Gearing up for the season and making an inventory of equipment. I had the question, hopefully for the benefit of many trappers, what your favorite snare support is for coyote snares on trails.
I've used all four of these, some more than others, and they all work. the simple 9 wire bent in a U and driven into the ground is simple, easy to hide and effective. The small rod with the 9 wire extension is the same. However they both require a stake or some other attachment for the snare, post, tree, stake, etc.
The stake with the 9 wire gives you the snare support and an anchor for the snare but doesn't get the coyote away from the set area unless you use an extension. Which is not a problem. I like an extension.
The kill pole I've used probably more extensively than any of the others. I had great success with it in the 90s in Eastern Washington before we lost trapping with traps and snares. I snared a lot of sage brush and grass strips, often making weed eater X trails across grass strips and baiting the middle. They worked great in those situations.
I had heard you could snare really open with them and one day the opportunity presented itself to test that theory. I was traveling between ranches on a railroad service road and found a little draw in which the grass and sage brush had been burned up for a couple hundred yards up a small draw. Probably a spark from the train or a cigarette from a rail worker. In the bottom of the draw was a thin little trail through the ash and some coyote tracks. I had to drive by every check so thought I might as well give the kill poles a shot. The set was just a bare kill pole next to the trail through the ashes with the snare hanging out in all its glory. The next check I had a coyote. Thinking that had to be a fluke, I moved the kill pole up the trail a little and hung a fresh snare. Next check had another coyote. I didn't take anymore there that season so I'm convinced I caught the two dumbest coyotes that ever lived.
Fast forward to last season, my first season of coyote trapping after moving back from Alaska. I used the kill poles quite a bit but despite them being fairly well camouflaged, had more refusals than I ever experienced in Eastern Washington. So I had to start using the 9 wire bent in a U and started seeing very few refusals. I was using 5/64 snares just as I did back in the 90s.
I will be trying a mix of all four systems this season but would be curious to find out what is everyone's favorite. And perhaps there are other options I haven't considered. I like all the aforementioned because they are all pretty fast to set up.
I snare pretty open country with some timber mixed in but mostly open wheat and cattle country. I don't snare when cattle are sharing the same field.
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