. . . The ends of the board have holes for sticks to go into and protrude upwards (not into the water) to cause the 'rat or mink to submerge and swim below it, still in the run, and into the colony trap. . . .
My take on that is that it would fall under the prohibited fencing albeit on top of said colony trap, not on sides. Might be up to a wardens interpretation?
Walt, the last bullet point in the regs regarding colony traps states the following:
You may not use a colony trap in conjunction with any fencing, netting or other material placed in the water (including other colony traps) that create an underwater obstruction designed to force or channel any wild animal into the trap. The sticks protrude above the water, not placed in the water. They create an obstacle above the water, not underwater. Therefore, no interpretation needed.
I would welcome a differing interpretation to these restrictions JO came up with back when colony traps became legal. If cited, I would then appear in court to plead not guilty by reason of reading the law and abiding by it as stated in the regs.
It's time we shucked off most of these restrictions that were put into place for no apparent reason. Worst one?
You may not place bait, including scent, in the trap or at the set location. Now if you use colony traps for just a little while, you'll discover they self-bait. A host of little guys just love fartin' around inside these things. Warden comes along, picks up the colony trap, and discovers a crawdad inside. Citation? Who placed the bait? What's the end goal here for these restrictions?
Anyway . . .