and an early run.  The catch rate for everyone except us, was maybe 1/2 to 2/3 rds what they normally catch.  So this buyer is having to pay a bit more than usual to get his “batch” up before he ships them off and our 700 plus count is really looking like a premium to him (this is all speculation on my part, but I know Greed when I see it).  My suspicion is telling me that today (Tuesday) he will visit again and make a higher offer…something in the $9.50 range and will promise that if he gets more than he expects, he will make up the difference to us after he gets his fur check.  EVERY trapper in this area has heard him say this and NONE of US have EVER seen him come back and give us more money…NONE!  So, does he think we will fall for that line again?  Come on! (Baby, you have such beautiful eyes..I have never seen such gorgeous eyes in my life!  I need to get closer to you…Oh Baby…Oh Baby…OHHHHH)

But, my speculation is not over….Bob will tell him again we want something over $10 and that we are going to be grading our furs ourselves tomorrow, which we have planned and “he” will invite himself down to watch…you watch and see…I’ll make sure I have a picture of “him” sitting there with his coffee cup, drooling over this large batch of $20 rats passing before his eyes, his left leg twitching as the day progress’.  And he will sit there and watch us grade these various piles of Xtra Large and Xtra Xtra large rats into smaller piles of damage…Big damage down to slightly damaged…as we want to make ourselves aware of how the auction house grades.  We will be very tough on our grading and “he” will be sitting there all the while wishing he had his hands on them…his mind will be racing.  When we are satisfied and ready to bag them up, he will make another offer in the $9.80 range and then spit and shuffle off when we tell him NO.

When he is gone, we will bag them up in official Ok-Doki NAFA bags, put our tags on them and put them away in a locked environment while they wait for our Friday rendezvous with the man who picks up fur for this auction.

My story is not finished:

Later in the evening of Wednesday, “he” will call Bob one last time and make an offer of $10, straight through for our rats.  Bob will tell him, “we will think about that” and let him sweat the night away at his home, hoping Bob will call him on Thursday morning.  After he has had some time drinking his coffee, he will then call Bob and ask about his decision on the $10…Bob will tell him NO!  But then, he will continue to bug Bob at least once more on Thursday, quite possibly with a higher bid, but not much higher and then again on Friday a couple of times.  He will most likely come to Bob’s on Friday with a personal visit…

Well, that’s my speculative take on it all!  Let’s see how things play out.  On the trap line I was fooled every day I tried to let you know how my expectancy was with the rats being caught and every time I was wrong…close a time or two, but never right on with my expectancy.  Am I expecting too much from this guy in this regard?  I think not, but we will see.

Bears Butt

March 25, 2014

Written on March 25th, 2014 , Daily Trapping Events
By: Bears Butt
DAILY CATCH OF RATS PaidBrek PDMav     PDMav          
DATE BOB REMARKS Skinning Rat purchase WYNN REMARKS Rat purchase BREK REMARKS WEASEL REMARKS Maverik
  65                      
11-Feb 6       11 1 Raccoon   1 1 Raccoon 0    
12 6       11     2   0    
13 8       6 1 Raccoon/1Skunk       0    
14 7       11 1 skunk/1hawk       3    
15 10       20 2 skunk       0    
DATE   Sunday $61.00     Sunday       2    
17 24       20 1 Raccoon       1    
18 19       18         0    
19 0       0         0    
20 20       27 3 Raccoon       0    
21 17       15 1 Raccoon       0    
22 10       22 1 Raccoon       0 1 Fox  
23   Sunday $122.50     Sunday     Pulled Traps   Sunday  
24 14     $20.00 20 1skunk       1   4
25 9       11   $5.00     0   1
26 14       14 1skunk       0  
27 12       3 1 skunk       0    
28 12       24         0    
1-Mar 9       31         1 +one eaten  
2   Sunday $30.00     Sunday       0    
3 14       14 1Raccoon/1Skunk       0 1 Raccoon  
4 7       17         1    
5 11       7         0    
6 4       5         0    
7 11       10         0    
8 2       12         1    
9   Sunday       Sunday       0    
10 9       13         0    
11 3       6         0    
12 2       2         0    
13 6       16         0    
14 5       3         0    
15 5 Pulled Traps     3 Pulled Traps       0 Pulled Traps  
16   SundayTrapping Over                    
17 341   372 9 coons/8 skunks 3 1 Coon 10 1coon/1fox 5
TOTAL RATS 731 46.60%   50.89%   0.40%   1.37%   0.68%
  Bob Paid Out $213.50 $20.00 Wynn Paid Out $5.00    
    Total Paid Out $238.50     Total Paid Out $5.00          

And so you can see from this spreadsheet that our work involves more than just trapping, it involves record keeping in order to keep all the partners informed and everything above board.  So often I have read stories about how trapping partners of the past have come to odds over things that probably should not have caused them to split up.  By keeping accurate records and making those records known to all the people involved only makes for good relationships.

More than this record, I have created a “Trespass permission slip” to be signed by the land owner involved for the 2014-2015 trapping season and before the summer is out, signatures will be obtained by those land owners for our trapping next year.  Without going to this degree, those land owners can grant permission to the next trapper that comes along and there is nothing you nor I could do about it.  The biggest thing, is to make sure the land owner feels a part of your trapping success and make it easy for them to “sign on the dotted line”.  In the case of our biggest stake holder, is he wanted some raccoons caught as well as the muskrats and we did a pretty good job for him in that regard…not to count the skunks!

Letters to the various land owners have also been generated and will be dispersed, either through personal contact with the land owners, or through the mail.  Those letters usually explain when we started to set traps on their properties, when we stopped trapping and how many animals we caught.  Also, side notes as to the condition of their property and whether you feel your trapping services are needed or not.  If you feel your services are still needed, make certain to include in your mailing (or in person) an easy to sign trespass permission slip, dated for the next trapping season and include a self addressed stamped envelope.

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2014 MUSKRAT TRAPPING REPORT FOR 41 DUCK CLUB

Thank you once again for allowing me to trap on your great club properties.

My muskrat trapping season began on February 10 this year as the ice was beginning to move away from the heads of the Springs. Both my brother Bob and I had high hopes that this would be a record breaking year for catching rats. However, as the season progressed we found out otherwise. Other trappers in the area were finding out the same thing on their lines.

As it turned out, Spring came early in the swamps.

My normal routine for muskrat trapping is to start on Pete Holmgrens properties and then move out to the Promontory area where I end the season. This year brought a change as Richard Nicholas was holding his bulls in another area while I had time to trap the small seep that crosses through where he usually keeps them. I decided that while I was out on the Promontory mountain I’d trap Steve Peterson’s and the pond at Doris Larson’s. While there, Mr. Nicholas secured my trespass on the property adjacent to Doris’ on the South. The water from Doris’s pond runs down through his place and holds rats that come up stream to populate the pond.

Catch rates for the past few years have been like this:

Doris’ pond: 2013 = 1 rat, 2014 = 12 rats

Adjacent property to Doris’: 2014 = 12 rats

Richard Nicholas place: 2014 = 53 rats

Stephen Peterson’s: 2012 = 29 rats, 2013 = 106 rats, 2014 = 24 rats

The large expanse of Club 41 was a complete surprise. My catch for this area was very low. Historically: 2012 = 139 rats

2013 = 194 rats (with a helper)

2014 = 24 rats

It’s very understandable the downward direction of the catch on Mr. Peterson’s place as it is an isolated spring with little or no rats moving in from other areas. Catching all the rats out of there is totally possible. As is the area where Richard Nicholas keeps his bulls.

Doris’ pond and the downstream area will always have rats coming up from the GLS and the springs found in close proximity.

However, your Club properties have changed so much in the past couple of years what with my catching as many rats as I have, you draining the larger ponds and the fact that there is little for the rats to eat, the problem with rats that you have had is now a thing of the past. I have said all along you can never get rid of all the muskrats, but you can control the population and this is where your club is today.

I can still see a need to trap Mr. Nicholas’ place, at least one more season and of course Doris’ pond should always have traps placed on it to control those little diggers.

As for the rest of your property and Mr. Peterson’s, I don’t think there is a need for my services on those areas for several years to come.

Please keep my name and number handy in case things change and you feel you need me to come back for more control work.

Again, Thank You very much for the opportunity to trap on your club!

Very Sincerely,

Wynn “Bears Butt” Zundel

145 W. 200 N.

Willard, Ut 84340 435-723-6462 Thezundels1974@yahoo.com

P.S.

Check out my website. www.bearsbutt.com

 

Send to: Bob W. Foxley 708 33rd St. Ogden Ut 84403

Along with the key he sent (2014)

 

The key points in all of this is to keep all lines of communication open for everyone involved and do it in writing.  Make sure to be business-like in all your dealings with the landowners and at every chance, make sure you pick up debris you find along your trapping routes.  I even like to fix a fence or two while I’m out and about.  It generally only takes a minute with existing materials found at the sight and makes the landowner know you really care.

Bears Butt

March 22, 2014

Written on March 22nd, 2014 , Daily Trapping Events
By: Bears Butt

StoppedByTriggerTip

Just like the lucky rat that got through this trap, we are very fortunate trappers.  We kept a running catch record as we went along on our daily trapping adventures and when we got back to the skinning shed, we each recorded our day’s catch.  The spreadsheet is interesting to look at.  We have to keep track of not only the daily catches, but also the daily/weekly outlay of cash and who paid what to whom.  Bob paid almost all of the pay out in order to keep it as simple as it could be, but it ends up being quite a burden before it’s all over.  He will be paid back (his half) when we finally get a paycheck from the auction house, but until then, he is stuck with the bill.

Here is how things totaled for the season:

Bob  341 rats (46.6%), Bears Butt 372 rats (50.89%) plus 9 raccoons (let’s not talk about the 8 skunks), Brek 3 rats (.4%) plus one raccoon, Weasel 10 rats (1.37%) plus one raccoon and one fox.  We also purchased another trappers rats (5 total, at .68%) and they are included in our total rat catch of 731 rats!  A very good year of trapping for a couple of old guys and a couple of young guys who didn’t have much area to trap.  The mileage on my toy’s speedometer reads 67 miles…that is how much ground I covered while trapping.

Last night we finished putting the remainder of the rats up on stretchers and now it’s just allow them to dry while we wait for the time to meet with the guy who picks up the furs for the auction.  In the background we are hearing from others how a local buyer is going to make Bob and offer of a pretty good sum for our rats, little does he know, we have committed to each other that we are sending them off to the auction and that it would take a heck of an offer to change our minds….a heck of an offer, one he is not going to make.  It will be interesting when he hears about our intentions.

Most of the local trappers are content with “getting the shaft” from the local buyers because it means they get their money right now and don’t have to wait for a few months to get paid for all their work.  That’s OK, we did it for years and years and were happy about it.  I hate the hassle of bargaining with the buyers, it’s the worst thing in the world to me as they just won’t come through with their best and final offer right up front.  They want to get the furs for the lowest price they can and so they hold out until the last minute in some cases, to make an offer worth taking.  By shipping them off, we know exactly what is coming down and when, and then it’s just a waiting game to see what the auction house sends us in the way of a check.  It’s like pulling the handle of a slot machine only you are guaranteed “something” on the pull…will you get the average?  Above average?  Below average?  Whatever it ends up being, I’ll be OK with it.

While we wait, I can now get some much needed work done around the house…the weeds are going nutso!

Bears Butt

March 20, 2014

 

Written on March 20th, 2014 , Daily Trapping Events
By: Bears Butt

UncombedRatCombedRat

Yesterdays Post told you about life after trapping and inside the skinning shed, but without pictures I probably didn’t explain it well enough.  So we took a few pictures of the process’ yesterday and I thought it appropriate to re-do the explanation of the different process’ and include those pictures.  I want to caution all you trappers to wear rubber gloves while handling your furs.  Critters carry diseases and some of these diseases can kill you.  You are working with sharp knives and tools that poke holes etc.  And I sure would not want to be the one responsible for your death….wear those protective gloves!

As you recall, these two pictures are “before combing” and “after combing”.  A close inspection of the two pictures clearly shows how much better the combed fur looks.

 

UncombedRatUpCloseCombedRatUpClose  There is no question about the improvement and by doing this with every rat we put up, will only make our grade higher.  A little time now will help make our batch of rats stand out from the normal at the auction house….at least we hope so.

 

 

 

 

 

 

From the combing of the dried furs comes the fleshing of the skins.  Fleshing involves the removal of extra meat and fat that clings to the underside of the skinned fur.  You can’t expect to remove that in the skinning process and nearly every fur handled in the shed needs a certain amount of fleshing.  Some more than others, but nearly all of them have some flesh or fat that is excess and needs removal.  In my limited experience with foxes and bobcats, they were the only animal skins that didn’t have much to flesh.  Raccoons and beaver, on the other hand, make up for the fox and cats as they have a ton of hard to press off fat.

A lot of new trappers who are desirous to get good at putting up skins will question the “fleshing board” and if you search on line you will find that most trappers are using a round pole for their fleshing board.  I have found the use of a plain old 1 inch by 6 inch pine board to work just fine.  I have it rough cut and the edges rounded somewhat so that I can slip the muskrat hide over the tip and do my fleshing.

MyFleshingBoard

FleshingBoardWidth

My fleshing tool is nothing more than a automobile window scraper with the pointed edges rounded off to avoid digging into the skins.  By using a flat fleshing tool like my window scraper, the flat board is more conducive to getting the skin fleshed properly and quickly.  I do have to add an extra step in fleshing and that is to pull the skin partway off the board and turn it in order to get the sides of the skins fleshed, but that doesn’t take a lot of time.

FleshingRat

Like I said in my post yesterday, my back really takes a beating when fleshing a lot of skins, but this position is what I’ve found to be best for me to adequately get the job done.

When the skin is fleshed, it’s time to put it on a stretcher to dry.  We use wooden clothes pins to hold the nose of the skin onto the end of the stretcher and then pull the hide down as tight as it can be pulled.

ClosePinnedNoses

Here you see Bob and his friendly dog Abby, putting a skin on a wire stretcher.

BobAndAbbyStretchingRat

When the people grading the rat hides grade them by size, they measure diagonally from the nose down to the “hip”, rather than the tip of the tail portion.

DiagonalMeasureOfHide

The stretched hides are hung overhead on wires to dry.  It’s important to note that the temperature inside the drying room should not exceed 70 degrees, at least not for too long a time.  The ideal temperature for drying furs is between 55 and 65 degrees and the use of a fan in the room is always advisable to keep the air moving.  Our skinning and drying shed has vents in both gable ends that can be opened or closed to assist in the air flow in the upper reaches of the shed.

When the trapper has exceeded the amount of space he has available to hang the drying hides on the stretchers he has to do something with those dried hides to make more room.  We utilize large wire hangers to put the dried hides on.  We have our way of doing things and for you beginning to get into putting up your own hides you too will find a strategy that works for you.  Here Weasel is taking hides off of the stretchers and piling them up on the floor, while Bob is putting them on the hangers.

TakingRatOffStretcher2

RatsOffStretcher

PuttingRatsOnHanger

We like to limit the number of hides on one stretcher to 20.  That allows us to keep them separated to allow for air to circulate around them and they will continue to dry without getting moldy.

RatsHangingOnHanger

You might be wondering where we determine to poke a hole in the hide in order to put them on the hangers…we don’t poke a hole, there is already an eye hole and we use that.

There is a very good resource to download and print about proper fur handling at this site:

https://www.nafa.ca/trapper/Resources/NAFA_PeltHandlingManual_2009.pdf

We have a printed copy of it hanging in our skinning shed and we refer to it often.  The part we use the most deals with muskrats, since that is the number one fur we handle.  But we have used it for beaver, raccoon and fox.  This just might be the best information you could possibly use in setting yourself up to handle furs.  It covers all aspects of handling furs, from catching them and proper handling in the field, to skinning, fleshing and stretching.  It has it all!

Good luck in your trapping adventures and maybe we will cross paths someday out in the field!

Bears Butt

March 19, 2014

Written on March 19th, 2014 , Daily Trapping Events Tags: ,
By: Bears Butt

StoppedByTriggerTip

JawsStoppedByTriggerTip

Trapping and putting up furs doesn’t end at the trap line.  Sure, the trapper has to go out into the field and catch the animals and bring them in, but there is sure a lot more to it then that.  We have pulled all our traps and now have a deadline approaching which makes it very important that we get all the furs we put in the freezer during the season out and thawed, dried, combed, fleshed and stretched and adequately cured and ready for the auction.  Yesterday was a very full day for Bob and I.  We began at 1 p.m. by meeting in the shed.  We had laid out the rats the day before in order to thaw and our first order of business was to make sure they were all separated and that the wet ones were put on the drying rack to further dry.  As is always the case when you take furs out of the freezer, some of them will be dry enough to put up.  We separated them into a big pile while the rest were laid out on the drying rack or otherwise put where they could dry both on the front and the back of the fur.  The pile we ended up with that were dry enough to put up was a pretty big pile.

Without counting them we knew we had about 150 that we took out of the freezer and so we knew that we had to take down about 150 from the overhead in the shed.  “Taking Down” means, removing some of the dried skins from the hangers and bagging them up.  We decided to take down 200 and bag them in lots of 50 per bag.  They are ready for the auction and for storage purposes, we put them in a large chest freezer for safe keeping.  That freed up hanger space for rats to come down off the stretchers and go on the hangers.  The hangers allow the skins to cure a little longer….not that they need it, but why not allow them more time, right?

Our next big decision was how many of the hides on the stretchers should we take down and put on the hangers?  We decided we needed enough space for the pile of rats that were dried and ready to be fleshed and stretched and we made a wild guess of about 75 or so were in that pile.  So, we took down 100 stretchers and put those hides on the hangers.

These things take time to accomplish and it was after 3 p.m. by the time we began to brush out the hides laying there on the floor.  We did what we could in our old and slow way and had about 25 put up on stretchers and beginning the curing process when Weasel arrived…it was right at 4 p.m.  With his help, the pile of dry rats soon became a pile of hides turned inside out and waiting to be fleshed…my job.

Fleshing the way I do it doesn’t take a lot of time, but it sure does make my back ache.  I bend over a fleshing board to get the job done and even though I’ve tried other methods, I always come back to the one I think gets the job done better.  It was about 6 p.m. when the last of the dry and brushed hides went up on the drying line overhead.  A long 5 hour day in the shed for Bob and I.

If it wasn’t for Weasels’ help we would have been in there a couple more hours!

Well, today’s schedule is almost the same, except with Weasel willing to help again, we are not meeting in the shed until 4 p.m. to put up the remaining hides.  Again, it will require taking down about 100 from the stretchers and putting them on hangers, but we estimate, with three of us we won’t be much past 6 p.m. getting the whole job done.

On a side note, hunting, fishing and other activities come with opportunities that a lot of people don’t think about or recognize that can put a few dollars into their pockets.  I have a friend that used to pick ducks and geese for a profit and if you have ever done something like that to make a dollar or two, you know how nasty that job can be.  Well, he would save the feathers and especially the down from those birds and would sell the bags to further make his money.  Trapping muskrats has a similar money maker hidden in it and we have been capitalizing on that for several years.  Male muskrats have glands that produce a musky smell (thus the name Musk…rat) and they swell up pretty large during the Spring time run.  There is a pretty good demand for these glands in the “lure making” business and so we save these glands and put them into quart sized jars.  Normally we sell them locally, but this year I have contacted a business in Florida that will give us a very good price for them and I’m going to ship our 3 quarts off to him.  For you who might also be interested in shipping your glands to him you can give him a call at 239-994-7772.  He is really interested in Mink Glands and will pay as much as $250 for a gallon of them, but he wants any and all mink glands he can get. Like he told me, he can’t buy mink or muskrat glands locally…Florida just plain doesn’t have those critters.   His business name and address is:

Grandpas Trading Post,  10171 Betsy Parkway, St. James City, Florida  33956

Bears Butt

March 18, 2014

 

Written on March 18th, 2014 , Daily Trapping Events

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