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Why do you trap? #6563820
06/28/19 12:28 AM
06/28/19 12:28 AM
Joined: Feb 2013
Posts: 213
Virginia
T
Turkeyeggsaver Offline OP
trapper
Turkeyeggsaver  Offline OP
trapper
T

Joined: Feb 2013
Posts: 213
Virginia
Here are a couple of pics of one reason I trap. I’ve been trapping critters about 7 years and I enjoy it as much if not more than hunting. I think I attached them....my first attempt from my phone.

A6DED483-6C4A-457A-8A86-624EF8167CDF.jpeg576ADEE4-F387-443A-9E4B-FA6E0216E27B.jpeg
Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Turkeyeggsaver] #6563821
06/28/19 12:34 AM
06/28/19 12:34 AM
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 25,658
Georgia
warrior Offline
trapper
warrior  Offline
trapper

Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 25,658
Georgia
$


[Linked Image]
Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Turkeyeggsaver] #6563823
06/28/19 12:37 AM
06/28/19 12:37 AM
Joined: Jul 2009
Posts: 2,794
100 Mile House, BC Can
bctomcat Offline
trapper
bctomcat  Offline
trapper

Joined: Jul 2009
Posts: 2,794
100 Mile House, BC Can
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^


The only constant in trapping is change so keep learning.






Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Turkeyeggsaver] #6563832
06/28/19 02:01 AM
06/28/19 02:01 AM
Joined: Feb 2018
Posts: 4,104
Bonner County, Idaho
Wild_Idaho Offline
trapper
Wild_Idaho  Offline
trapper

Joined: Feb 2018
Posts: 4,104
Bonner County, Idaho
Because I like putting unnecessary wear and tear on my truck, body and life in general.


Real name Eric
The sharpest hammer in the box of crayons.

Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Turkeyeggsaver] #6563842
06/28/19 05:24 AM
06/28/19 05:24 AM
Joined: May 2010
Posts: 28,978
potter co. p.a.
P
pcr2 Offline
"Twerker"
pcr2  Offline
"Twerker"
P

Joined: May 2010
Posts: 28,978
potter co. p.a.
cause i am not the smartest peanut in the terd.









Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Turkeyeggsaver] #6563853
06/28/19 06:23 AM
06/28/19 06:23 AM
Joined: Jun 2016
Posts: 14,146
Michigan
T
Trapper Dahlgren Offline
trapper
Trapper Dahlgren  Offline
trapper
T

Joined: Jun 2016
Posts: 14,146
Michigan
I have trap for 40 + years ,I guess its trying to out smart them [animals ] on there own ground , I love the out doors is part of it too ,if it was for the money I could do other stuff with my time an make more money

Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Turkeyeggsaver] #6563862
06/28/19 06:53 AM
06/28/19 06:53 AM
Joined: Feb 2018
Posts: 189
orange co, nc
B
brisket Offline
trapper
brisket  Offline
trapper
B

Joined: Feb 2018
Posts: 189
orange co, nc
I had to do something with all this rebar laying around.

Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Turkeyeggsaver] #6563864
06/28/19 07:05 AM
06/28/19 07:05 AM
Joined: Sep 2017
Posts: 25
New Jersey
S
Shaky Jake Offline
trapper
Shaky Jake  Offline
trapper
S

Joined: Sep 2017
Posts: 25
New Jersey
I do it for a few reasons. To help my landowners where I hunt, challenge myself, catch the turkey killers and to keep the tradition alive.

Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Turkeyeggsaver] #6563972
06/28/19 10:16 AM
06/28/19 10:16 AM
Joined: Aug 2018
Posts: 3,843
Pennsylvania
The hammer Offline
trapper
The hammer  Offline
trapper

Joined: Aug 2018
Posts: 3,843
Pennsylvania
Trapping has been in my family for four generations now teaching my daughter so working on the fifth. I only hope she keeps it going as she grows up and has kids of her own. Or if God blesses me with a long enough life and grand kids I'll teach them. So I trap because it's a good way to enjoy nature and cause the knowledge of trapping has been in the family for a long time now and I'd like to see go on further.

Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Turkeyeggsaver] #6564017
06/28/19 11:35 AM
06/28/19 11:35 AM
Joined: Dec 2018
Posts: 5,214
Crivitz WI
Sprung & Rusty Offline
trapper
Sprung & Rusty  Offline
trapper

Joined: Dec 2018
Posts: 5,214
Crivitz WI
For the girls!!! Bahaha.


No Jab.
Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Turkeyeggsaver] #6564023
06/28/19 11:45 AM
06/28/19 11:45 AM
Joined: Nov 2013
Posts: 650
SK
S
Saskayote Offline
trapper
Saskayote  Offline
trapper
S

Joined: Nov 2013
Posts: 650
SK
Money, excersize, fun, challenge, to protect our sheep, to share practical wisdom with the kids. Lots of reasons.

Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Saskayote] #6564029
06/28/19 11:57 AM
06/28/19 11:57 AM
Joined: Jul 2017
Posts: 1,796
IA
T
teepee2 Offline
trapper
teepee2  Offline
trapper
T

Joined: Jul 2017
Posts: 1,796
IA
Because it's there.

Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Turkeyeggsaver] #6564031
06/28/19 11:58 AM
06/28/19 11:58 AM
Joined: Oct 2013
Posts: 8,773
East of the Mason-Dixon Line
DelawareRob Offline
trapper
DelawareRob  Offline
trapper

Joined: Oct 2013
Posts: 8,773
East of the Mason-Dixon Line
Conservation


Who is John Galt?

You don't rise to the occasion, you fall to the level of your training.

Semper Paratus
Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Turkeyeggsaver] #6564032
06/28/19 12:00 PM
06/28/19 12:00 PM
Joined: Sep 2016
Posts: 6,599
MB
J
Jurassic Park Offline
trapper
Jurassic Park  Offline
trapper
J

Joined: Sep 2016
Posts: 6,599
MB
I trap mostly for the money. But a huge reason why I trap is because it’s fun! Never know what will be in the trap where I trap. Could be a fox, coyote, bobcat, lynx, Wolf, Marten, Fisher, or even a skunk. And that’s just foothold trapping for fox. Might even have a cougar waiting for me one day!
Nothing better than coming around a corner and seeing a foxes tail bouncing around! I love that.


Cold as ice!
Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Turkeyeggsaver] #6564043
06/28/19 12:18 PM
06/28/19 12:18 PM
Joined: Nov 2013
Posts: 372
northern indiana
son-of-grizz Offline
trapper
son-of-grizz  Offline
trapper

Joined: Nov 2013
Posts: 372
northern indiana
It gets me away from society to give me that well needed reset!

Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Turkeyeggsaver] #6564047
06/28/19 12:25 PM
06/28/19 12:25 PM
Joined: May 2010
Posts: 28,978
potter co. p.a.
P
pcr2 Offline
"Twerker"
pcr2  Offline
"Twerker"
P

Joined: May 2010
Posts: 28,978
potter co. p.a.
Its who i am. wink









Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Turkeyeggsaver] #6564080
06/28/19 01:25 PM
06/28/19 01:25 PM
Joined: Aug 2013
Posts: 8,364
Firth, Nebraska
jabNE Offline
trapper
jabNE  Offline
trapper

Joined: Aug 2013
Posts: 8,364
Firth, Nebraska
Because when I sneak out in middle of night to run the line...my wife has never questioned where I was half the night with, as she puts it, the "way I stink when I get back." She never has to question my fidelity.

Actually, I dont really know why. I lose money at it, it's a lot of work year round, I dont get to sleep much, and a whole litany of reasons why it's not always fun and games.
On other hand, i get to catch very cool animals, spend a LOT of time outdoors in winter, get to see some pretty cool starry nights, hear and see coyotes up close and personal, and have made some.very good and long friends with several landowners.

I just like it. That's about the best reason I can give.

Jim

Last edited by jabNE; 06/28/19 01:25 PM.

Money cannot buy you happiness, but it can buy you a trapping license and that's pretty close.
Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Turkeyeggsaver] #6564085
06/28/19 01:32 PM
06/28/19 01:32 PM
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 7,183
Three Lakes,WI 72
C
corky Offline
trapper
corky  Offline
trapper
C

Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 7,183
Three Lakes,WI 72
Because every morning of the season is like Christmas morning.

Re: Why do you trap? [Re: corky] #6564088
06/28/19 01:39 PM
06/28/19 01:39 PM
Joined: Jul 2017
Posts: 2,717
PA
W
w side rd 151 Offline
trapper
w side rd 151  Offline
trapper
W

Joined: Jul 2017
Posts: 2,717
PA
Originally Posted by pcr2
Its who i am. wink

Originally Posted by corky
Because every morning of the season is like Christmas morning.

Those two reasons for me plus I love the heritage of trapping .It had a huge role in the history of the North American continent . And trappers are the most observant people in the world .They notice things other people never even think about

Re: Why do you trap? [Re: Turkeyeggsaver] #6564126
06/28/19 02:16 PM
06/28/19 02:16 PM
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 2,061
Ames, IA
MikeTraps2 Offline
trapper
MikeTraps2  Offline
trapper

Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 2,061
Ames, IA
Trapping the Forgotten American Heritage

(Authors note: I started this story more as a rant than anything else. However the more I toyed with it, the more I liked it and breathed more of my experiences into it. It was published in “Fur Fish Game” in August of 2004 as “Trapping the American Heritage.”)

My friend Mel once asked me “Mike why do you trap?” To which I replied, “I don’t know how not to trap. I have trapped for as long as I can remember and probably before that!” I then started thinking about why I trap. My mind drifted back to my youth spent trapping with my Father and Grandfather.

I remembered as a young child running traplines with my Dad and Grandfather (Pop). I also remembered the names of other trappers who trapped in the same areas that we did. Men like Arnold Favinger and Jack Bonney the raccoon and fox trappers from up in Lenni, Bob Currey the raccoon trapper who let my Father trap foxes on his farm, and Jack Murphy, the long lining trapper who would catch three to five hundred raccoons a season.

Back then you could go into any of the numerous small grocery stores similar to, Ahearns, or the Frogtown Country Store or into any local bar like Martins, Eddie’s, or The Hilltop and ask the name of a local trapper and get three or four responses. People would not only tell you, whom you were looking for, but also what they could catch, and where to find them. Now you’d be lucky to find anyone who knew a trapper at all, let alone where to find them and what animals they specialize in.

To me it is a sin to let this great American heritage fade away like a wisp of smoke. Think of all of the great outdoorsmen and adventurers of the old west that were trappers. Men like Jim Bridger, who helped map out the Oregon Trail, as well as many overland stage routes, and Kit Carson, the famous Indian scout who knew the desert southwest like the back of his hand. These men and others to numerous to name helped map out and settle this country. Their in depth knowledge of the land and waters is what guided them through the wilderness. They had no maps or atlases, all they had to go on what their own knowledge of the land and what they could gather from other trappers and hunters. By running their trapline in the wilderness they came to know and love the land, much like trappers today.

In this day and age it is hard to find a trapper, unless you belong to a trapping organization such as the National Trapper Association. America has more outdoorsmen per capita than probably any country in the world, but only a small handful of those are trappers. Trappers not only have to defend themselves against the anti trappers, but sometimes even against other outdoorsmen, like hunters as well. Trappers have long had their back to the wall, between ever increasing cost of equipment and gas, lowering fur prices, and the ever present antis, some trappers have hung it up and quit. Traps now gather dust in old barns, outbuildings, and musty basements.

My generation was just old enough to catch the tail end of the great fur boom, when fur prices were high and everyone seemed to trap. The boom lasted till I was about twelve and then the fur prices dropped, and dropped and dropped, till by the time I graduated high school, you could hardly give wild fur away. My brothers and sister and their generation never got to experience the type of things I did. Trapping taught me so many things about life and the wild world that I don’t know what I would have done without it.

I learned planning and preparation from watching my Dad and Pop. Every year before the opening day of trapping season, you could find us in the field under the big walnut tree. There would be a large cauldron of water and walnuts boiling over a wood fire (we later went to gas) to dye the trap in. The walnuts were personally gather by my brother Matthew and I by either picking them up off the ground, or shooting them off the branches with our BB guns. The traps were arranged in piles on the battered sheet of plywood that Dad and Pop had supported on sawhorses every year. Dad would check the pan tension on this one while Pop was checking the springs on other. Only after careful inspection were the traps put in the dye to obtain the proper shade of black. When the traps were dyed properly, they were removed from the cauldron and allowed to dry on a rack. Then Pop would put the wax on to melt. After the wax was melted the traps were dipped in, till they stopped crackling and popping. Then they were removed and allowed to dry. Pop and Dad did this many weeks before the season so that when the season opened they would be ready.

I learned about truth, honesty, and fair play from two different instances I can remember. One morning while checking traps with my Dad, we came to a small creek, and I could see there had been a catch made. “Hey Dad you got a coon” I yelled to him. He walked up the creek, looked at the coon and said “Son that coon isn’t in my trap; my set is up around the bend.” He walked back downstream, and I looked longingly at the coon, knowing it was worth 35-40 dollars. Dad later explained to me that he hated when someone stole his traps or fur and how he despised thieves and would never be counted among them.

One cold November morning I was checking traps with Pop, down in the Darlington Valley. As we were walking down the train tracks we could see three people in the distance. They saw us and waved and we met about halfway down. It was Arnold Favinger, Jack Bonny, and a young kid. “Morning Charlie” Arnold said to Pop. “Morning Arnold, morning Jack” Pop replied. (All local trappers pretty much knew each other back in those days.) “Say, Charlie did you shoot one of my coons yesterday, down under the trestle?” Arnold asked. “Yes I did, it was only held by one toe and I didn’t want it to escape on you” Pop replied. “I appreciate it, but was wondering why a thief would shoot my coon, and then leave it for me?” Arnold said laughingly. Arnold later told me when he and I trapped together that he never feared losing a trap or an animal when he and Pop trapped the same area. Pop unwittingly showed me fair play, and how to establish and honest reputation for yourself.

I also learned that you have to take responsibility. I can remember one year my Dad hurt his foot at work and could barely walk, but he made sure his fox sets got checked every single morning, even if it took him twice as long. I can remember Pop driving through a blizzard to pull his traps just so they would not be operating when he would not be able to reach them.

I learned a few things about honor as well from trapping. I can remember every December 23rd we would either pull or snap all of our traps. “Nothing should die on Christmas” Dad once said to me. I still carry this tradition with my children; all traps are sprung or pulled on Christmas Eve.

Another thing I can remember is a single set of fox tracks on a frosty trestle bridge. I saw them many times as Pop and I walked over that bridge to check his sets. “Why don’t you ever try to catch that fox Pop?” I asked. He just looked at me grinned slightly and said “Someday you’ll know why” and continued on down the tracks. Later I did know why neither he nor Arnold, nor Jack ever tried to try to catch the fox that left the tracks on the trestle. I wish I could tell you but it is something you have to discover for yourself.

I was taught a lesson in respect every year. Although Pop and Dad had been trapping some of their farms for a decade or more, they still stopped by the farmhouse in early October to renew permissions with the farmer. It also gave them a chance to ask questions on where the farmer had seen foxes or coons, get to know the dogs again, and find out if any areas were off limits. The farmers appreciated that we stopped to ask permission and talk again and that we did not take their permission or land for granted.

The greatest thing trapping has taught me, is appreciation and knowledge of the outdoors. I can readily look at a field, creek, pond, river, or woods and know where to look to find whatever animal I am searching for. I have learned how to read just a small piece of track, or identify a single strand of hair I may find in a fence or tree and determine what left it. I now know that no matter how much I know about trapping and animals, that there is always something new to learn. Every fall I am still amazed at the myriad of colors of the woods, the bright burning reds of the maples, the glimmering yellow of the oaks and beeches, blazing through the valleys like an arboreal forest fire. I love to listen to the slow, soft murmuring of the mink stream, which sounds like a distant conversation I can’t quite make out. I chuckle on days when hunters look outside and decide the weather is just too nasty to venture forth, and I am out tending my traps. I love to walk in the falling snow, and hear it sizzle past my ears, and marvel at how the rest of the world seems to have been silenced by the beauty of the snow covered woods. I’ve seen sunrises so beautiful that they are beyond my power to describe. And, even though I have witnessed more sunrises I can remember I still on occasion stop my truck and watch the spectacle of it again.

Trappers are out in the woods and water every day of the three to four month trapping season. They spend hours in and around their location, and know it better than any hunter of fisherman ever could. Trappers know every bump, rock, pool and sandbar on the creeks they trap. They know every saddle, draw, cow/deer path, and trail on the lands they trap. They know a foxes bark from a coons, and can tell you how far away a coyote is just by hearing the howl. Trappers are among the most observant people in the world. Because they have to be, in order to be any good at their sport they have to be. I had always just taken my powers of outdoor observation for granted, but my children helped to bring this trait to my attention. My daughter Teagan (8) walks through our neighborhood and woods like a modern day Osa Johnson (famous woman African explorer). She amazes her friends by pointing out to them rabbits and squirrels, which they cannot see. She also identifies bird songs, squirrel barks or tracks in the snow to her amazed friends. When her class goes on and ECO- trip (an outside field trip) the teacher and students call her the “resident expert” in identifying animal tracks, droppings, sign, and calls. My son Jamison (12) says on field trips he sees many different animals, but for some reason none of his friends can see them. “I keep saying it’s right there, just to the left of that tuft of switch grass” he tells me. And, his friends can’t see the tuft of grass let alone the pheasant that just strutted by it.

Trapping is one of the few sports every member of the family can enjoy and participate in. No matter how old or young everyone can be a part of trapping. My youngest daughter Charly (3) helps Teagan and Jamison collect the walnuts to dye the traps with (much like I used to). The older kids run traps with me on weekend and days they off of school. They are learning to develop the skills to pick their own location, and the ability to read the tracks and other signs. They tough it out despite the sub zero temperatures, the wet feet, the snapped finger, just to catch something. The smile on their faces when they do make a catch is incredible. Even Pop when he had long quit trapping still participated. Most days he’d have me and my partner show him the catch, then heckle us for not catching enough, and ask where we got which animals and in what kind of set. Even when he was losing his battle with dementia and Parkinson’s Disease and didn’t know me from the imaginary people he saw, when I said trapping, a light came to his eyes and they seemed to clear, and for the briefest of moments he knew me, and we talked about trapping. It was the last conversation I ever had with him, and I’m glad it was on trapping.

I hate to see this heritage die a slow death, so I try to keep it alive in my children, and hopefully my grandchildren (when I have some). Someday I’ll be just a shadow following my children on their trapline, much like I feel I am followed on mine at times. When that time comes maybe I’ll meet up with Pop and we’ll try to catch that trestle fox.


Far better is it to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure

Theodore Roosevelt
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