Re: Dog knot
[Re: Golf ball]
#6587624
08/04/19 09:53 AM
08/04/19 09:53 AM
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Joined: Mar 2012
Nevadafornia
Lazarus
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Mar 2012
Nevadafornia
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Every anchoring system has its pros and cons. You have to make a decision of what's best for you based on cost, portability, effectiveness, availability, etc.
I love dog knot stakes . . . for nostalgia. For decades the dog knot was the preferred method. It worked in a variety of soil types, was fairly lightweight, and since the stake was permanently attached to the trap, if the animal pulled out, the stake (and long chain) acted as a drag and often the animal could be recovered.
There are other staking systems that have advantages, like your double staked rebar. The disadvantage to double staking is weight (carrying two stakes instead of one), ease of use, and soil types. Cable disposable stakes have the advantage of weight and inexpensive cost, but in rocky soils, its pretty easy to shear off the soft, aluminum ferrels. Cable stakes and steel stakes have one other disadvantage: you have to drive the stake ALL THE WAY IN to cover them.
I like chain stakes for that reason. They are light, easy to use, cost effective and you drive the stake in as far as you think you need to, not all the way like steel or cable stakes. But like I say, the ALL have advantages and disadvantages.
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Re: Dog knot
[Re: ~ADC~]
#6587656
08/04/19 10:58 AM
08/04/19 10:58 AM
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Joined: Mar 2012
Nevadafornia
Lazarus
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Mar 2012
Nevadafornia
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Tracy can you give the dimensions on that stake please? I may make a few just for the heck of it. Just need the length and what size rod. Also are they cut at an angle on the end or flat or pointed? Thank you.
~ADC~ That one is 18" long. Don't know if everyone understands, but the dog knot was made in various lengths. I have some that are 16", 24", 30" and 36". They are all 1/2" diameter and the ends are super sharp, forged 4 surfaces. The head is 3/4" across. Hope that helps.
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Re: Dog knot
[Re: Golf ball]
#6587763
08/04/19 02:20 PM
08/04/19 02:20 PM
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Joined: Aug 2015
eastern, CT
scott k
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Aug 2015
eastern, CT
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I know that dog knot stakes worked for years and held 10’s of thousands of coyotes but, I can’t bring my self to use only 1 on a set ? I know it’s smooth rod and hard to pump but I guess I’m over cautious.
Last edited by scott k; 08/04/19 02:22 PM.
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Re: Dog knot
[Re: Golf ball]
#6588001
08/04/19 07:51 PM
08/04/19 07:51 PM
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Joined: Oct 2015
Maine
mainer
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Oct 2015
Maine
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Dog knot stakes are great if you can find them. I used them back in the day but foolishly sold what I had, which is another story. As Laz points out, there are pros and cons to every staking system. While I would love to have a bunch of dog knots to use -- and I'm keeping my eye out -- there are more feasible alternatives like cross staking and earth anchors. I use around 60% earth anchors (with chain) to 40% cross staking on my line. It all depends on the soil conditions.
Dog knots are a western stake, designed by Mike Ayers for the sandy soils of western states - correct me on my history if I'm mistaken. Like Laz, the nostalgia of having and using dog knots is not a trivial thing. The older I get the more I appreciate the wisdom and innovation of those trappers who came before us. It also allows me to relive if only in bits and pieces the glory days of the 70s and early 80s.
"...in a very few days we succeeded in taking over one hundred beaver, the skins of which were worth ten dollars per pound." Jim Beckwourth (1856)
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Re: Dog knot
[Re: Golf ball]
#6589122
08/06/19 10:41 AM
08/06/19 10:41 AM
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Joined: Aug 2011
Peoria County Illinois
Larry Baer
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Aug 2011
Peoria County Illinois
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I had 18 and 24'' one from Mike Ayers. The vague of that stake is the knot. The knot provides a pivot point that makes it so you can only pull that stake out if you pull it from straight up. I have some pictures of coyotes with dog knot stakes up out of the ground about 8'' but they could not pull the stake because it won't come out when pulled at an angle. The pounded points on those things were hard. I still use some of these but one thing you will need if you use them is long chains at least 30'' long - 36'' is better. It's a good system but most people use short chains now.
Just passin through
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Re: Dog knot
[Re: Golf ball]
#6589129
08/06/19 10:57 AM
08/06/19 10:57 AM
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Joined: Mar 2012
Nevadafornia
Lazarus
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Mar 2012
Nevadafornia
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Larry makes a great point . . . and not to beat a dead horse, but the genius of the stake was that if you drove the stake in the ground and then pulled it out (i.e. you didn't make a catch), the stake usually comes out fairly easily. However, if you make a catch, the animal circling the stake drags dirt and small rocks down into the stake hole where they land on top of the "knot." it then acts like a disposable and its very hard to get out. Like Larry says, many a time I've seen a coyote with the stake half out of the ground but still well held because he'd tamped so much dirt and rock down on the knot that the stake wasn't coming out.
Also, on the long chain, the G men had that huge swivel, heavy chain and long chain for several reasons. One of them was that it helped pump the stake out of the ground without tools. If you hold the trap in one hand and "whip" the chain toward the stake, that 3 feet of chain will most times pop that stake right out of the ground.
While every staking system has its pros and cons, the old government 3N with a long, heavy chain, heavy swivels and a dog knot stake had a lot of advantages and stood the test of time for tens of thousands of coyotes.
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Re: Dog knot
[Re: Golf ball]
#6590051
08/07/19 04:20 PM
08/07/19 04:20 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Western Colorado
coloradocat
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Western Colorado
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Mike Ayers was from Colorado. I remember as a kid going to his place with my dad to pick up dog knots. All I can remember is piles and piles of them laying around.
There are still a bunch out floating around. I look for them because the "lawyer" will buy about as many as I can find. Only problem is they have to be priced right, or he wont touch them. That's where having a better golden tongue than a lawyer comes in handy.
Colorado Search and Rescue- Interfering with natural selection since 1976
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Re: Dog knot
[Re: coloradocat]
#6590069
08/07/19 04:51 PM
08/07/19 04:51 PM
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Joined: Mar 2012
Nevadafornia
Lazarus
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Mar 2012
Nevadafornia
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Mike Ayers was from Colorado. I remember as a kid going to his place with my dad to pick up dog knots. All I can remember is piles and piles of them laying around.
There are still a bunch out floating around. I look for them because the "lawyer" will buy about as many as I can find. Only problem is they have to be priced right, or he wont touch them. That's where having a better golden tongue than a lawyer comes in handy. Indeed. Anyone that can find an old dead stump and sell it as art has a more golden tongue than I ever possessed.
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Re: Dog knot
[Re: Golf ball]
#6590417
08/08/19 12:27 AM
08/08/19 12:27 AM
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Joined: Dec 2014
E central Il
Golf ball
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Dec 2014
E central Il
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Back when I started trapping coyotes I used a long chain with a single stake . Not because I knew anything about trapping coyotes but because I knew if you put a 65# English coon hound on a short chain ( dog leash) with a single stake he would pump it up. But not enough in one night to get loose. If you put that same hound on a 15’ chain at the house he wouldn’t pump the stake at all , lol ! It only made sense to me that a 30 or 35# coyote couldn’t pump out an 18 or 20” stake over night if you gave him a 30” piece of chain.
I also added a shock spring to that long ( cheap ) chain after seeing a chain break . I will go back to a shock spring with a good chain !
Thanks again guys for all your help ! I know I can hold a coyote with a 20” smooth stake but it can’t hurt to add a little insurance.
Last edited by Golf ball; 08/08/19 12:39 AM.
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