Re: Near death beaver trapping stories.
[Re: Oakey]
#8137809
05/11/24 10:12 PM
05/11/24 10:12 PM
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Joined: Jan 2007
MN
160user
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2007
MN
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I would guess that thin ice has claimed the most Beaver trappers by far.
I have nothing clever to put here.
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Re: Near death beaver trapping stories.
[Re: Oakey]
#8137827
05/11/24 10:36 PM
05/11/24 10:36 PM
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Joined: Nov 2007
St. Cloud, MN
trapperkeck
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Nov 2007
St. Cloud, MN
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I was trapping the Missouri river on the NE/SD border right after ice-out. I was out of the boat in chest waders walking to a likely spot for a crawl out set and stepped off a shelf from 3' of water to 12'. Thank God I made a grab for my Jon boat and grabbed the gunwale. I was neck deep in water with substantial current but made it back in the boat and survived the 2 mile run back to the boat ramp. It was 45-50 degrees that day. I swear, it took me two weeks to warm up!
"The voice of reason!"
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Re: Near death beaver trapping stories.
[Re: Oakey]
#8137840
05/11/24 11:02 PM
05/11/24 11:02 PM
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Joined: Dec 2012
S E Idaho
Jmack
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2012
S E Idaho
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Fell through the ice up to my shoulders while crossing a pound over to a beaver house. Was around 11 mile snowmobile ride back to the truck and by myself. Temps were chilly but nothing crazy. Showbibs were pretty stiff by the time I got back to the truck then 20 minute drive back to home.
The first requisite of a good citizen in this republic of ours is that he shall be able and willing to pull his own weight. Theodore Roosevelt
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Re: Near death beaver trapping stories.
[Re: Oakey]
#8137855
05/12/24 12:02 AM
05/12/24 12:02 AM
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Joined: Aug 2011
james bay frontierOnt.
Boco
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Aug 2011
james bay frontierOnt.
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Wouldnt say near death but was checking under ice beaver traps at 55 below zero and froze my lung working (chizelling) went to doc with Pneumonia like condition,doc said small part of lung got frozen,Doc gave some antibiotics to keep from getting infection while it healed up. Been in water many times trapping beaver,not a problem since always carry change of clothes when under ice beaver trapping alone and remote on skidoo.A normal safety precaution here,along with fuzees to start fire.
Last edited by Boco; 05/12/24 12:06 AM.
Forget that fear of gravity-get a little savagery in your life.
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Re: Near death beaver trapping stories.
[Re: Oakey]
#8137926
05/12/24 07:39 AM
05/12/24 07:39 AM
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Joined: Apr 2016
Labrador, Canada
crosspatch
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Apr 2016
Labrador, Canada
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Never near died but would now if it happened. Early '80's and I am about 30 years old in early December. Driving a 12 Elan skidoo at night to check beaver traps. Topo map says beaver house was 2 miles from the road. Half way there put the skidoo through the ice on my old track from previous check. Grab axe* and jump off into waist deep water. Walk the mile back to truck and drive back to town and get a buddy and his 12 Elan skidoo. We go back mile across pond to my skidoo. I jump in again, up to waist, to grab the skidoo and he is pulling from shore. We get it out and haul it back to road with us both on his little 12 Elan. Next day thawed out skidoo and got it going same day. Never though much about it. Good example what being young can do. Not sure would survive one mile night walk over ice back to truck now let alone go back same night and jump in again to get skidoo.
Seems to me you can not do any amount of frozen weather trapping by yourself without having had similar experiences. Imagine many can identify. If you're gonna be dumb then you gotta be tough lol.
* My axes are always on side of running board on skidoos in a bracket for that reason. Works on gravity and NEVER comes off on its own. Easy one grab and go for emergencies and just ordinary work. No messing around with retainers of any sort to get an axe. Number one tool along with properly packed matches + lighter on you for cold weather emergencies.
Last edited by crosspatch; 05/12/24 08:09 AM.
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Re: Near death beaver trapping stories.
[Re: Oakey]
#8138005
05/12/24 10:52 AM
05/12/24 10:52 AM
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Joined: Jan 2009
Idaho, Lemhi County
Gulo
"On The Other Hand"
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"On The Other Hand"
Joined: Jan 2009
Idaho, Lemhi County
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Not specifically beaver, this was otter. Could have been beaver. Could have been disaster.
The next morning, with all the familiar necessities completed, I departed the frozen river in front of my house at about 10 a.m. I flew east, hoping to cut the tracks of the Dog Puke Lake Wolf Pack. Weather was shaping up to be perfect, as advertised. I hadn’t gone more than about twenty miles when I spotted a set of tracks along a drainage, with the little stream alternately cutting through patches of black spruce, then opening into a series of beaver-dammed ponds. I dropped down another hundred feet or so until I could easily read the sign. Obviously, I was initially mistaken, in that the tracks had been made by a group of three or four river otters, not wolves. Just as I was about to flare off and resume my quest for wolf tracks, I noticed a pair of otters cavorting in a small blackfish hole in the ice of a large pond not more than two hundred feet from me. A hasty decision to harvest a $60 or $70 otter (a bird in hand . . .) meant that the wolf hunting could wait another half hour. I circled around and found an easy place to settle the plane onto the snow-covered ice of the pond.
After throwing the engine cover over the cowling, I grabbed the snowshoes and little .222 Remington and started the hundred-yard walk toward the open hole. I could still see the group of otters periodically periscoping up and down in the blackfish hole (open lead). When no more than thirty yards from the hole, I kicked out of the snowshoes, plopped my rear end on one shoe and stuck the other, tail-first, into the snow. Perfect rest for the rifle. I waited several minutes for an adult otter to hop out of the blackfish hole onto the shelf ice, centered the crosshairs, and touched off a round.
Blackfish are an interesting critter. They are a relatively small fish (usually less than six inches, at least in that part of Alaska). They usually live in stagnant ponds and sloughs, where, once the ice and snow are thickening, the dissolved oxygen content of the water diminishes to near zero. However, these fish have adapted over countless eons in these subarctic ponds, and have come up with an adaptive solution. They are able to gulp free air, thus maintaining their ability to oxygenate their blood and preserve their health. Often, by the time winter is waning, the ice covering on their ponds may be in excess of five or six feet, with another couple of feet of snow on top of that. Without their propensity to keep open holes in the ice, they would indeed be doomed. However, these open holes are maintained by constant activity of the fishes chiseling away with their micro-sized teeth, and simply their frenetic activity jumping and cavorting at the holes, limiting the amount of ice that is able to build. There are often hundreds, maybe thousands, of blackfish constantly moving the water at an open hole, disallowing the hole to freeze over. Other species of wildlife certainly take advantage of this open water. Ravens periodically congregate, picking off an easy meal as the fish jump from the water to gulp oxygen. I’ve seen commonly where otters take advantage of the only open holes in an otherwise ice-locked pond as an access portal to open water for hunting pike, whitefish, or even the blackfish themselves.
The otter slumped immediately, but as I slipped back into the snowshoes, the critter started kicking its hind legs, which slipped him back off the ice shelf and into the water. As I approached, the kicking action in the water further propelled it into the center of the little open lead. I kicked out of one snowshoe and picked it up, reaching with the snowshoe to coax the now-dead otter back to the ice-edge so I could grab it. Unthinking, I put weight on my un-snowshoed leg as I tried to retrieve the otter. With absolutely no warning, the ice I was standing on collapsed and I was immediately engulfed in thirty-two-degree swampwater. Each time I kicked to get my upper torso onto the ice, that ice would again give way. It seemed like a minor eternity (but which I suspect was actually no more than thirty seconds), and I finally was able to exit the unscheduled bath.
I slipped into the snowshoes once again, grabbed the otter, and hurried back to the plane. I was soaked through quite thoroughly, and remember thinking to myself how (This word is unacceptable on Trapperman) heavy arctic insulated coveralls and a down jacket were when they were soaked through. The airplane was a mere hundred yards away, but it seemed a mile. I threw the rifle, snowshoes, engine cover, and otter in the back seat and was relieved when the little Lycoming sputtered and started on about the fourth or fifth pull. With the engine running, I hopped in and quickly went through the checklist and was airborne in a matter of seconds.
There was no questioning my plans for the remainder of the day. I didn’t need to even glance at the OAT gauge (outside air temperature) to know that it was minus twenty-five or thirty, and turning for home was the only prudent course of action. Home was only about thirty minutes back to the west. A SuperCub cockpit, even without bunny boots and grossly thick winter attire, is fairly cramped quarters. I was huddled in that cockpit, heading home. The air temperature inside the plane was marginally warmer than the outside air, but still, my water-soaked parka and insulated bibs were freezing stiff in no time. Without making a preliminary circle over my landing spot on the frozen river in front of my house, I brought the plane to ground (ice, actually) and quickly taxied into my tie-down spot. With my right elbow, I released the doors to exit the plane. It was then I realized that I was frozen in a sitting position, my thick clothes maddeningly disallowing me to change positions and my butt frozen into the seat of the plane. I wiggled and shook myself with as much energy as I could muster, and finally tore my frozen butt cheeks off the seat. No way in (This word is unacceptable on Trapperman) could I get my feet out of the plane for a “normal” exit, despite my herculean efforts. At this point, I was pretty exhausted, and decided the only way I was going to get out of the ’Cub was to simply fall, in the sitting position, out the door on my right side. Of course, when I made the half-hearted lunge out the door, my noggin made solid contact with the wing lift-strut, and, even through my thick otter hat, I felt the lump. A few short minutes later, the blood was trickling down my face.
Now I was lying on the ice, still in a frozen sitting position, blood staining the immediately surrounding snow. Again, energy that I thought was long ago depleted enabled me to right myself, and, still in the sitting position, I was able to duck-walk up the river bank and crawl the twenty yards to my front door.
Crossing the threshold, a warm house never felt so good. At the time, it wasn’t all that comical. Looking back on it now, though, with a different perspective, I just shake my head and chuckle.
Last edited by Gulo; 05/12/24 10:54 AM.
Books for sale on Amazon, Barnes & Noble etc. Poetic Injustice The Last Hunt Wild Life Long Way Home
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Re: Near death beaver trapping stories.
[Re: Oakey]
#8138038
05/12/24 12:38 PM
05/12/24 12:38 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
beaverpeeler
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
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That's one heck of a great tale Gulo! Thanks for sharing that.
I got nothing to match that, but have certainly had plenty of swims over the year for various reasons. Usually just my boat drifting off while I have my back to it engrossed in making a set. A couple of times cruising along at full speed (about 20 mph) hitting a submerged log or something and getting jettisoned out of the boat. One time I had just made the boat ramp when my motor died and before I could get it started the current ran me sideways into a partially submerged widow-maker (tree leaning out into the water). The jon boat instantly had water come over the side flipping the boat and me somehow ending up between the hull of the boat and the widow-maker and all the river pressure pinning my body hard between the two. It was one of the rare instances that I had my trap shed helper with me that day who had already disembarked at the ramp and who ran the 300 yards downstream to where I was stuck and helped get the boat off me from the bank. That was kind of a thrilling experience.
My fear of moving stairs is escalating!
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Re: Near death beaver trapping stories.
[Re: Oakey]
#8138059
05/12/24 02:34 PM
05/12/24 02:34 PM
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Joined: Aug 2013
Firth, Nebraska
jabNE
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Aug 2013
Firth, Nebraska
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The last time I ever wore a dumb pack basket too. Had a small beaver in it and couple traps, hatchet, etc. Slipped and went through the ice on my back and couldn’t get that dam heavy thing off fast enough to get my head back up above water. Jim
Money cannot buy you happiness, but it can buy you a trapping license and that's pretty close.
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