Re: Qaluraq's '18 Journal
[Re: Inupiaq]
#6398123
12/13/18 11:41 PM
12/13/18 11:41 PM
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Joined: Feb 2011
Fairbanks Alaska
AKHowler
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Feb 2011
Fairbanks Alaska
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That ribbon seal is awesome. Do you eat the meat of them too as well as making seal oil and utilizing the hides? I'd guess they would make great bait. Do you ever use snares for your beaver? Glad to see you got the young ones out giving you a hand. Keep it up and be safe.
Alaskan #9 Trap Company JR Pederson PO BOX 58226 Fairbanks AK 99711 cell# 907-378-7291 pedersonjr@yahoo.com
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Re: Qaluraq's '18 Journal
[Re: AKHowler]
#6401922
12/18/18 02:27 AM
12/18/18 02:27 AM
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Joined: Dec 2009
Kotzebue, Alaska
Inupiaq
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Dec 2009
Kotzebue, Alaska
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AKHowler. I cut the blubber up to make seal oil but not long later asked my Native brothers from Mekoryuk about that and they said they only keep the skins on those ribbon seals. Blubber and meat too strong for humans. Give them to the dog team. So, that’s what I’m going to do.
It makes sense. Anything with real dark meat has a lot of iron in it. Iron as an element is an oxygen grabber. Animals like pronghorn antelope, ptarmigan, and these ribbon seals need to get away very quickly and dive deeper than the other seals, so they need lots of iron to store that oxygen. Even jack rabbits have lots o& iron, and river otter need it for diving.
As for snares on beaver I found it to be quite a hassle in our very cold temps and thick ice. To set those snares on a pole you need to be pretty much gloves off...which is kind of impossible up here. Also, when snared the beavers float to the bottom of the ice. That’s not good to finally find out that you connected after so many snares were tripped...and that thing is super stuck in the ice. Now you gotta chop a huge hole, only to find out that you actually chopped some holes in the hide....you know the story. Nope. Ain’t messin with that. Just use a couple 330’s ain’t the run at the lodge entrance and maybe a couple more at the bank den and kill em at the bottom.
Back to seal, I don’t use it for bait very much. If an animal gets a hold of the meat or find a glob of oil, they’ll roll around in that stuff and there ain’t no soap in the. World that can get that stuff out very thoroughly. Beaver bait is the best I’ve found for marten, gulos, fox, and lynx.
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Re: Qaluraq's '18 Journal
[Re: Inupiaq]
#6402122
12/18/18 12:12 PM
12/18/18 12:12 PM
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Joined: Feb 2011
Fairbanks Alaska
AKHowler
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Feb 2011
Fairbanks Alaska
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Thanks for sharing and the reply. I hear ya on the smell of the seals for bait.
Alaskan #9 Trap Company JR Pederson PO BOX 58226 Fairbanks AK 99711 cell# 907-378-7291 pedersonjr@yahoo.com
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Re: Qaluraq's '18 Journal
[Re: Inupiaq]
#6406101
12/22/18 04:28 PM
12/22/18 04:28 PM
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Joined: Dec 2009
Kotzebue, Alaska
Inupiaq
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Dec 2009
Kotzebue, Alaska
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Muskrat 411, I have a good dozen old seal oil buckets that I've been saving up for qavviks. Gonna notch them and put wire on the bottom to hold beaver bait.
Ryan, yes. The beaver have moved through Kotzebue and way up north now. Kivalina, Pt. Hope, way up in the mountains towards Utqiagvik now too. Way up in the sheep mountains. Boy I would love to live up there, alright. Jeremiah Johnson country up there! Eagle nests on the cottonwood trees, sheep grazing on the south-facing slopes during the day. Wolf packs roaming, qavviks going from creek to creek, whistling marmots in the spring big as a badger. Now there's lodges up there in those grand valleys that no human sees except for pilots.
I will save some lodges for re-population, but what happens is the beaver are so abundant south of us that they come up this way each spring with the melt. They swim along the peninsula banks until they find a valley. Once they do they populate our peninsula like ants. I wonder sometimes though about these lodges that I did trap out with the full feed piles. I wonder if it's too much work to remove the stale willows that no beaver ate. I notice that some move into those lodges, but not for long, they make a new one nearby with its own feed pile. I try to trap the bank dens for just mom and dad if I can, but finding them is quite tricky. Otters help me find them. Wherever they make holes in the bank, that's where there's a bank den. Too bad I didn't have a pet otter!
Have a Merry Christmas, everyone! As of today the sunlight is gaining! We're on the sunny side of the year.
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Re: Qaluraq's '18 Journal
[Re: Inupiaq]
#6406265
12/22/18 08:34 PM
12/22/18 08:34 PM
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Joined: Aug 2013
AK, Northwest Arctic Borough
Caribou
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Aug 2013
AK, Northwest Arctic Borough
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Not a recipe, but an observation......My wife uses the same pot for Beaver cooking. You'll get a rime on the sides that is not easy to remove, and can 'add flavor' to the next meal cooked in it.
You more like the guy I know with that shaved face....I was totally wondering who you were when we bumped into each other in Barrow.....LOL!!
Good to see your doings.
Last edited by Caribou; 12/23/18 02:45 AM.
What would the Founding Fathers do?
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Re: Qaluraq's '18 Journal
[Re: Inupiaq]
#6406363
12/22/18 10:19 PM
12/22/18 10:19 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Mt.
g smith
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Mt.
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Blessings ,thanks for pictures
You can ride a fast horse slow but you can't ride a slow horse fast .
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Re: Qaluraq's '18 Journal
[Re: Inupiaq]
#6409933
12/27/18 02:00 AM
12/27/18 02:00 AM
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Joined: Jan 2008
Alaska and Washington State
waggler
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2008
Alaska and Washington State
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You mentioned smelt for bait in the ermine set (BTW, tell your son congrats), I'm just curious if your smelt smell like cucumbers? There seem to be several different kinds of smelt, I really like the "cucumber fish" variety, don't care so much for the mushy, hooligan type.
"My life is better than your vacation"
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Re: Qaluraq's '18 Journal
[Re: Inupiaq]
#6409962
12/27/18 05:35 AM
12/27/18 05:35 AM
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Joined: Feb 2014
NWT
Ryan McLeod
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Feb 2014
NWT
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Congrats on the weasel. Pretty cool set just like a mini wolverine bucket. The cucumber fish are rainbow smelt
If you take care of the land the land will take care of you
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Re: Qaluraq's '18 Journal
[Re: Ryan McLeod]
#6409989
12/27/18 06:34 AM
12/27/18 06:34 AM
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Joined: Dec 2009
Kotzebue, Alaska
Inupiaq
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Dec 2009
Kotzebue, Alaska
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Yes, Ryan. I learned to use these Food Service cans from a marten trapper in a nearby village. When school is going on, I check the menu my kids bring home. When there's good fruit cans, I go to the dumpster and pick up the empty Food Service cans. Bring them home (they're usually in boxes of 6). I finish taking off the lids to all, give the cans a good rinse, then I take two cans, cut the bottom off of one of them, make some slats on the lip of the bottom one and join the two cans. Then put a couple self-tapping screws in the slats.
For marten you have to pretty much use two cans connected together in this way. One can is too short, IMO. Once the cans are joined, I place the joined can facing up on a table and place a set 110 conibear on it, mark it with a magic marker where the coni jaws touch the can. Then I take the coni off and cut the slits with tin snips. I usually leave one big flap on the left side where I'm going to screw the can set to a tree. Then when I get out into the trees, I scrape a bit of bark with a hatchet, nail or screw the can onto the tree with at least two nails or screws. I have it facing up just a bit so the bait could stay way at the back. Then I put some beaver or lynx chunks in the can, put the trap on, secure it with the flaps, wire the 110 to a branch, put a little bit of Gusto on the branch above, tie a flagging on the tree and do the next set. Sometimes I cut a small, thin tree and attach it to the tree so a marten can climb it and go right into the can. Make it a little easier.
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