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Old farm pond beaver

Posted By: Owen156

Old farm pond beaver - 03/17/21 07:32 PM

I am trying to catch an old solitary beaver in a farm pond. He has a lodge and a 3 foot dam blocking the farm pond run around. He has a massive feed pile and is not cutting anywhere.

I tried 330's at the dam but he comes in pushing material and trips the 330's. I tried footholds on drowners at the same place and somehow he is able to trip them, but he only comes there every 3rd night. I found a feedpile and set 330's where he swims in, and now he avoids that area. Everything was blind set, no lure.

So I tried making a castor mound set on a drowner. I found a good area with trees and grass humps that would naturally block him and guide him over the trap. The last two nights he has tripped my foothold, mowed down my castor mound, and built his own 5 feet away. It appears he charges my mound from behind, judging from tracks, then goes in the water and trips my foothold. I am considering putting a 330, or snare, in place of my foothold, where he is returning to the water and moving my foothold over to his castor mound.
It seems like the castor mound is the key because he is really reacting to it. Yesterday I put his castor mound on top of mine and last night he just tore it down flat and built his mound back, so I have his attention and he thinks he has a rival.

I suspect part of my problem is trying to catch him in a #3, have #5 Bridgers that will be here on friday. I could easily kill him but its become personal that this big rat is just whipping me. I can step on his lodge and hear him swim out then in a few minutes he is swimming in easy buckshot range. Anyone have a trick they would care to share, I think snares are in order?
Posted By: Ave

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/17/21 07:42 PM

I would say to wait for those bridger 5s, and put them on the castor mound. If he trips one, he should be waiting for you the next day, unlike your number 3s. Maybe make a new mound right next to his. I have no experience with snaring beaver, hopefully someone who does will chime in. Good luck!
Posted By: Ave

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/17/21 07:43 PM

I will also add that those small pond beaver are an absolute nightmare once they are educated.
Posted By: SNIPERBBB

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/17/21 08:03 PM

Snares or 330 in place of the foothold is the way to go. No muss, no fuss. Course if he avoids those your back to footholds
Posted By: Wanna Be

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/17/21 08:15 PM

No help in catching him, but set a trail cam on video and record his antics! That would be cool to watch!!
Posted By: traprjohn

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/17/21 08:23 PM

Let him rest until the #5's get here.

Did you use breasting sticks on the deep water side of the footholds at dam break sets?
330's at dam breaks are a hard sell and low percentage set IME. BUT, when set tween 2 breaks, perpendicular to the dam, often work.
Did you tune the 330's?
Did you blend them in with local debris?
Have you made any slides of your own?

Yes, I'd also hang snares on his trail uphill from a mound, and put a foothold at waters edge....actually back about 16-18". Then you have both directions covered.

Also, Paul's leaning limb snare set in a foot or more of water is deadly and found in his dvd "Beaver Sites and Sets".

Posted By: Owen156

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/17/21 09:13 PM

Originally Posted by traprjohn
Let him rest until the #5's get here.

Did you use breasting sticks on the deep water side of the footholds at dam break sets?
330's at dam breaks are a hard sell and low percentage set IME. BUT, when set tween 2 breaks, perpendicular to the dam, often work.
Did you tune the 330's?
Did you blend them in with local debris?
Have you made any slides of your own?

Yes, I'd also hang snares on his trail uphill from a mound, and put a foothold at waters edge....actually back about 16-18". Then you have both directions covered.

Also, Paul's leaning limb snare set in a foot or more of water is deadly and found in his dvd "Beaver Sites and Sets".


I used breasting sticks, and all 330's are tuned and were blended with aquatic weed the beaver used in his dam. Everything is taking place on the farm pond dam, I made a slick slide to the castor mound. The water level is is about 2" below cresting the dam. I think I may wait for the Bridgers and put them in with the snares for a double whammy. I don't see how he can keep tripping traps unless he is breasting the trap or maybe he is missing both front feet. Footholds have been set in 2 to 3" of water with breasting sticks. I have another beaver job, waiting on the landowner to cut trees out of the road. Beavers have built a lodge on his pontoon boat.
Posted By: bhugo

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/17/21 09:20 PM

Lol, floating palace.
Posted By: traprjohn

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/17/21 10:04 PM

2-3” water sounds a lil shallow. They will be walking.
When possible set back from break the length of your forearm and hand. Offset trap about 4”.
Posted By: traprjohn

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/17/21 10:10 PM

^^^^Also I often just make slides without a mound. 2-3 on each shore.
Lure western shore sets with BTO or sac oil or Castorium.
Different at each slide.
No lure on eastern shore and set them blind.
Posted By: alaska viking

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/17/21 10:21 PM

Yep, set deeper. 6" minimum will get a front foot. Don't be afraid to go 12" for a back foot. And wait for the bigger traps. Letting him settle down can only help.
Posted By: Owen156

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/17/21 10:51 PM

I got an update from UPS and traps will be here tomorrow and will get them in Friday. I also heard from the landowner today and he leveled with me. Someone else tried and failed at getting this beaver out of the pond....so....I'm dealing with one that has a masters degree in survival. I gotta admit...this is fun...like hunting a big buck except its a buck beaver. It's usually easy...but this one has sure tested me and so far I have failed.
Posted By: Tsouth87

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/17/21 10:52 PM

Alright this is left field but I’m gonna day it anyway. What if you were to bed the #5 on dry land next to the castor mound. I’m thinking two or heck four if it that personal. He is obviously PO’d and not leaving your mounds alone, so why not bed a foothold like it was at a dirt hole set for any other animal. Just replace the dirt hole with a castor mound. Just a thought but if anyone tries this please let me know if it works
Posted By: Owen156

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/17/21 11:18 PM

Originally Posted by Tsouth87
Alright this is left field but I’m gonna day it anyway. What if you were to bed the #5 on dry land next to the castor mound. I’m thinking two or heck four if it that personal. He is obviously PO’d and not leaving your mounds alone, so why not bed a foothold like it was at a dirt hole set for any other animal. Just replace the dirt hole with a castor mound. Just a thought but if anyone tries this please let me know if it works


I can't do that. Its a farm pond dam with dog and people tracks on it.
Posted By: ~ADC~

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/18/21 12:44 AM

Way easier to snare him, but it's almost cheating because it's so easy.
Posted By: bearcat2

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/18/21 01:59 PM

Understand why you can't set the trap on dry ground there, but even underwater you can cover it with mud or old leaves and blend it in. It helps a lot with trapwise beaver. I'm a fan of front footing them personally but a hind foot will work fine. How steep are are the edges? 2-3" is fine for front footing them, they will be walking unless the ground drops away almost vertical from there. Also make sure your trap is bedded solid with no wobble in case he steps on a jaw or spring first, and offset the trap offcenter a little bit.
Posted By: traprjohn

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/18/21 02:46 PM

Originally Posted by Owen156

I can't do that. Its a farm pond dam with dog and people tracks on it.


I explain to landowners that they could help immensely by keeping dogs home and people out of the area.
This gets their attn when you are charging $25/day to check traps, which may not be happening in this case.
WHEN a customer tells me someone else trapped it, I try and get the trappers # to ask what they used so I have a clue what NOT to do.

hang a blended in snare on the mound your beaver made.

Also, t87's suggestion is what Paul teaches, to set a blind foothold on its trail with a drag hooked LOW to local sapling..... or log.

in any case Id certainly make and set several slides as I described earlier....and Paul's leaning pole snare set.

BTO is a lure most guys don't use, compared to sac oil or castor.
Posted By: Owen156

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/18/21 03:37 PM

There didnt appear to be any movement last night due to multiple storms coming through. I pulled my #3's and will leave it alone till monday. Then I will reset with #5's and snares. I made 3 more slides with mounds and found a big mound of his hidden due to a briar thicket. I made a slide and mound several feet away so tonight he should get bent out of shape. Two of the slides are perfect for snares. I have another pond to trap and may use castor from those beaver on this one.

This beaver is strange in that he doesnt seem to leave the water for more than a foot to make a mound or repair a dam break. There are no out of water trails, in fact, the pond is surrounded by soybean fields and there are no trails that he used last year to eat the beans. Landowners says he's been a resident for over two years. I've trapped alot of farm pond beavers this year that were destroying soybean and corn fields, but not this guy. He swims fine but I wonder if he has a problem with front legs, or lost both to the last trapper.
Posted By: Yukon John

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/19/21 01:49 AM

I have (I believe, anyway) an elusive beaver myself. No new chews for a few days, but there are just too many little things happening to my sets (snares). I deactivated everything today, I'm gonna give it a few days, and see what happens.
Posted By: KJD357

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/19/21 04:03 PM

I’d just shoot it and be done with it before he burrows a hole thru the dam and then you’re in a real pickle
Posted By: Owen156

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/24/21 08:21 PM

Well it seems my beaver has left the pond. I pulled sets for 4 nights, then returned and reset. I was concerned because my dam break had not been repaired, but one of my castor mounds had been mowed down. The landowner and a friend came in and did a little target practice with a shotgun and AR15. They were about 75 yards from the lodge, with the lodge downrange. I suspect that was all that beaver could take and he left for greener pastures. I'm leaving snares in for a couple more days then moving to a pond with a lodge built on a pontoon boat.
Posted By: Golf ball

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/24/21 09:09 PM

We need to see that !
Posted By: Ave

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/24/21 10:21 PM

Originally Posted by Owen156
Well it seems my beaver has left the pond. I pulled sets for 4 nights, then returned and reset. I was concerned because my dam break had not been repaired, but one of my castor mounds had been mowed down. The landowner and a friend came in and did a little target practice with a shotgun and AR15. They were about 75 yards from the lodge, with the lodge downrange. I suspect that was all that beaver could take and he left for greener pastures. I'm leaving snares in for a couple more days then moving to a pond with a lodge built on a pontoon boat.

It wouldn’t surprise me. Sometimes smart beaver just won’t put up with stuff, and they leave. I’ve seen it a few times before. Last year I caught a decent male, and missed the female the next night. I kept trying, but within a week the sign dried up, and there hasn’t been a beaver in that pond since.
Posted By: Willy Firewood

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/27/21 04:53 AM

Traprjohn $25 per day to check traps???

I would bet that the target practice included shooting into the beaver house.The beaver was probably killed.
Put out some trail cameras to watch for beaver.
Posted By: Owen156

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/27/21 01:42 PM

I will check back in a few days and see if the dam break has been fixed.
Posted By: traprjohn

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/27/21 10:15 PM

Originally Posted by Willy Firewood
Traprjohn $25 per day to check traps???

yessir, that's the starting price for ADC work, IF there are other jobs nearby,
Posted By: Willy Firewood

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 03/29/21 12:45 AM

I understand that you are charging for ADC work.
I questioned $25 because my truck will not start for that price.
Posted By: Owen156

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 04/01/21 09:57 PM

I checked on the old beaver yesterday and he is still MIA, dam break is still flowing wide open.
Posted By: traprjohn

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 04/02/21 12:03 AM

I’d make another break or 2 if it was me.
Posted By: Owen156

Re: Old farm pond beaver - 04/02/21 03:24 AM

Originally Posted by traprjohn
I’d make another break or 2 if it was me.

Its a real strange situation. His dam is a small, about 10 foot long dam, on top of the pond dam, so there is really no where else to make a break. I looked at the lodge and it doesn't show any sign of maintenance, no new mud or sticks. I checked an area he was feeding in and both runs are completely silted in, no evidence of him entering or leaving and no new chewed sticks. I'm convinced he is gone, but will check again in a couple of weeks.
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