Strictly Trapping


No Profanity *** No Flaming *** No Advertising *** No Anti Trappers *** No Politics
No Non-Target Catches *** No Links to Anti-trapping Sites *** No Avoiding Profanity Filter


Home~Trap Talk~ADC Forum~Trap Shed~Wilderness Trapping~International Trappers~Fur Handling

Auction Forum~Trapper Tips~Links~Gallery~Basic Sets~Convention Calendar~Chat~ Trap Collecting Forum

Trapper's Humor~Strictly Trapping~Fur Buyers Directory~Mugshots~Fur Sale Directory~Wildcrafting

Trapper's Tales~Words From The Past~Legends~Archives~Kids Forum~Lure Formulators Forum


~~~ Dobbins' Products Catalog ~~~


Trading Post
(Please support F&T Trading Post, our sponsor for the Trapping Only Forum)



TrappersPost
Please support Trappers post, a sponsor of the Strictly Trapping Forum



Print Thread
Hop To
Muskrat trap questions #7665535
09/05/22 06:20 PM
09/05/22 06:20 PM
Joined: Dec 2021
Posts: 39
Missouri
J
Jakesdad Offline OP
trapper
Jakesdad  Offline OP
trapper
J

Joined: Dec 2021
Posts: 39
Missouri
Here's my situation. We don't normally trap muskrats and one of the farmers we trap coons and coyote on has a smallish pond that has a few muskrats in it. He wants them gone because we all know a few becomes not so few pretty quick. The only traps we have other than dps are #2 Bridger's we use for the coyotes. He has 18 duke #1 coil springs he use to use in his barn( I have no idea for what) he's offered to give us the traps to use on the muskrats. I'm just afraid they'll be a little light for drowning(going to use some type of float)Considered adding some type of weight to help in the process. Is this a doable situation? Not wanting to buy any more traps in a size (#1 1/2) that we'll rarely use. Opinions or ideas? Thanks.

Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: Jakesdad] #7665543
09/05/22 06:41 PM
09/05/22 06:41 PM
Joined: Apr 2022
Posts: 3,791
Wisconsin
G
Guss Online content
trapper
Guss  Online Content
trapper
G

Joined: Apr 2022
Posts: 3,791
Wisconsin
A 1 1/2 is fine for rats.

Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: Guss] #7665545
09/05/22 06:43 PM
09/05/22 06:43 PM
Joined: Dec 2021
Posts: 39
Missouri
J
Jakesdad Offline OP
trapper
Jakesdad  Offline OP
trapper
J

Joined: Dec 2021
Posts: 39
Missouri
I don't have any 1 1/2 just #1. Didn't want to have to buy any # 1 1/2

Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: Jakesdad] #7665577
09/05/22 07:33 PM
09/05/22 07:33 PM
Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 6,120
Northern Wisconsin,Rhinelander
Hodagtrapper Offline
Muskrat Master
Hodagtrapper  Offline
Muskrat Master

Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 6,120
Northern Wisconsin,Rhinelander
The #1 coils are not ideal but they will work with added weight attached. I cut up old 1/2" galvanized pipe into 6" lengths and attached that to chain mid length on #1 longsprings to insure a quick trip to the bottom and it works. I do like the larger target area, jaw spread and weight of a 1 1/2 though.

Chris


>>In God we trust<<
Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: Jakesdad] #7665621
09/05/22 08:25 PM
09/05/22 08:25 PM
Joined: Oct 2014
Posts: 2,011
Wisconsin
8117 Steve R Offline
trapper
8117 Steve R  Offline
trapper

Joined: Oct 2014
Posts: 2,011
Wisconsin
I have used lead decoy anchors on the chain near the trap and they don’t take up much room on the float.


Steve
WTA
NRA
Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: Jakesdad] #7665622
09/05/22 08:25 PM
09/05/22 08:25 PM
Joined: Jun 2022
Posts: 1,335
South Dakota
T
TheYouthTrapper Offline
trapper
TheYouthTrapper  Offline
trapper
T

Joined: Jun 2022
Posts: 1,335
South Dakota
Floats will work, my floats that I use are just a 24" piece of 1x12/1x13, you can use plywood also, and then 2 2x4s on edge cut at 24" going along the top. I then drill a hole in the middle and anchor it in place with a rebar electric fence post. The traps just get fence stapled to the 2x4 and they caught quite a few rats last year even with the weather we had. The #1s will work fine and you can add weight or you don't have to, I would personally if I had the material to add the weight. Apples or carrots work good for bait and then the lure can be just a normal rat lure. Good luck trapping, if you need any help building the floats you can just pm me on here.

-TheYouthTrapper

Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: TheYouthTrapper] #7665706
09/05/22 11:26 PM
09/05/22 11:26 PM
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 11,365
East-Central Wisconsin
B
bblwi Offline
trapper
bblwi  Offline
trapper
B

Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 11,365
East-Central Wisconsin
He has 18 1 Duke dbl coilsprings. If that is a small pond 9 sets for round one should be enough and move to others as needed. Take the 1 coils set two at each feed bed or toilet. Take a small piece of wire and wire the chains together about 1/3rd or half way up. That way you either have a rat in two traps or you have one for the needed weight you are looking for and you don't need to buy any traps or do any other stuff.

Bryce

Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: bblwi] #7665749
09/06/22 05:50 AM
09/06/22 05:50 AM
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 3,723
Maine
M
Mac Offline
trapper
Mac  Offline
trapper
M

Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 3,723
Maine
Just my opinion but I would borrow a handful of those #2 Bridgers from the coyote line. and use those. If you are not trying to catch and hold raccoon, you would be hard pressed to find a better muskrat trap than a #2 coil spring. Set the tension very light and you basically have a trap that will act as a body grip.

Floats are fine in the spring but few serious muskrat trappers that I personally know use them. Spring? Hard to beat floats in the spring..
Locate sign the muskrats are leaving. Small pocket sets will take a lot of muskrats. Pinned baits against the bank with a bit of grass etc. covering the overhead view of baits, set a trap against the baits with about an 1 1/2 of water over the pan. Baits: apple slices, carrots etc.
Not many critters respond to lure as well as muskrats so buy a couple different lures and use them.
Set blind sets where they leave the water.
Set heavy and clean them out fast. If he wants them all gone, it will or should not take long.
Stake securely. To be brutally honest, if you are using #2 coils I would not get all caught up in drowning cables, tangle stakes etc. Those drowning methods work fine with smaller and lighter traps. If you set good sets with light pan tension, you will not be losing muskrats. If they can move at all they will make a move to deeper water, and that is the end.
Easy peasy.

Mac



Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: Mac] #7665843
09/06/22 08:55 AM
09/06/22 08:55 AM
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 17,659
Rodney,Ohio
SNIPERBBB Offline
trapper
SNIPERBBB  Offline
trapper

Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 17,659
Rodney,Ohio
Originally Posted by Mac
Just my opinion but I would borrow a handful of those #2 Bridgers from the coyote line. and use those. If you are not trying to catch and hold raccoon, you would be hard pressed to find a better muskrat trap than a #2 coil spring. Set the tension very light and you basically have a trap that will act as a body grip.

Floats are fine in the spring but few serious muskrat trappers that I personally know use them. Spring? Hard to beat floats in the spring..
Locate sign the muskrats are leaving. Small pocket sets will take a lot of muskrats. Pinned baits against the bank with a bit of grass etc. covering the overhead view of baits, set a trap against the baits with about an 1 1/2 of water over the pan. Baits: apple slices, carrots etc.
Not many critters respond to lure as well as muskrats so buy a couple different lures and use them.
Set blind sets where they leave the water.
Set heavy and clean them out fast. If he wants them all gone, it will or should not take long.
Stake securely. To be brutally honest, if you are using #2 coils I would not get all caught up in drowning cables, tangle stakes etc. Those drowning methods work fine with smaller and lighter traps. If you set good sets with light pan tension, you will not be losing muskrats. If they can move at all they will make a move to deeper water, and that is the end.
Easy peasy.

Mac



Thats the way to go. Only problem would be if you're trying to do floats or feedbed sets because they are way to heavy, maybe the stock pre-MB versions would work, without using some sort of extra support unless its a massive feedbed/hut.

That said, 1.5s are very versatile traps that can shine for raccoons when your DPs fail as the inevitably do for raccoons.

Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: Jakesdad] #7665914
09/06/22 10:54 AM
09/06/22 10:54 AM
Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 2,479
Idaho
B
bearcat2 Offline
trapper
bearcat2  Offline
trapper
B

Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 2,479
Idaho
I've never trapped very many muskrats. Mainly because I've never trapped where there were many, and haven't targeted them since I was a kid (except throwing an occasional trap or two out when I seen muskrat sign on a beaver pond I was trapping). But I remember back as a kid 1 1/2s were considered too big for muskrats and the #1 ls was the muskrat trap, or the #1 stoploss if you had the money to buy them. Adding weight certainly won't hurt, nor will a tangle stake, although using a float that won't be necessary. I wouldn't pass up any good feedbeds or toilets because you have floats, quick, easy to set, and you don't have to try and draw the rats there with bait, they are already coming there.

Next time you order something from MTP, select their 150 bodygrip as your free gift. Get three or four of those in your possession and use them in runs next time you see rat sign where you are trapping.

Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: Jakesdad] #7666066
09/06/22 02:54 PM
09/06/22 02:54 PM
Joined: Jun 2010
Posts: 16,382
Iowa
~ADC~ Offline
The Count
~ADC~  Offline
The Count

Joined: Jun 2010
Posts: 16,382
Iowa
There's no reason those #1 coils wouldn't hold a rat. On a float, them #1's are going to drown them just fine. They'd drown on a slide wire to deeper water too.

If you can see the dens, and it's legal, build/buy a couple simple colony traps. 5x5, 6x6, or 7x7x24 is all you need. Cheap 1x2 16ga wire from a farm store, a few small zip ties to hold it together, and you're in business.

[Linked Image]

[Linked Image]

Last edited by ~ADC~; 09/06/22 03:00 PM. Reason: added pics
Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: Jakesdad] #7666294
09/06/22 09:53 PM
09/06/22 09:53 PM
Joined: Apr 2019
Posts: 833
SD
B
Bison88 Offline
trapper
Bison88  Offline
trapper
B

Joined: Apr 2019
Posts: 833
SD
ADC: that is an awesome pic! What are the dimensions on that colony trap?

Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: Bison88] #7666925
09/07/22 11:16 PM
09/07/22 11:16 PM
Joined: Jun 2022
Posts: 1,335
South Dakota
T
TheYouthTrapper Offline
trapper
TheYouthTrapper  Offline
trapper
T

Joined: Jun 2022
Posts: 1,335
South Dakota
Originally Posted by Bison88
ADC: that is an awesome pic! What are the dimensions on that colony trap?


Looks like a 6x6x24.

Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: Jakesdad] #7666938
09/07/22 11:37 PM
09/07/22 11:37 PM
Joined: Apr 2019
Posts: 833
SD
B
Bison88 Offline
trapper
Bison88  Offline
trapper
B

Joined: Apr 2019
Posts: 833
SD
I know, I can't believe he stacked 8 rats in there. They must have been flying when they hit that door!

Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: TheYouthTrapper] #7666953
09/08/22 12:21 AM
09/08/22 12:21 AM
Joined: Jun 2010
Posts: 16,382
Iowa
~ADC~ Offline
The Count
~ADC~  Offline
The Count

Joined: Jun 2010
Posts: 16,382
Iowa
Originally Posted by TheYouthTrapper
Originally Posted by Bison88
ADC: that is an awesome pic! What are the dimensions on that colony trap?


Looks like a 6x6x24.


Actually 7x7x24 I built the cage, but a buddy of mine used it to make that catch.

Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: Jakesdad] #7667428
09/08/22 06:54 PM
09/08/22 06:54 PM
Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 551
Iron Range, Minnesota
R
Ringbill5196 Offline
trapper
Ringbill5196  Offline
trapper
R

Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 551
Iron Range, Minnesota
I am not a big rat trapper, but I catch them. I have 3 doz #1 Bridger
coils and they work fine on rats and mink. Maybe a 1.5 Coil is ideal but when it works use what is available. If in doubt use 4 ft of wire and but an entanglement stick angled away 2-3 ft out. Rat swims out and wraps around and as he swims back to shore/hut he can’t get there and the angle of stick forces him under. You find this set diagramed in old trapping books when they had little #0 longs they used.

Use a variety of sets so the little rat you get to do is more entertaining for you. Pocket setswill produce coon and mink in addition to mush rats. Set houses, feed beds and even on the bottom outside a den hole. Enjoy it. Heck, a few rats in ditches while checking land sets is just plain fun. And rat carcasses are great bait for all predators.

Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: Jakesdad] #7667474
09/08/22 07:49 PM
09/08/22 07:49 PM
Joined: Nov 2012
Posts: 4,853
Frazee, MN
B
backroadsarcher Offline
trapper
backroadsarcher  Offline
trapper
B

Joined: Nov 2012
Posts: 4,853
Frazee, MN
I used #1 Northwood s coils for some time on rats and they worked just fine. The #2 Bridges will work as long as you get them drowned right away.

Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: Jakesdad] #7667520
09/08/22 09:05 PM
09/08/22 09:05 PM
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 2,626
Flint, Michigan
bhugo Offline
trapper
bhugo  Offline
trapper

Joined: May 2007
Posts: 2,626
Flint, Michigan
Like others said, #1 coils will be fine. No extra weight needed.

Colony traps is the way to go if you can get to their dens, like ADC said.


Member MTPCA, FTA and NTA
Re: Muskrat trap questions [Re: Jakesdad] #7667601
09/08/22 11:09 PM
09/08/22 11:09 PM
Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 5,514
Orergon
A
alaska viking Offline
"Made it two years not being censored"
alaska viking  Offline
"Made it two years not being censored"
A

Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 5,514
Orergon
Never saw a rat that could "swim around" with most any trap on it's foot for long enough to matter.


Just doing what I want now.

Previous Thread
Index
Next Thread

Moderated by  Drifter, Wolfdog91 

Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.1