Wow... the learning curve with this trade!!! It's a long way from trapping canines in corn fields, I know that. I went from getting one call a month to three per day and I've been holding my own, but this week has presented some unique challenges.
I've never had this happen before. Client had unintentionally left their crawl space entry open for a few days back before Easter. And lo and behold a raccoon popped out of their floor vent! They chased it out of the house with a broom and closed the crawl space door, but began hearing noise in the attic last week and kind of freaked out and called me thinking they had a raccoon up there. I did a thorough inspection of the crawlspace and attic. I found no entry points and no signs of wildlife. But I set a trap in the crawlspace and attic just to be sure. There was no action for two nights, and then after the third night, I checked the attic trap and it is, as pictured below. It had held a critter long enough for them to struggle enough to pull insulation through the trap and defecate but the trap was empty. Simultaneously, the crawlspace trap held a feral cat. It is a very old house... two put together actually, built in the late 1800's. There are a lot of nooks and crannies in the crawlspace and attic, so I concocted a theory that there might be a wall chase that led from the crawl space to the attic and perhaps I had caught the cat in the attic and it miraculously escaped and I caught it again in the crawl space trap. But that feces does not look like cat to me. Even though it's squished a bit, it looks like young raccoon, but I could definitely be wrong.
Anyway, I reset the trap and nothing the first two nights but then last night the bait was stolen. So I'm still thinking young coons that did not trip the trap this time. So I've reset in the attic with Comstock 5x5 swing panel traps, which I've used multiple times for successfully catching adolescents.
I'm also not dismissing the idea there could be kittens, but I'm pretty confused. I've never had a critter defeat the trap pictured before.



