Re: Marten set tutorial
[Re: trapped4ever]
#4124786
11/20/13 01:34 AM
11/20/13 01:34 AM
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Joined: Dec 2008
Posts: 1,997 Kelowna BC Canada
trapper ron
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2008
Posts: 1,997
Kelowna BC Canada
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Call graders at either NAFA or Fur Harvesters, and ask them if they see more fur damage on marten, from body grips, or appropriately sized footholds!!!!??? I agree, that too large of a foothold for marten is a BAD idea!! I would doubt if they know how the marten was trapped or even have time to check to see. Damage is damage and the pelt goes into the damage section where it fits without a CSI or postmortem to check trapping methods.
Member BCTA Trapping Instructor
"It's what you learn after you know it all that really counts."
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Re: Marten set tutorial
[Re: Bushman]
#4124790
11/20/13 01:48 AM
11/20/13 01:48 AM
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Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 47,336 james bay frontierOnt.
Boco
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 47,336
james bay frontierOnt.
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Ron,the graders were not told how the marten were trapped-That would have made the study biased.The skins were marked by the FIC,graded then checked independently to see if any that were caught in magnum conis had any more damage than any other.They did not.Neither do mine,less in fact than the old weak traps.
Forget that fear of gravity-get a little savagery in your life.
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Re: Marten set tutorial
[Re: FullFreezer]
#4124809
11/20/13 03:00 AM
11/20/13 03:00 AM
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Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 17 Tonsina, Alaska
Wolverinebait
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 17
Tonsina, Alaska
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Well, I'll throw my 2¢ into this circus ring,.. but you're probably gonna get ripped off. I too, like T4E, am a confirmed foothold marten trapper, after trying & using every type of set/trap I could think of, over many years. And I agree with most of the issues concerning both footholds & body-grippers that have been mentioned by others. These type of threads are good for bringing out ideas & methods from all across North America, and this is how one can pick up even little things to improve your methods that you just might not have thought of otherwise on your own,... there's some pretty ingenious trappers on this forum. And nothing is more true than doing what works best in your particular area/habitat,.. and we are not all the same in that regard. And since most of you have violated Bushman's directions of keeping this thread picture-heavy,... I'm going to have to help make up the slack for some of you,... But there are some rather important advantages (in my humble opinion) in using footholds that haven't been brought out yet,.. so I will mention a few. First of all, my experiments with body-grippers has been less than desired in the number of refusals to enter them,... this has been true for mink as well,.. (and wolverine too). I could post a lot of pictures just like FT of marten tracks coming right up to sets, and not going in. And trigger styles/configurations make no difference, including pans,... for me in my area, a considerable number of marten just don't want to enter them,... and I used mostly 160's from the start. Just like some areas have marten that won't climb, mine don't want to go thru a steel frame. I trap in some of the deepest snow country in Alaska,... some of my main marten country has annual snowfall depths of 30-45 feet,... so for sure, my main issue is having a set that keeps working no matter how much snow falls,... even in no tree areas. I have years when I step off my snow machine, and have trouble getting back on again, with my head level with the running boards in extreme conditions. My next most important issue is mice/shrew damage. I have a good friend who traps a little north of me who has no mouse problems,... he has fox problems. I have never had a fox eat a marten in my life that I can remember,... A ground cubby with footholds is closest set to 100% capture that I have seen in my experience when working,.. but of course they are the worst for getting put out of commission & rodent damage, so I don't use those. Pole sets with 3"-4" of snow on them are somewhat out of commission from what I've seen, and in my area, that would be almost all the time. I have caught lot's of marten in pole sets, but it very deep snow, or higher elevations, trees aren't always available. For me, in my area, nothing has worked better/lasts longer than plywood boxes, (5/8"-3/4" preferred) set mostly horizontal. I have tried different heights-lengths,... and have come up with the smallest dimensions that still work almost every time,.. 6" tall, and 14" deep, with 10" sides. I can get 16 boxes out of a full sheet of plywood and scrounge up scrap plywood whenever I find it, so all my boxes are free. It's fast & easy to rip up a whole pile of them on a table saw. One of my favorite methods of setting my boxes is to attach them to a pole, then I can stick my pole anywhere I want,... even out in the wide-open spaces,... and it stays working. I always use 8d nails to attach them,... that way they don't get wrecked when a bear or wolverine tears them off. Also, I can easily pop them off & move them up a tree as the snow gets deeper. At the end of the season, I pop the box off the tree & place it over the sawed-off end of a smaller tree somewhere, as high as I can get it, where they are generally safe from summer-time bears and porcupines. I would rather not use plastics & other non-biodegradable materials and have trash scattered around my set areas. Here's a few of my pole/box marten sets,...
Last edited by Wolverinebait; 11/20/13 03:01 AM.
"I'm sorry for hurting your feelings when I called you stupid,... I thought you already knew,..."
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Re: Marten set tutorial
[Re: Wolverinebait]
#4124826
11/20/13 04:02 AM
11/20/13 04:02 AM
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Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 17 Tonsina, Alaska
Wolverinebait
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 17
Tonsina, Alaska
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This is why I use smaller nails to attach my boxes, so they don't get wrecked when bears or wolverines tear them down,... The drawbacks of body-grippers are the same for me as for most,... besides a lower catch rate. Carrying a bunch of replacement traps that can't be used to set more areas is a fairly big factor for me, since I refuse to drag a cargo sled around if at all possible to avoid it, and on trips of 15-20 marten caught, this is a big pile of traps. As far as the damage issues using body-grippers go,... this too, must be an area-weather related thing to some degree. I for sure had more damaged marten in them than footholds did. Using only #0 or #1's would only result in some occasional minor foot damage,... which is no detriment to the price of the fur. But many of my body-gripped marten had lines/damage in the fur across the body that I could not comb out, not matter what I did. Any wiggling around at all in those traps would cause that,.. just like it does with otters, beavers, etc. I remember watching Dean Wilson grading marten at times & picking out the body-gripped marten that he could see had a line going across the body,... for sure not all/most did, but some certainly did. A foot-caught marten will never have body damage from the trap. Someone mentioned that having to deal with live marten was a negative thing that body-gripping traps eliminate. I actually LIKE having live marten in my traps for several reasons, which can never happen in body traps: 1) I know they are not damaged from mice, from being frozen against anything, etc. Let's face it,... if you're anything like me,... the most damage I do to marten is trying to haul hard/frozen marten home on a bouncing sled all day. I usually carry towels with me to wrap frozen marten in,.. but marten fur is so fine & delicate that even touching each other can make marks in the fur. And having a body gripper trap frozen around it with sharp, poking things sticking out only invites more damage trying to get it home. 2) A simple love-tap on the snout, hold their hearts, and a marten is dispatched in a min or less. Not only is a warm, unfrozen marten going to make it back home undamaged, but I can get him peeled & on the boards right away that night. They peel better fresh, and I really like keeping up with my skinning as much as I can,... no freeze-dried faces, tails, etc. skinning something you caught 2 months earlier. 3) A foot-caught marten, caught by only a toe or two, can be released just fine. Maybe not too many people will do this too much at current prices, but I have done it in the past, more than once. I have released small black females on numerous times that I know were just fine. Can't do that with a body-gripper. It's not always a sure thing that it will work, because I can think of at least 2 times that I had caught the same marten in the same set, now hanging dead that I had released the previous check. But at least you have that option on occasion to manage your marten line with footholds that you don't have with body-grippers.
"I'm sorry for hurting your feelings when I called you stupid,... I thought you already knew,..."
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Re: Marten set tutorial
[Re: Wolverinebait]
#4124828
11/20/13 04:20 AM
11/20/13 04:20 AM
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Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 17 Tonsina, Alaska
Wolverinebait
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 17
Tonsina, Alaska
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You know,.. I don't think I have very many pictures of boxes set without a catch,.. that is kinda weird now that I think about it. I just have the trap inside as far as I can get it, spring in first. I generally don't have much of a bird-squirrel issue, but on occ I'll get one. Weasels are the biggest pest, but not sure how to avoid them without loosing marten potential as well. Another advantage of using footholds over body-grippers for marten (or maybe not,... depending on how you look at it) is the possibility of catching something better,... and bigger. With current prices, this may not be a good thing, but in the past it was. I can think of at least a half-dozen times that I have caught & held a wolverine in a #1 longspring in a marten box. (funny thing is, I have no pictures of this,... ), but of course have lost most of them. But I always anchor my trap with this in mind. But years ago, when lynx & even fox were worth more than a marten, I considered this a bonus that wouldn't happen in a little body-gripper,... even on pole sets,...
"I'm sorry for hurting your feelings when I called you stupid,... I thought you already knew,..."
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Re: Marten set tutorial
[Re: Bushman]
#4124836
11/20/13 04:37 AM
11/20/13 04:37 AM
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Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 490 Fairbanks AK
Aknative
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 490
Fairbanks AK
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Man WB! I can't even catch a fox in a set made for them! Love those pics though!
Rumors of my assimilation have been greatly exaggerated.
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Re: Marten set tutorial
[Re: Bushman]
#4124840
11/20/13 04:57 AM
11/20/13 04:57 AM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 2,275 Homer, Alaska
Family Trapper
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 2,275
Homer, Alaska
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Great post WB. But man I hate to prove you wrong. ;0) But all in fun no less. I considered this a bonus that wouldn't happen in a little body-gripper, Caught the last week in March. 110 duke or similar in a plant pot. Undoubtedly the nicest furred fox I have ever caught. At the time of year when they are most all are terribly rubbed. Higher country. I was amazed. Certainly not the normal. But a rarity that can happen. Agree with everything you have said WB. Just fun to share the oddity of things at times.
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Re: Marten set tutorial
[Re: Family Trapper]
#4124850
11/20/13 05:33 AM
11/20/13 05:33 AM
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Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 17 Tonsina, Alaska
Wolverinebait
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 17
Tonsina, Alaska
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Great post WB. But man I hate to prove you wrong. ;0) But all in fun no less. I considered this a bonus that wouldn't happen in a little body-gripper, Caught the last week in March. 110 duke or similar in a plant pot. Undoubtedly the nicest furred fox I have ever caught. At the time of year when they are most all are terribly rubbed. Higher country. I was amazed. Certainly not the normal. But a rarity that can happen. Agree with everything you have said WB. Just fun to share the oddity of things at times. Yeah, I know you're right,... it has happened. Seems like I remember someone on here posting a picture of a wolverine caught in a 160 too,... but it's really not all that uncommon to catch other stuff like this in footholds,... I have a lot more pictures of lynx, fox, even a coyote caught in boxes,... just not wanting to spend the time trying to find them, but I did just run across a couple more that I don't even remember, including a tail-caught marten in a pole set. The weird things always make for good memories. That's a very nice fox,.. great picture!
Last edited by Wolverinebait; 11/20/13 05:34 AM.
"I'm sorry for hurting your feelings when I called you stupid,... I thought you already knew,..."
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Re: Marten set tutorial
[Re: Bushman]
#4125013
11/20/13 08:28 AM
11/20/13 08:28 AM
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Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 47,336 james bay frontierOnt.
Boco
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 47,336
james bay frontierOnt.
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Any foothold set in a tree here is a totally illegal set.Some of those pics demonstrate why. WB do you check your traps every day?
Forget that fear of gravity-get a little savagery in your life.
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