Because the beaver isn't just an animal; it's an ecosystem!

Tag: beaver trapping


Fur trading days make a comeback at 4-H Center

Men made fortunes during those boom times. Few people realize that John Jacob Astor built his multimillion dollar empire by outfitting trappers and buying and selling animal pelts and hides. Fewer folks know that 13 of the 16 recognized rendezvous were held west of the Continental Divide.

Six of the gatherings took place in territory belonging to Mexico and six more at Horse Creek near what is now Daniel, Wyo. The sites were chosen to accommodate almost 2,000 men and were named for the site area.

Fast forward to the present day: the lost tradition gets reborn June 14-16 at The Furtakers of America Rendezvous at Evansville’s Vanderburgh 4-H Center. Trappers, traders and woodsmen will gather to conduct demonstrations of woodcrafting, trapping, hide preparation, root and herb identification, skinning techniques, nuisance animal control, predator calling and much more.

Talk about reliving the glory days! Evansville Indianna is having a three day rendezvous extravaganza to teach families and children  all about the glories of beaver trapping – and no I’m not kidding. Tickets for all three days are 10 dollars each. That’s  a bargain at twice the price! Remember that historic rendezvous combined some of the most dangerous, greedy men without social skills in an open space with gunfire and alcohol – you can see why they’d want a rerun to teach the kids about!

Don’t miss this opportunity to celebrate our greedy heritage of slaughter and unintended consequences! No word yet on whether Evanston plans to hold a similar ‘draught festival’ or corresponding ‘silent spring jubilee’ later in the year.

The general public is invited to join in the scheduled outdoor activities, games and crafts designed to interest children of all ages and women who are interested in participating in things like trap setting, turkey calling, knife sharpening and wildlife identification.







Lifelong trapper recalls life where the wild things are

By Eugene Scheel, Published: October 24

Check out yesterday’s Washington Post for the sepia-toned memories of wistful trapper Tom Frye who literally scraped his livelihood off the backs of the animals foolish enough to walk into his traps. I don’t know why the Post decided we need another such article at this moment in our collective lives, maybe because the AP article mentioned in passing that trapping was controversial?

“There’s not many of us left,” Tom Frye said as we talked recently at his Furnace Mountain home, above Taylorstown. For 50 years, he has trapped raccoon, skunk, mink, muskrat and beaver, from Loudoun County south to Prince William and Orange counties.

“I started out when I was 5, maybe 4, in 1940. We lived next to Bush Hall’s livery stable on West Loudoun Street [Leesburg], and this time of year, mice and rats would come out of the hay into our house. Then I started trapping muskrat in Town Branch and Dry Mill Run. I caught my first mink in the Town Branch; they were pretty much everywhere — up around Lincoln, in those streams there a lot.”

Let me get this straight – the Post is asking us to feel wistful about the lost art of trapping without ever feeling responsible for the lost species that were trapped? But obviously it was this paragraph that got my attention…

Frye’s prowess as a trapper caught the ear of Loudoun game warden T.A. Daniels when beavers began menacing wetlands. “We didn’t start seeing any beaver until the late ’60s. Just like the deer, there just wasn’t any here. They migrated from the [Potomac] river up those feeder streams.

“The mother will kick the young ones out when they’re about a year old, and they go to find a new territory upstream. They build a dam, and then they build a house [upstream from the dam]. Any time beaver hear running water, they try to stop it.

“They had cut down a half-acre of corn near Aldie [at Oak Hill Farm] and built a cornstalk home aside a stream coming into Little River,” he said. Frye laid large traps, as adult beavers weigh up to 60 pounds. “I think I caught four or five the first night. All I could carry. Caught one or two after that.”

Menacing wetlands! What an idea! No wonder something had to be done! Thank goodness you were there Tom with your beaver-crushing devices to preserve our wetlands from these fiendish aquatic rodents. Whew! Maybe with all your spare time now you can help stop all that money from menacing our banks and those  children from menacing our schools?

Oh, and Bonus Points Post for hi–jacking Maurice Sendak’s beloved title.




But I have that within which passeth show;
These but the trappings and the suits of woe.
Hamlet: Act I Scene ii

Before the beavers came to Martinez I didn’t much think about trapping or trappers. I never chained myself to a fur store or threw paint on a stole in protest. I probably thought more about the mistreatment of lab rats and rhesus monkeys (and some particularly unlucky Scotty dogs) in grad school, but I never really paid that much attention to the issue.

Of course that changed post-beaver. For years now I have reviewed articles that are both wistful and admiring about the “lowly” trapper. There seems to be an allure of the lost mountain men and a sense that killing beavers or foxes is as much apart of America’s heritage as a re-enactment of a particular battle in the Civil War, which may be true.  There are trappers who become beaver experts and start advocating for them, like Grey Owl and Connecticut’s Skip Hilliker, and trappers who just  think they’re beaver experts and spend their time spreading lies about them, like the charmer in MA, or the one in PA who said he was only killing the ‘soldier beavers‘.

I try not to react from an emotional place, and to stay focused on the fact that trappers are real people who need to earn a living and  ultimately they may become the people who install the flow devices as public opinion shifts.   Still, every now and then a trapping image or pronouncement is so stunningly  horrific to me it catches me totally off guard. Yesterday, for example, a trapper that gets no link contacted me and said he’d invented a new form of live trap and was I interested. His youtube channel showed a battlefield of beavers, and I thought really? I suggested he talk to Sherri Tippie and he wrote back that he had but that she was very unreasonable. This morning she wrote an animated response describing his trapping devotions and putting voice to my private misgivings.

Sometimes seeing these grisly images can be like a black and white photo from the holocaust, which I even hesitate to type because it implies that I think the actions are morally equivalent or their impact is the same – which I don’t. But it can be throat-closingly, indescribably, shocking – especially when I don’t expect it. Somehow I think the very existence of that shock is offensive to some people, so that they deliberately mock it or provoke it like a young boy on the playground chasing his screaming classmate with the a dead lizard. Remember Josh’s aunt? And her remark that PETA members made excellent coats?

For the record, I don’t think we should set fires to fur warehouses or butcher stores and I also don’t think we should rely reflexively on killing to solve problems.  I’ve noted before that the way we treat animals has become a kind of “false populism” where we identify which ‘tribe’ we belong to by whether or not we kill the intruder or discourage it. But this kind of tribal identification is essentially false -because we personally know there are all kinds of hunters with compassion and plenty of PETA-types without it. People are more complicated than tribes and our attitudes towards wildlife are a reflection of that complication and evolving all the time based on whether we believe we have realistic options or not.

So this week’s AP article on the pros and cons of trapping is valiant nondiscussion of the issues: you know the type – some say the earth is round, some flat, what do you think? It describes what some trappers say and describes what some members of the animal saving group Born Free says and never discusses once the issue of wildlife management in a realistic way or whether we have other tools than extermination in our arsenal. It prompted some fiery push back from the trappers in PA which prompted one of my favorite outdoor writers to reiterate his support for trapping, which prompted me to write him in frustration saying  something about everything looking like nails to men with only hammers…

Which brings us to the review in Fur Taker Magazine Sept 2011, (and no, I’m not kidding). It’s actually a positive recommendation of Mike Callahan’s Beaver solutions DVD by trapper Stephen Vantassel, which only makes sense only if we admit we’re living in a post-tribal world.

I have been a long fan of beaver pipes or beaver flow devices ever since I became convinced of their effectiveness in the late 1990s. Unfortunately a lot of people within the wildlife damage management community, including fur trappers, see these devices as threats to their way of life. I would argue that there is no necessary reason to think this way. I suggest it is better to view the pipes as just another tool in the toolbox for doing wildlife management.

Good for you, Stephen. He of course goes on to mention crazy animal rights people just so readers know he’s STILL ONE OF THE TRIBE but its hard work crossing the aisle these days so I thank you for it. In the meantime, take a lesson from the world of beavers and talk reasonably to someone who’s not in your tribe today.

LOCAL UPDATE:

Remember  the big storm back in March that wiped out the lodge and blew away the filter on Skip’s flow device? Well Moses brought it back and its been sitting in the corp yard. We’ve been watching to see when the pipe would be plugged (the filter stops the beavers from feeling the suction and plugging the pipe) and I figured since it didn’t happen all summer with  it would probably happen after the first rain. Which it did. I took this photo yesterday morning with no movement coming out of the pipe. So it has to be fixed because the dam will rise and is rising. Dave Scola says that city staff will be replacing the filter themselves any day now. So let me know if you see anything.The good news is that its winter so whatever happens the beavers will get the water back.



The body gripping traps are traps designed to kill the trapped animal quickly. They are frequently called “Conibear” traps after Canadian Frank Conibear who first constructed this type of trap in 1957. This type of trap was considered by trappers one of the greatest innovations in traps in the 20th century. Animals were quickly killed and therefore no animal could escape once caught.  Conibear traps are mostly used to trap muskrats or beaver.


Every six weeks it seems like there’s an article in some paper discussing the fact that beavers need killing but not to worry because ‘the conibear traps they use kill instantly and are very humane’. I’ve even read of trappers offering reassurance about their humanity by saying that there were never any ‘chew marks’ on the trap, meaning the animal was killed before he could struggle. Of course,  I’ve seen those bunny hugger videos about how cruel and actually UNinstant these traps are, especially for an animal that can hold its breath for 15 minutes, but I’ve been doing this long enough to realize that even though they’re shocking to me, they’d quickly be written off as unimportant PETA whimpers and ignored.

This story might just change all that.

Seems Tuesday morning David & Chrissy heard what sounded like a cat whining in distress in the backyard.

Upon investigation, the couple found a small, black cat caught in a trap on a neighboring property. The trap was attached to the fence by a hook and the cat lay ensnared between the trap’s clamps. Reaching over the fence, Atlee and Espley managed to grab the trap and then rushed to contact another area resident they thought the cat may have belonged to. The couple, with the assistance of the resident, who was not the cat’s owner, was able to release the cat, rushing the animal to Happy Cat Haven seeking medical assistance. The trap was confirmed by Miller to be a Conibear, often used to hunt small animals such as mink and beaver.


Did you get that? Not only was the cat howling for a good long while, he also lasted long enough for two neighbors to be contacted and then survived a trip to the vet.  And this was after being caught in the same trap that is supposed to kill beavers instantly and humanely! I don’t know when the last time you compared our stocky little beavers to a sleek  light-boned cat, but I have to imagine its easier to crush a cat than it is to crush a beaver.The cat received medical attention and painkillers and was still surviving well at the end of the article. Maybe the whole thing is not that instant after all.

I guess it’s a good idea that  beavers are trapped underwater, so nobody ever hears them howl.


Would like you all to know that it’s hot, dangerous, muddy work killing beavers and squirrels and raccoons for a living. But apparently it’s not thankless. June appears to be the month for weddings and inspiring tales of very manly trappers. (Hmmm…maybe all these female reporters – and trust me, the reporters are always female – are pining for their own wedding bells and dreaming about someone to kill the big spiders  in their tiny apartments.) Or maybe it’s that all of nature is looking for a place to raise its young at  this time of year. Whatever the reason, this morning from my google vantage point I can see at least three stories of trapper-porn-informercials, thinly disguised as news.

The first hales from New Jersey where Frank Spiecker’s rodent-killing muscles ripple at wildlife menacingly while he pauses to pose for the camera.

“Animal control doesn’t provide removal of wildlife from your home,” Spiecker said. “When someone calls in and says they have a squirrel in the house, provided it’s not attacking anyone, it’s the responsibility of the homeowner. They assume because they pay taxes that that’s what they get for their taxes.” A hunter since adolescence, Spiecker also was in construction for more than a decade, making him somewhat of an authority on the subject of trapping — especially indoors.

Hmmm….nice. How about this offering from Maine? I’m sure the reporter was eager to do the behind the scenes follow-up on this story.

John Bourgoin works daily to allay the fears of homeowners who call to report hearing “strange noises in the night.”

John Bourgoin was on the job in Fortune Rocks near Biddeford Pool this week, carrying a wire trap for extracting raccoons that settled in a house’s attic through a vent. “I’ve been a state-licensed trapper for 30 years. But I’ve been doing this since 1979. I started out fur trapping for pelts at age 17 with my father and grandfather.”

Too Northern for your tastes?  Consider  Mr. Burch  from Jacksonville Florida, an admitedly more rugged specimen, but one who merits his own cover story after bagging two  alligators that were harassing medical staff.

ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. — A St. Johns County alligator trapper was busy early Wednesday trapping two gators in two places.  Adam Burch caught a gator at Flagler Hospital at about 2 a.m. after the gator bit a hospital employee on the leg.

It’s a dog-eat-dog world out there, thank goodess these men are around to protect us from wildlife, and reinforce our lazy reluctance to work for real solutions. I’m thinking all these snare-bearing heart-throbs might want to do a calendar?

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