Jayme, I hate to give all my secrets away at one time!

Just kidding! I use the standard Senneker setup, but like I said, the longer springs are a winner in my book. Even if the lock slips a wee bit, they have enough travel to really keep the pressure on. What makes the triggers important, is The yote hits the end and the lock is set before it releases the tension from the spring. I use a piece of 1/4 inch rod that is thirty inches long, with a piece of 11 gauge wire welded to the end and the other end is flattened to keep the wind from turning it. I like the long rod because I drive it into the ground at a steep angle to the trail, then use a loop in the wire to hold a weed stalk to break the outline of the snare lock and spring, and also the support rod. It just looks like a blown over weed at that point. I like iron weeds for the weed, they have a bushy top. I've snared a lot of yotes off of cow trails where there was just a path through buffalo grass, the coyotes walk those trails before they walk the grass, and in overgrazed pastures, many times there is an abundance of weeds standing in those pastures! Not real effective during a full moon, but the rest of the time, it can be deadly! For anchoring, I just drive a rebar stake, usually back off the trail. The idea is to get him dead and off the trail so you can reset the same spot. I always use an extension, so I can loop a new snare to the extension without pulling the stake. You play with it, you figure it out quick!