I'm curious about catching a cat in a 220 on a crossover.
You may be thinking "beaver dam crossover" which isn't what I am referring to. Down here, every lake or pond has a levee, where the crick runs into the lake. They run concrete overflow units in the lakes as opposed to culverts. So, to get from the lake to the creek, the otters and other critters have beaten down trails (almost always by the overflow dealy) that we refer to as crossovers. You can see what I am calling a "crossover" in the very first pic I posted on this thread. It's not a dam crossover, it's a levee crossover.

The crossover in that pic is not the one I caught the cat in this year, but I did catch a cat in that very same crossover another year. (It's also the one that yielded both the otter and muskrat today).
Here is perhaps a better pic of what I am calling a crossover.... You can see here the beaten down trail coming from the lake... up across the levee, and down the other side to the crick. The otters often have toilets at the top of these levees at these crossovers.
![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2026/02/full-20923-285891-otterset.jpg)
All high and dry... I hate soggy critters.

These sets cut down somewhat on incidental beavers, which I do not want. I hate everything about beaver. But sometimes the idiots still shove their heads through the 220s....
Here is the actual set the cat was caught in. You cannot really see a pronounced trail/crossover in this pic, but it was there....
![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2026/02/full-20923-285892-unnamed.jpg)
Since we moved here 12 or so years ago, my small trapline has yielded I believe 3 cats in these type of sets, otters, nutria, beaver, muskrat and once a very ticked off leg-caught coyote lol.