Recently I saw a short video that featured trapper Robert Waddell trapping in, believe, Kansas. ( Part 1 and 2 )
It was titled- The Management Advantage, It is shown on : YouTube.
When you're sidelined, you have a lot of time to stare at the ceiling, four walls , or at times, even the internet.
I 've never met Robert Waddell, but I do know people who do know him, have trapped with him, etc.
When you've been around this industry for a good while, you either know most of the 'who's who' or know someone who does.
The videos were well-made and straight forward covering many of the things I personally believe in and have used over the years.
Many of the shots appeared to be done with a Drone. Which gave you a better sense of the overall area and why he chose a certain location.
Well done, IMO.
One of the things he discussed was human scent control.
Robert who set all his coyote traps, bare-handed, dismissed human scent control as 'hogwash'. ( not the term he used verbatim )
I agree. Anyone who believes otherwise is showing you where he is at in his coyote education .
Good trappers can get away with more and do more with less.
The one thing I did note, was how beat up his hands were. . .which gloves perhaps may have prevented.
Secondly, he doesn't skin all his coyotes and that is something I stopped doing long ago.
He points out (and shows) many of the coyotes, the flaws in their pelts stating they aren't worth skinning for that reason.
The grade of the coyotes is extremely important.
Some of which have very little value in today's market.
I concur.
Most of the coyotes I kill, I never skin.
I never even put them in the truck.
Many trappers who come out to run with me will tell you I have piles of the rotting carcass', regardless of the time of year.
Many trappers I know, do exactly the same.
Damage control, after all, isn't fur trapping.
I'm not so much a 'fur trapper' anymore as I am a 'gun for hire'.
I trap for money, or I don't do it.
The fur market is shot by comparison to what it once was.
Many of the coyote trappers I know, many of which travel out of state, do so for money paid.
Especially when the target animal is coyotes.
I know trappers that do beaver control, and only cut out the castors.
They are paid to kill beavers year-round when a beaver has little value.
All in the name of 'control'.
Some of them, never skin a single one.
When you see a man, ( who traps professionally ) with a barn side covered in pelts, he most likely has something to sell you. ( imo)
( * this doesn't apply to part-timers)
Many of the coyotes I see trappers skin aren't the money to skin and put up, much less process one at the tannery.
That's done for show.
Looks more impressive to see a hundred coyotes hanging, than it does fifty, even though the fifty were the only ones worth skinning. ( J S )
Many of the best trappers are not in print ( or in this day and age, film )
LT G