Alright, it's been awhile since an update. I didn't trap much around Christmas as my parents came down to visit from Iowa and I didn't want to be out in the woods trapping while they were down here.
They headed back up Friday, and I made a plan to start the line back up. The field was becoming more work to trap than it is worth, so I decided to switch over and focus on beaver trapping. I've found a few holes of water on the bayou that have quite a bit of sign in them, and it's not a three mile trip from the road to set them, either.
I'll note that we didn't get any snow as was predicted, but the weather has turned off cold (for Arkansas). Yesterday morning when I left the house it was 7 degrees. Today it was 9. That meant two things:
1. The bayou was frozen over.
2. I needed to figure out how to set beaver snares under ice.
I did a lot of reading last night and went out this morning to try my hand at setting snare poles at this spot, which is just downstream of a bridge:

On the way back to the car, I saw an otter scamper from the ice into some brush along the creek, just as another one was climbing out of a hole of open water onto the ice about thirty yards away. I made a clean shot with the .22 and got to bring some fur home on my first day back on the line.
Here's a tailgate picture without the tailgate:

The pelt was roughly 28" long unstretched. (Not great pictures, they were taken as it was getting dark).
Where does that put this guy as far as size? Based on some pictures I have seen, I figured that might be on the small side for an otter. This is my first however, so I've got nothing to compare to.
Had a great day regardless and am hoping that I can snare a beaver under the ice before it melts off, just so I can say that I did it. The opportunity doesn't come around all that often in this part of the country.