Re: first trapping book
[Re: whiteotter55]
#7312336
07/23/21 05:57 PM
07/23/21 05:57 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 21,600 SEPA
Lugnut
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 21,600
SEPA
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No, I don’t remember that one. My first trapping book fifty-plus years ago was titled Pennsylvania Trapping and Predator Control Methods by Paul L.Tailor.
I still have my original copy plus one I bought decades later to keep at Camp. It’s interesting to look how things were done and how things have changed since the early 70s.
Eh...wot?
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Re: first trapping book
[Re: whiteotter55]
#7312349
07/23/21 06:11 PM
07/23/21 06:11 PM
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Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 6,133 Northern Wisconsin,Rhinelander
Hodagtrapper
Muskrat Master
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Muskrat Master
Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 6,133
Northern Wisconsin,Rhinelander
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My first trapping book that I read was at the age of 8. Trap-Lines North, by Stephen Meader. Checked it out at the public library. Read it 40 plus times since. Purchased first edition, which was printed in England, and a later copy which was printed I believe for the 75th anniversary of the book and proceeds went to the Nakina, Ontario library. Visited the trapline area twice and enjoyed both visits.
Chris
>>In God we trust<<
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Re: first trapping book
[Re: whiteotter55]
#7312350
07/23/21 06:12 PM
07/23/21 06:12 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 14,719 Central Pennsylvania
Nittany Lion
Don't call me Mister, Mister
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Don't call me Mister, Mister
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 14,719
Central Pennsylvania
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Lugnut, that book is a classic. One of my first books.
I got myself a seniors' GPS. Not only does it tell me how to get to my destination, it tells me why I wanted to go there.
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Re: first trapping book
[Re: Nittany Lion]
#7313229
07/25/21 05:50 AM
07/25/21 05:50 AM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 21,600 SEPA
Lugnut
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 21,600
SEPA
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Lugnut, that book is a classic. One of my first books. This is the copy I keep at camp. I built my first set of stretchers off of the specs in this book. Also, tried most of the sets described in it at one time or another in my youth. I still enjoy thumbing through it occasionally and remembering how excited I was when I first tried some of this stuff.
Eh...wot?
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Re: first trapping book
[Re: Lugnut]
#7313336
07/25/21 09:50 AM
07/25/21 09:50 AM
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Joined: Oct 2018
Posts: 5,618 Dunbar, Wisconsin
Pike River
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Oct 2018
Posts: 5,618
Dunbar, Wisconsin
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No, I don’t remember that one. My first trapping book fifty-plus years ago was titled Pennsylvania Trapping and Predator Control Methods by Paul L.Tailor.
I still have my original copy plus one I bought decades later to keep at Camp. It’s interesting to look how things were done and how things have changed since the early 70s. Tell us what has changed
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Re: first trapping book
[Re: Pike River]
#7313989
07/26/21 06:47 AM
07/26/21 06:47 AM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 21,600 SEPA
Lugnut
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 21,600
SEPA
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No, I don’t remember that one. My first trapping book fifty-plus years ago was titled Pennsylvania Trapping and Predator Control Methods by Paul L.Tailor.
I still have my original copy plus one I bought decades later to keep at Camp. It’s interesting to look how things were done and how things have changed since the early 70s. Tell us what has changed There is a chapter dedicated to calling/hunting great horned owls which includes methods such as using crows to locate them then stalking and picking them off with a scoped rifle. Also on "driving" them similar to a deer drive. Great horned owls are protected today by both state and federal laws. The preference for stretcher board sizes seems to have turned towards narrower boards. The red fox boards specs in the book call for a bottom width of 9" on a 48" long stretcher. NAFA specs 7" at 66" long for a large fox board and FHA specs 5.25" at 60" long. Coon board specs in the book are 2" wider than NAFA specs and 3" wider than FHA specs for the same length (48"). Maybe NAFA and FHA specs were always narrow like that, I don't know. The sets described using exposed bait are illegal in PA today. The bulk set in particular was one i used to use quite a bit. You set three or four traps on drags around a pile of bait like a dead deer, deer guts or chicken butchering remains. Those are a few of the changes.
Eh...wot?
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Re: first trapping book
[Re: backroadsarcher]
#7314011
07/26/21 07:13 AM
07/26/21 07:13 AM
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Joined: Feb 2016
Posts: 4,026 Kentucky
ky_coyote_hunter
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Feb 2016
Posts: 4,026
Kentucky
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Mine was Hawbakers Trapping North American Furbearers. I think this was many trappers intro book...Have a 1974 hardcopy.
Member - FTA
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Re: first trapping book
[Re: Pike River]
#7314180
07/26/21 10:10 AM
07/26/21 10:10 AM
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Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 5,257 Idaho Falls, ID
Grandpa Trapper
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 5,257
Idaho Falls, ID
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No, I don’t remember that one. My first trapping book fifty-plus years ago was titled Pennsylvania Trapping and Predator Control Methods by Paul L.Tailor.
I still have my original copy plus one I bought decades later to keep at Camp. It’s interesting to look how things were done and how things have changed since the early 70s. Tell us what has changed I think it was in this book that said after you completed dying your traps to use the smoke of the fire on the remainder of your equipment to mask human scent on the equipment.
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Re: first trapping book
[Re: whiteotter55]
#7314189
07/26/21 10:24 AM
07/26/21 10:24 AM
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Joined: May 2011
Posts: 2,573 Garden,Michigan
Buck (Zandra)
trapper
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trapper
Joined: May 2011
Posts: 2,573
Garden,Michigan
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Trappers Partner by E.J.Dailey.Pictures were too grainy to make heads or tails out of,but to a 14 year old in the mid '70's the info it contained were gold.I read it over and over and over.
Buck(formely known as Zandra)
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Re: first trapping book
[Re: Grandpa Trapper]
#7314253
07/26/21 11:47 AM
07/26/21 11:47 AM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 21,600 SEPA
Lugnut
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 21,600
SEPA
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No, I don’t remember that one. My first trapping book fifty-plus years ago was titled Pennsylvania Trapping and Predator Control Methods by Paul L.Tailor.
I still have my original copy plus one I bought decades later to keep at Camp. It’s interesting to look how things were done and how things have changed since the early 70s. Tell us what has changed I think it was in this book that said after you completed dying your traps to use the smoke of the fire on the remainder of your equipment to mask human scent on the equipment.
That is correct. He said to cover your fire with green vegetation and smoke your pack basket by placing it on top and putting all your equipment on or around it to get as much smoke as possible. The author also recommended rubbing a few drops of fox urine into the fingers and palms of your canvas gloves to hide human odor.
Eh...wot?
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Re: first trapping book
[Re: whiteotter55]
#7314257
07/26/21 11:49 AM
07/26/21 11:49 AM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 21,600 SEPA
Lugnut
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 21,600
SEPA
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He also recommended against waxing traps except to protect them from rust over the summer months.
Eh...wot?
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