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Non-Cattle Specific Topics
Sports, Hunting, Fishing & Wildlife
Trapping Coyotes
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<blockquote data-quote="Dave" data-source="post: 1404700" data-attributes="member: 498"><p>Years ago my trapping partner made some extra long snares for an experiment that didn't work out. So the follow year we were trapping muskrats in the irrigation water waste ways in the Columbia basin. Coyotes had paths beat down along both sides of the drains. We set these 16-20 foot long snares where the trails went under fences. The soil is almost pure sand so tracks showed up real well. A coyote would get in a snare and go out to the end of the cable. When they hit the end they would turn and run back the other way. They would be going pretty fast when they hit the end 32-40 feet later. And they would be laying there dead as a door nail. No struggle at all.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dave, post: 1404700, member: 498"] Years ago my trapping partner made some extra long snares for an experiment that didn't work out. So the follow year we were trapping muskrats in the irrigation water waste ways in the Columbia basin. Coyotes had paths beat down along both sides of the drains. We set these 16-20 foot long snares where the trails went under fences. The soil is almost pure sand so tracks showed up real well. A coyote would get in a snare and go out to the end of the cable. When they hit the end they would turn and run back the other way. They would be going pretty fast when they hit the end 32-40 feet later. And they would be laying there dead as a door nail. No struggle at all. [/QUOTE]
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