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|  Wolf traps
 #6884852 05/29/20 10:06 AM
05/29/20 10:06 AM
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| Joined:  Apr 2012 Southern Michigan
trappergbus
  OP trapper
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|  OP trapper
 
 Joined:  Apr 2012
 Southern Michigan
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I'm curious, what is the preferred wolf  trap and setup for you all. Please and thanks 
 Common sense catches alot of fur..
 Pay homage to all you harvest..
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|  Re: Wolf traps
[Re: trappergbus]
 #6885549 05/30/20 07:57 AM
05/30/20 07:57 AM
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| Joined:  Apr 2012 Southern Michigan
trappergbus
  OP trapper
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|  OP trapper
 
 Joined:  Apr 2012
 Southern Michigan
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Thanks guys, couple more ?.. Long chains staked solid or drags? Are 4 coils absolutely necessary and why? Do any of you use Lure or mainly urine? 
 Common sense catches alot of fur..
 Pay homage to all you harvest..
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|  Re: Wolf traps
[Re: trappergbus]
 #6885661 05/30/20 10:32 AM
05/30/20 10:32 AM
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| Joined:  Dec 2006 Fairbanks,  Alaska
Pete in Frbks
   trapper
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|   trapper
 
 Joined:  Dec 2006
 Fairbanks,  Alaska
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Thanks guys, couple more ?.. Long chains staked solid or drags? Are 4 coils absolutely necessary and why? Do any of you use Lure or mainly urine?If you can stake a wolf trap solid in Interior Alaska in January, you don't even need a trap.   You are obviously capable of running down a wolf and killing it with a Buck knife and your teeth.....
Last edited by Pete in Frbks; 05/30/20 10:35 AM.
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|  Re: Wolf traps
[Re: trappergbus]
 #6885668 05/30/20 10:45 AM
05/30/20 10:45 AM
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| Joined:  Apr 2012 Southern Michigan
trappergbus
  OP trapper
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|  OP trapper
 
 Joined:  Apr 2012
 Southern Michigan
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LOL, I kinda figured that Pete .. Thanks  Don't know if you all realize but Sleepy Creek is going back in business. From what I understand they are going to work on wolf size double longs possibly with cast jaws.  
Last edited by trappergbus; 05/30/20 10:49 AM.
 
 Common sense catches alot of fur..
 Pay homage to all you harvest..
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|  Re: Wolf traps
[Re: Pete in Frbks]
 #6887212 06/01/20 01:03 AM
06/01/20 01:03 AM
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| Joined:  Jan 2007 Interior Alaska
smalltimetrapper
   small greenhorn
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|   small greenhorn
 
 Joined:  Jan 2007
 Interior Alaska
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I have and like my Alaskan #9's, but my go-to trap has always been the 114 NH.
 Pete
Pete, do you still use 114s? I have a few and think it would be cool to catch a wolf in one for the sake of nostalgia. Just haven't brought myself to the point of setting one. I may have to do it one of these days in a place where I know there's no chance of theft. |  |  |  
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|  Re: Wolf traps
[Re: trappergbus]
 #6887852 06/01/20 09:14 PM
06/01/20 09:14 PM
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| Joined:  Dec 2007 40 years Alaska, now back to O... 
alaska viking
   "Made it two years not being censored"
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|   "Made it two years not being censored"
 
 Joined:  Dec 2007
 40 years Alaska, now back to O...
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 I love the TS85 traps for beaver, but my personal opinion is, they need a lot more than adding 2 springs to make them a bonified wolf trap, compared to the other 3. The Koro and Alaskan 9 are in a league of their own, and the MB750, along with the Bridger Alaskan #5, and Sleepy Creek 4.5 fills the niche below them.
 
Last edited by alaska viking; 06/02/20 03:06 PM.
 
 Just doing what I want now.
 
 
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|  Re: Wolf traps
[Re: trappergbus]
 #6889174 06/03/20 11:47 AM
06/03/20 11:47 AM
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| Joined:  Apr 2012 Southern Michigan
trappergbus
  OP trapper
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|  OP trapper
 
 Joined:  Apr 2012
 Southern Michigan
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Thanks S.E. great pics for comparison. The Coro , Alaskan 9 have beefy levers. as well as the KOs. Which one performs best in snow ?  Are dogless better than dog on? 
 Common sense catches alot of fur..
 Pay homage to all you harvest..
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|  Re: Wolf traps
[Re: trappergbus]
 #6889580 06/03/20 10:09 PM
06/03/20 10:09 PM
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| Joined:  Jan 2008 49th State
mad_mike
   trapper
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|   trapper
 
 Joined:  Jan 2008
 49th State
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I agree with missing too many with the SC 4.5’s.  They aren’t quite a wolf trap, but I have heartburn with putting a #9 or Koro in a set that will be submerged by the tide.  
 SC did previously make their #5 Which are apparently still available to add to the cart on MTP’s site.  I want to add a few to my trapping arsenal.
 
 I bought a bunch of the MB750 Wolfers, couldn’t ditch them fast enough.  Not only are they  S L O W to fire in our freeze/thaw conditions, like the SC 4.5’s, but they are scary to be in a hurry with in trapping areas you are under the gun fighting tides.  At least the SC 4.5 is somewhat corrosion tolerant, for a acceptable service life.
 
 Currently, for me, the #9 is king, followed very closely with the Koro.  I have taken more with the Kroro, because I have more of them.  The #9 works in more adverse conditions, hands down.
 
Last edited by mad_mike; 06/03/20 10:18 PM.
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|  Re: Wolf traps
[Re: trappergbus]
 #6889666 06/03/20 11:00 PM
06/03/20 11:00 PM
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| Joined:  Oct 2011 Idaho
bearcat2
   trapper
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|   trapper
 
 Joined:  Oct 2011
 Idaho
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Not familiar with the Koro, Alaska 9's are nice no doubt, but their price tag hurts.  Down here the majority of the wolves are caught in MB750s, because that is what most of the trappers have.  No doubt due to price, advertising, and the fact that the guys teaching the required wolf trapping class recommend them.  Personally while I own a dozen of them and have caught a couple wolves in them, I don't like them.  They'd be alright for dry ground wolf trapping, but for freeze/thaw and snow trapping they are one of the worst traps I've dealt with to keep operating.  On the plus side, if they grab a wolf they will hold it.  I have some SC 4 1/2s that I like quite a lot better (of course I am partial to longsprings) and their price point isn't much higher.  I know some guys down here who are catching quite a few wolves are using the NOBS traps or some TS85s modified by a local guy in Montana.  I've no experience with them however.  I've made a couple prototype traps using Bridger #9 springs and 8" inside spread round jaws, that I like quite well, but haven't caught anything in them.  So they are still in the basically untested phase, but I'm going to make a dozen or two this summer to try next trapping season.  They worked well in the freeze/thaw, come up better through the snow than the SC 4 1/2s (and obviously the 750s) and don't take up as much room to bed as the longsprings, considerably more than the mb750s though, and I've found longsprings easier to bed solidly than any coilsprings. |  |  |  
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|  Re: Wolf traps
[Re: trappergbus]
 #6889852 06/04/20 09:13 AM
06/04/20 09:13 AM
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| Joined:  Apr 2012 Southern Michigan
trappergbus
  OP trapper
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|  OP trapper
 
 Joined:  Apr 2012
 Southern Michigan
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Very interesting and informative conversation guys, thanks. What do you all use for attraction at sets? 
 Common sense catches alot of fur..
 Pay homage to all you harvest..
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|  Re: Wolf traps
[Re: trappergbus]
 #6890556 06/05/20 04:17 AM
06/05/20 04:17 AM
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| Joined:  Dec 2010 Southeast, AK  
rosscoak
   trapper
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|   trapper
 
 Joined:  Dec 2010
 Southeast, AK
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I had approx. 40 snares out and 20 traps for wolves out..This year I trapped 8, of which 2 were caught in traps...both tidal area sets..the attractant for one was Gusto and seal oil up in the V of 2 logs, with a factory new shiny Bridger 5 on drag...plopped down in fresh snow on frozen sand, was a messy set I hurriedly threw in because of tide, boat , wx issues...didn't really think it'd catch but it did. The other set was a TS 85 modified, on a rebar homemade  drag.  It was a small freshwater pool set with 3 whole herring under a rockpile by son helped me make...he was confident it would catch and it did...on the last check of the season as we pulled gear.  I am a believer in location, location, location and having the trap where they step versus the type of trap. Sold all but 2 750s recently. Bought more TS  85s after seeing how they perform in my conditions and fire thru sand and concrete. We also use  #9s in the saltwater...I'm gonna play with zinc coating here soon. We set lots of snares, gotta cork every hole they can get thru.  ![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2020/06/full-18314-51950-polish_20200605_001520721.jpg) ![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2020/06/full-18314-51951-polish_20200605_001434654.jpg) |  |  |  
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|  Re: Wolf traps
[Re: trappergbus]
 #6891778 06/06/20 09:36 AM
06/06/20 09:36 AM
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| Joined:  Apr 2012 Southern Michigan
trappergbus
  OP trapper
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|  OP trapper
 
 Joined:  Apr 2012
 Southern Michigan
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Thanks, great info. I used too get the spray zinc galvanizer from Low's but it's not in stock any more. It is very tough and might be a big help in saltwater environments. All I did to prep new traps is clean the grease off then spray. Very durable. 
 Sleepy Creek is back in production thru southern snares.
 
 Nice work
 
Last edited by trappergbus; 06/06/20 09:37 AM.
 
 Common sense catches alot of fur..
 Pay homage to all you harvest..
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