By: Bears Butt

Already it’s Thursday…boy do the days go past quickly.

Today is going to be interesting.  I have some goals to reach and I just hope the snow allows me to achieve them, it’s the only thing in my way at this time.

To reach the bend in the stream going out of Big Spring is one and it’s only 100 yards from the end of the spring, and if I can make that I should be able to set another 10 traps.  And then over to the two small seeps to the South where I usually catch around 10 rats each year.  Most people would not even think to go over to those two spots but I have found rats there and always plant a few traps.

Once I reach the bend, if the snow is not too bad, I will continue down the stream to the East as far as there is running water.  I expect to find the edge of the ice down there not too far.  Once I hit that, I will turn around and hit Little Spring, check those traps and continue to set that out as far as the road to the Goose Club.  There is where I expect to hit the ice going that direction.

Life is good.  Health is great!  Gotta keep a positive attitude in light of the deep snow.  I may end up doing more digging than setting traps, but whatever happens happens.  Wish me luck!

If it didn’t blow too hard out there last night I should catch “2” rats…;-)

Bears Butt

Feb. 21, 2013

Written on February 21st, 2013 , Daily Trapping Events
By: Bears Butt

Cold and windy out on the trap line today.  And it wasn’t a very good day of trapping.  The 9 sets on Doris’ pond gave up not one rat, nor any set off traps.  Big Springs, even though it has a lot of promising sign only yielded one rat and one other set off trap.  I was surprised by that, as I just knew I was going to have at least 8 rats in those sets.  I suppose the wind could have kept them hid up.

But what the heck.  I did see some pheasants this morning.

Pheasants

Rooster

They are always fun to see.

These two picts are of Big Springs.  You can see it covers well over an acre of area and should give up at least 10 rats.

Big SpringBig Spring2

But only one rat came to my traps.  I was unpleasantly surprised.

FirstRat

So, with lots of day left, I loaded up a sack with 14 more traps and headed in the other direction to set “Little Spring”, another nice little place that is usually good for 10 or so rats.  The walk was a little long and the snow quite deep, but I made my journey and managed to set 10 of the 14 traps I had with me.  My last Conibear trap broke as I set it and so had to be bought back home for repair.  A normal thing to happen on the line.

It made me realize I did not have any pliers nor wire to make emergency fixes out in the field.  I remedied that when I got home.

With the snow melting I decided that tomorrow I will take the toy out on the line and see just how far I can get before getting stuck.  I will remember to take the shovel with me when I leave the truck.  This year is a crazy one so far and not to be outdone, there was another surprise waiting for me at home.

I skinned the rat in the field and fleshed and stretched it when I got home.  So number one is now drying on the stretcher…at least an $8 rat.  That done and the trap repaired, I headed for the shed to un-leash the beast!  I had to take the snow plow off and then check the tire pressure and fill the gas tank.  The beast is ready!  I backed the truck up to the trailer and locked it down solid.  Drove the toy up into the trailer and secured everything.  I figured I had best drive to the garage and check the tire pressure so that everything is ready in the morning.

I backed into the garage and turned on the compressor, grabbed the tire gauge and then noticed the passenger side tire on the trailer was as flat as a pan cake!  I just filled it a week ago too when I dug the trailer out of the snow bank.  The last thing I need is to have trouble with a trailer tire.  It was old and weather cracked and so I started calling around to tire dealers for a used one.  No body has that size.  I had to bite the bullet and purchase a new one…with tax…$76!  Ouch….That’s 9 1/2 rats and since Bob and I are splitting 50/50, that makes it 19 rats in order for my half to cover the cost of that tire.  I’m already in the hole on this deal!

It’s all ready to go in the morning though and hopefully more rats will find their ways into more traps.  I now have 35 traps out and 26 of them are in good locations.  Doris’ pond will probably only give up a couple of rats, if any at all.

I’m a little excited to think I have my wheels and can make some distant tracks out in the snow.  Way to hard to walk in that stuff and I just hope the toy can ride over the top of the crusted underneath.  I’d like to get a bunch more traps set out along Big Spring and set out to where the ice has it locked up.  The same for Little Spring if my day goes “very well” I should be able to get them both set tomorrow.  It will take over 100 traps to set them both and a couple of days to get it done.

More tomorrow!

Bears Butt

Feb. 20, 2013

Written on February 20th, 2013 , Daily Trapping Events
By: Bears Butt

The trapping area is almost an hour away from where I live and a lot of weather changes occur between here and there.  We are expecting a somewhat uncertain snow storm today along the Wasatch Front, but that normally does not effect “out there”.  I looked at the weather map and see a big old blob of pinkish-red clouds formed up and camped over the trapping area…the color indicates rain.  Rain right now is a good thing, I don’t want any more snow…I’m about as sick of snow right now as I am about the thought that 50 rat houses are being guarded by 18 bulls.

So, just what is the weather like out there?  My plan is to go out earlier than yesterday and check the traps I put out and then set some more.  Where to set them I’m not sure, but it won’t be the bull arena (that is what I chose to call that area)  right now.  I need that snow to melt more and for my courage to build some.

The current temperature here is 40 degrees…melting temps…I like it!  Tomorrow I think it will be time to put on the trailer and load up the ATV for the trip across the flats.  Let’s test the snow depth.  But that is tomorrow, today I’m gonna catch 10 rats.

Bears Butt

Feb. 20, 2013

Written on February 20th, 2013 , Daily Trapping Events
By: Bears Butt

This old blog of mine has been quite a fun thing to be doing.  I’ve said it before, that I can say whatever I want on here and nobody can make me change it.  I try and keep it a family friendly site and I hope I don’t make someone upset when some of my stuff is on the grey side.  I mean well.

Anyway, over the course of the past year or so I have often wondered why I was writing anything at all and still did on occasion.  Notice I wrote the word “did”…that wonder is gone now.  I suppose to some this writing could be like a warm fuzzy drug of some sort….get up, turn on the computer, grab a cup of coffee and log on to “Bears Butt Dot Com”….what is that old coot up to today?  Most of the things written are short and quick to read and then you have the rest of your day to do what is important.

Well, I was fishing recently and a good acquaintance of mine, WyoGoob, told me that he enjoyed my blog.  WyoGoob, even though I know him mostly through the Utah Wildlife Network forum:

http://utahwildlife.net/forum/index.php?sid=5c97bf18bdaa41913c9794f55286d653

is a genuine people person.  He cares about things that are good.  He volunteers hundreds of his life hours each year to doing things that are necessary for all our good.  Anyway, his wife had a very traumatic life changing event happen in her life and we almost lost her to it.  She was in the hospital trying to decide in her own mind if she had lived long enough or if it was time to cash in her chips.  While WyoGoob waited for her to decide, he clicked onto good old Bears Butt Dot Com and read every post on here.  Some thing brought smiles to his face and took his mind off of his wife’s condition.  With that alone, I shall keep clicking away on these keys…one never knows whose life something like this might change.

Bears Butt

Feb. 20, 2013

Written on February 20th, 2013 , Uncategorized
By: Bears Butt

Todays trap setting went about as I planned.  Doris’ pond has been changed quite a lot since last year.  They had a big digger machine come in and dig out the pond and place the mud all around the edge.  Then they smoothed it out in order to plant grass.  The grass is scheduled to be planted this spring.  It really makes the pond area look nice…however, they destroyed all the rat hiding places.  My walk around the pond yielded no sign what so ever and the water is very deep.  The sets I was able to put in were all “blind” sets and baited with carrots.  I set two floats as well, each float has two traps on them.

I swagged in 7 foot hold traps plus the two floats.  Then grabbed up a bag of 20 conibears and headed down the ditch that carries the over flow out and across the flats.  No sign in the ditch either and no rat holes.  They had taken the digger down that ditch and cleaned it up as well.  It looks really nice, but no rats.

The ranch hand told me of another place that Doris owns just down the road that I needed to check out.  He said there was a small swamp with a lot of rat houses in it.  He also has 18 bulls in there, but he reassured me they would not bother me…I hate bulls.

After setting the pond I took the drive down where he told me and looked across with the binocs…sure enough there must be 50 rat houses in an area not much bigger than a square block.  Also, 18 bulls.  Did I tell you how much I dislike bulls?  It is going to be a “suck it up and go trapping” ordeal because that many houses means at least 100 rats.

Then back up the road toward home I came.  I stopped at what I call Big Spring to look the situation over.  My main concern was pulling off the highway.  I got out and surveyed the situation and decided I could bust through the bigger drift next to the road (left by the state plows) and slide down the hill to some semi shallow snow.  Getting out might be a little problem, but I decided what the heck and went for it.  No problem getting in.  I backed up and pulled forward several times, flattening out the snow and trying to get myself a run-way to get out when the time came.

Then on went the hip boots and off I went with a 20 trap bag of conibears on my back.  Down to the Big Spring and immediately started seeing sign.  I set 16 traps as I proceeded around the spring.  What I think has happened is that lower stretches of the spring water has been frozen and is just now starting to thaw, that forced the rats up in the warmer water of the spring and they are just now beginning to spread out and go down stream.

The snow is about 12 inches deep out there on the flat.  My toy can handle about 8 inches before it gets high centered.  We have another snow storm coming tonight and tomorrow and so the plow is still on the toy until the threat of snow is over, probably Friday.  By then I hope the snow out there melts down and allows me to be able to drive out and follow the flow away from Big Spring.  I will have Big Spring trapped out by then and it will be time to set more traps farther out.  I’m too old and out of shape to walk that far and so I’m really at the mercy of the snow melting gods to get me there.

Back at the truck the task of pulling out of where I was and back onto the highway was giving me some heart ache.  Where the rig was sitting was flat and only had about 6 inches of snow on it.  I had flattened out a pretty good area and by backing up as far as I could (before spinning out), would give me a pretty good running start to go on an angle through the big drift and back to the highway.  There would be no way I could go back out the way I had slid in.  My biggest concern was when I hit the big drift, would it cause the back end to slide to the right and hang me up at a 90 degree angle to the highway.  That would be an ugly sight.

When I was all ready to give it hell, I pushed the auto 4 wheel drive button in, moved the gear shift to “L” and gunned it…shoot it didn’t even spin a tire.  On the road and headed home without any issues what so ever.

So, with 9 sets at Doris’ and 16 at Big Spring we are off and running for the season.  I expect to catch 10 rats tomorrow.

It wouldn’t be right if I didn’t show you the bird I saw today:

BaldEagleInDeadTree

Bears Butt

Feb. 19, 2013

 

Written on February 19th, 2013 , Daily Trapping Events
By: Bears Butt

Horses have been fed, the rig cleaned out “good enough” and loaded up for the beginning of the 2013 trapping season.  Todays temperature is right at 41 degrees and the snow is melting fast…I love it!  Out at the trapping properties it might even be warmer than it is here and I sure hope so.  Yesterdays reconnoiter trip sure didn’t have me feeling all that comfortable about starting trapping tomorrow.

So, what all is involved with getting ready to trap?  First off you have to have some traps.  You have to have a basic plan.  You have to make sure all the vital fluids in your rig(s) are up and ready.  Trespass permission and trap use permission slips have to be signed and on your person.  A few shells for the 22 pistol needs to be on hand, as well as the 22 itself.  Your hip boots need to be inspected for cracks and any holes repaired.  Shoulder length rubber gloves need to be packed and don’t forget the cloth gloves you need to put on before you slip the rubber gloves on.  Plenty of warm layer clothing needs to be at the ready.  Some rain gear at least in the form of a rain jacket.  Maybe some of those instant hand warmers tucked in a coat pocket.  It’s always nice to know you have some cans of kipper snacks and crackers for those days you might forget your lunch, or worse, get stuck or stranded.  In case of emergencies, make sure the first aid kit is packed and a flashlight is handy.  The cell phone needs to be fully charged.  A pack of blank paper and some pens and at least one pencil.  For record keeping you will need a paper dedicated to mark down gallons of gas and the price paid.  And for sure don’t forget your map drawing papers so you can find your traps once they are set.  AND lastly the flag clips.

That is quite a lot when you think about it.  I always toss in a pair of binoculars as well.   Not only are we going to see a lot of wildlife, we are going to wonder who that is way over there in our trapping area.  Are they infringing on your area or is it part of the ranch crew?

And so, just when you thought trapping was a couple of traps tossed over your shoulder, a bucket in one hand and an ax to cut some stakes in the other, along comes “long lining trapping”.  I say if you shoot enough times you are bound to hit your target and it’s the same with trapping…set a trap everywhere your targeted animal is likely to step and you are going to catch him and many others as well.  More is always better in the fur gathering business.

So, here is my rig all ready to go:

TrapsAndStakes

All the traps and trapping items belong to brother Bob.  All are marked with his trapping number and I have his permission slip to use his equipment in my wallet.  He likes to put 20 conibear traps and 20 stakes in each of the burlap bags and 10 traps and stakes in the leg hold trap bags.  I have loaded up 3 bags of conibears and 3 bags of leg holds for a total of 90 traps.  I also tossed in two floats which have two traps each on them and two folding colony traps in case I find a good deep run to set them in.

You never know the trapping situation that will present itself when you are out on the line and seeings how it’s an hours drive from home to get there, you might as well be prepared for any situation you might encounter.

When I get to the trapping location, I need to quickly put my wet gear on and head out to set and check traps.  I don’t have too much time and have to make every minute count.  No time to lally-gag around.  And so to expedite donning my boots and cold weather coats etc., I place them right behind the drivers seat.

BootsAndBait

This year I’m trying something I just read about in the latest Fur-Fish and Game magazine.  I have mixed up an anise oil solution and have one of the bags of chopped carrots soaking in it.  According to the old boy that wrote the story, the licorice smell really attracts muskrats.  I’ll try it and see for myself.

Now don’t think the way I have packed my rig is just an arbitrary jumbled up mess, there is some order to the way I have packed it.  My conibears are on the left, leg holds on the right and the other traps stuck in the middle.  The cooler without the lid is to carry the rats I catch back to the skinning shed and it doubles as a rat carcass carrier back out into the field.  I always like to put the carcasses out where the scavengers can clean them up.  It helps them survive the winter without having to hunt down food.

Next I find my old record books from last season and ready them for this years trapping.   Everything I purchase that is related to the trapping season gets marked down and especially the fuel costs and all costs are paid back to the home account with the fur check.  Even the cost to heat the skinning shed is deducted from the fur check on a 50/50 basis with brother Bob.

So, I found my old records:

Record Keeping

My old trap line maps on the left and my fuel records on the right.  Both books are cleaned up, fresh pages inserted and pens (that work) put with each of them.  The trap line map booklet goes with me from the vehicle out into the swamp.  You can read about how I keep track of where my traps are in a post I put on here last year.  Just go to the Daily Trapping Events category and search for trapping map.

So, everything looks like it is ready for the morning to arrive and then its off to the trapping grounds to begin the season.  All that remains to get ready is a hydration pack filled with water and a sandwich for lunch.

Bears Butt

Feb. 19, 2013

(What’s the 139 in the title?  My weight.  Watch what trapping does to that number.)

 

Written on February 19th, 2013 , Daily Trapping Events
By: Bears Butt

There may be some of you readers who don’t know what is meant by some of my terminology when it comes to trapping.  And so I decided I needed to give a little “Trapping 101” lesson on here.  Don’t think that I know everything about trapping because I don’t.  But I will share my knowledge with you just in case you are just starting out and want to sound like you know what you are doing.

I mostly trap muskrats and the occasional smallish critter that gets caught by accident that might have a value to their fur, such as mink and weasels.  Those two critters require that the trapper have a license with the state in order to trap them and sell the hides.  I have that license in my pocket.  So, even though I am targeting muskrats, I do occasionally catch one or two of the other guys during the season.

Believe it or not, Every Predator in the world likes muskrats!  Every one!  With that being said, it’s amazing that the muskrat population ever gets very big.  Out here in Northern Utah, flying predators like hawks, owls, eagles, crows and to some extent magpies, are always flying and hovering over the swamps looking for something to eat and when a little old muskrat comes swimming along he becomes the target.  Much more for the predator to eat than a simple mouse.

Foxes, Coyotes, Racoons, Mink, Weasels, Badgers (to some degree) and even large fish like Muskellunge and Pike will eat a muskrat in a minute.  So how on earth do they survive enough for me to be able to catch a few hundred each year?

They get tricky.  I used to think of them as a very dumb animal but in the last seven years or so, I have gained a new respect for them and their survival instincts.  They can be seen traveling and swimming around during the day, but most of their activity takes place after dark.  They don’t especially like windy conditions either as they can not hear the wings of predators over head, or the crunching of snow or dry grass from the ground predators.  They tend to swim more under water and travel very quickly from one air hole to another.  They stay hidden under canopies of grass, toolies, under cut banks and bull rush reeds and they also have their burrows (homes) under ground or in huts built out of naturally found materials.  Muskrats are a root and plant eating animal for the most part and they dig in the muddy banks of streams and ponds “a whole lot”.  This digging on their part causes a whole heap of problems for the rancher or property owner if they are trying to improve a water way or direct the water to an irrigation system.  Trust me when I say Muskrats cause big time problems and their numbers must be controlled or you will lose a great deal of your property to their habits.

Ok, we have talked about muskrats in general and what they do and what other animals like to eat them.  What about what the fur is used for.  Back in the early days of the USA, game animal hides and furs were used as pants, shirts, shoes and coats to keep the cold from freezing you to death.  A thick old buffalo hide is very warm when draped over you and you are sitting near a nice warm fire at night.  A lighter weight Coyote fur jacket is nice when you need to travel and stay warm while you go and a good pair of beaver or muskrat gloves are nice to have when the snow is falling.

Today, most Americans don’t care much for fur garments.  There are even groups who really would like to see people like myself taken off the earth all together.  The thought of killing an innocent little old muskrat just causes them all sorts of mental anguish…I don’t care about them types either, so I guess the feelings are mutual.  But, people in Russia and Asian countries where the winters are so bitterly cold even the Cold gets Cold, they love the feel and warmth of a good fully primed fur coat, gloves, hats and scarfs.  That is where these little muskrat hides eventually end up.  I catch and process the fur to its dried and stretched state, a fur buyer comes to me and buys my furs, he ships them off to an auction house or fur processor over seas, they buy them from him and then they have the furs tanned and sent off to a garment manufacturing plant, where the tanned furs are made into the coats, hats, gloves and scarfs.  Then off the finished items go to the cold climate countries where the people buy them up to keep warm.

In a very simple explanation, Chinese and Greeks are the number one buyers of the dried and stretched hides and the Russians and Mongolians are the number one purchasers of the finished coats, hats, scarfs and gloves.

Enough said about that.

As for traps that we use to catch our muskrats.  I grew up using what is called a Conibear trap.  This trap was invented in the early 1950’s by a man named Frank Conibear and of course it was something very new to the trapping world.  It is a very quick trap that dispatches (kills) the animal about as fast as any trap can.  It sets in a square shape and catches the animal by the body rather than the foot.

This is an unset Conibear trap:

Conibear

There are larger versions of this trap that have a spring on both sides of the jaws.  You can see this trap has been used for a few seasons.  A trap like this would cost about $8 new and you can catch a heap of fur in one until it becomes un-fixable and you have to toss it away.  In today’s fur market one muskrat would pay for one trap.

How does a trap like this work?  When it’s set, like this one,

Set Conibear

It can be placed in front of a den opening (where legal…check with your state regulations) or in an under water run (remember the tricky ways muskrats get past a predator).  The muskrat comes swimming along and swims through the opening.  Their head pushes the hanging down (or up) wire trigger, which in turn pushed the “dog” (the thing holding the trap in it’s square shape) and allows the two jaws to close onto the animals body.  The force of the spring is what gives it its force and holding power.

Fired Conibear

Notice the stick is caught on two places.  It catches muskrats in the same way.  It sometimes breaks the animals back, chokes it with a neck catch or at the very least holds the animal under water until it dies by drowning.  Either way, you have yourself a very valuable pelt with little or no damage to the hide.

Another trap we use quite often is what is called a leg hold trap.  In its simplest form a leg hold trap does just that, catches the animal by a leg, front or rear depending on how you set the trap and holds it until you come along and dispatch it and take it out.  We always strive to kill the animal as quickly as possible when using any trap and so when we use a leg hold trap it is always best to place it near deeper water so that the animal will drown quickly.  Otherwise it will suffer until you come along the next day.

Another thing the trapper needs to know about a caught muskrat is that when they are caught in a leg hold trap, they try their very best to get away and often times they will chew their foot off in order to do that.  Every year we have a few rat feet in our traps even though we do everything we think possible to keep that from happening.  The rats don’t necessarily die from that and so we will catch 3 legged animals every year as well.  There are some traps designed to minimize a muskrat from chewing off it’s leg and those traps are called “Stop Loss” traps.  They have a spring activated wire guard that comes around and pushes the muskrat away from the actual jaws of the trap, keeping it from being able to reach its foot with its teeth.

Stop Loss Leg Hold

(Traps like these cost in the neighborhood of $12 to $16 each.  More complicated and more metal than the Conibear type).

The wire guard in this case is extending down below the trap jaws, that is because the spring is very strong.  When the trap is set, the guard lays under trap pan (trigger) and also under the “dog”, the trap jaw holder when set.

Stop Loss Set

This “set” stop loss trap will lay flat against the ground and the animal comes along and steps into it.  The pan (trigger) goes down, the dog pops up and out of the way as the jaws begin to close and the animal is caught by one (or sometimes more than one) foot.

Stop Loss Fired

Here you can see the stick being pushed away from the jaws by the guard.  With an animal caught in this trap, it will jump around and if you have set it in the right place, the animal will try and swim away with the trap fastened to its leg, the weight of the trap will pull it down under water and it will drown.

Not only being under water drowned, but also out of sight from over head predators trying to get an easy meal.  Nothing will bite into your fur price bigger than a big old hole in the animals hide.  One more reason for trapping instead of  shooting the animal.

There are instances too where we come across a deep run, an under water trail that the rats use often and we wish to catch as many rats in one night as we can.  A set like that calls for a “colony trap”.  This trap is a long wire box type trap with doors on both ends.  Traps like these can be made by yourself or bought for a variety of prices from under $10 to over $50.

Colony Trap

Notice the doors, one on each end, hinged at the top and sloping inward.

The rats will hit the door when they swim up against it, the door lifts open allowing the rat inside, but the door on the other end won’t let the rat out and it will drown.  You can catch multiple rats in colony traps in one night of trapping if the situation is right.

3 rats in one colony trap

Colony traps are called that for their possibility of  catching a colony (the whole family) of rats in one night.

And we use one more system of traps in our arsenal, the “float set”.  Float sets can be in most any configuration and made of almost anything that will float and be big enough to hold the size and weight of a muskrat.  One must keep in mind when using a float set, that other water animals will also use the float.  Animals like ducks and geese and we don’t want to be catching them.  When we do we hope they are still alive and we can let them go.

Brother Bob has made up some relatively light weight floats that I am going to try this season and have placed two of in my outfit for tomorrows first day.

Two Trap Float

It’s a little hard to see the traps on this float, but there are two stop loss leg hold traps, one on each end of this float.  The traps chains are attached to the float by a bent over nail or staple.  They will be set and placed one on each end and some bait, like chopped carrots between the two traps.  The float is anchored either by a stick through the hole you see in the center of the board, or wired to a stake or other item along the bank.

Floats are used where bank dens, runs etc are not available and you know there are rats swimming around in the lake or pond.  The rat swims up to the float and climbs up and out of the water.  Sees the bait and heads in that direction stepping right on the trap and getting caught.  Then it jumps off the float with the trap attached to its leg and drowns directly under the float.  It’s a great feeling for the trapper to approach the float and not see either trap on the wood.

I have seen floats made out of styrofoam, air filled plastic containers, wood and even an old life jacket.  Muskrats have a tough time swimming past something floating that is big enough for them to climb up on.

Floats can be as large as you want to carry and have as many traps on top as you like.  Just remember, the bigger it is and the more traps you have on it the heavier it is.

So there is a little lesson on the muskrat and how Bob and I like to catch them.  My plan is to make a short video this year while I’m out in the field to show you just how we set up these various traps and maybe even catch a rat or two.

Bears Butt

Feb. 18, 2013

 

Written on February 18th, 2013 , Hunting/Fishing/Trapping Stories
By: Bears Butt

Here is a great video produced to show everyone just how incredibly stupid it is to try and outlaw a given rifle, shotgun or pistol.  We have our second amendment rights at stake and we need to have our focus on people, not guns.  This video also brings up a very important fact about “gun free zones”.

Bears Butt

Feb. 18, 2013

Written on February 18th, 2013 , Uncategorized
By: Bears Butt

Took a drive today out to Promontory to check out the snow and trapping situation.  It does not look good.  I called Doris and told her we were coming out and would be driving around her house looking at the pond and things.  She was OK with that.

The guys have really done a lot with that little pond since last year.  I guess my trapping has gotten them a little excited to fix it up and maybe even plant some trout in it.  They put a very nice head gate in on the down stream side and made the pond deeper (2 feet deeper).  That depth has pushed the island that was sticking up in the middle down and drowned out any rats that were living in it.  A very good move on their part.  Also, without walking around the pond I’m sure the bank rat houses also were covered over with water and drowned those rats as well.  Another good move on their part.

That should keep their rats population in check for a year, until a new batch comes along and begins to dig at the banks again.

I still plan on going out and setting a few traps around the pond, most likely I’ll use floats as the water will be to deep to set anything around the edge.  I will be prepared to set a few traps if there are any high runs.  Then set a few traps down the drain ditch that leads away from the pond.

Other than that, the snow is way too deep to even pull off the highway.  6 to 10 inches and very wet.  If a guy pulled off while pulling a small trailer like mine, he would be stuck very quickly.  And even if he was able to pull off the highway and unload a toy, the toy would most likely get high centered as you tried to drive next to the ditches and trapping areas out there.

So, it looks dim for now.  Maybe in an other week, maybe two.  That sucks big time.

Bears Butt

Feb. 17, 2013

Written on February 17th, 2013 , Daily Trapping Events
By: Bears Butt

I have a couple of friends who suffer (or not) from this:

OCFDfish

You know who you are!

Bears Butt

Feb. 17, 2013

Written on February 17th, 2013 , Hunting/Fishing/Trapping Stories

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Just some of my old stories, new stories, and in general what is going on in my life.