That was really cool thanks for sharing. I'm getting all my stuff together and getting ready for this coming trapping season. Thanks for helping me out . Bruce
Both. If I can, I try to sit pretty near it, and I pick up the droppings, but if I have trouble spotting the cage with binoculars, I may adjust the location a little bit, but still be in the vicinity of that toilet.
Thank you for the vid. Do you cover you whole state? One side to the other? How many traps do you normally set out on a line. I have seen some AZ trappers with 10 cages but their area is not really very large. Maybe 30 miles.
@@trappingspots how do you know who the land belongs to? I tried looking at BLM for maps and it didn’t really work. What is the best way to make sure I am on open land?
@@stephaniepeterson3159 I was born and raised here so I pretty much know we’re all public and private land is. However, most people and probably me to in the future; they use the OnX Hunt app. You pay a monthly fee and it tells you where all public private land boundaries are. Most hunters use it now as well as Trapper‘s.
@@trappingspots Thank you for sharing that pro tip! That is by far the best map I have seen to date. I appreciate your stance on educating the newbies to the sport and supporting growth, instead of keeping useful information a closely guarded secret.
That was really cool thanks for sharing. I'm getting all my stuff together and getting ready for this coming trapping season. Thanks for helping me out .
Bruce
Awesome. Good luck Bruce.
Nice catches and locations, when you find them big tiolets pike that do set your cages right there or away from them a ways?
Both. If I can, I try to sit pretty near it, and I pick up the droppings, but if I have trouble spotting the cage with binoculars, I may adjust the location a little bit, but still be in the vicinity of that toilet.
Thank you for the vid. Do you cover you whole state? One side to the other? How many traps do you normally set out on a line. I have seen some AZ trappers with 10 cages but their area is not really very large. Maybe 30 miles.
I cover about the middle third of the state. I normally run about eight lines and average about 40 traps.
@@trappingspots how do you know who the land belongs to? I tried looking at BLM for maps and it didn’t really work. What is the best way to make sure I am on open land?
@@stephaniepeterson3159 I was born and raised here so I pretty much know we’re all public and private land is. However, most people and probably me to in the future; they use the OnX Hunt app. You pay a monthly fee and it tells you where all public private land boundaries are. Most hunters use it now as well as Trapper‘s.
@@trappingspots Thank you for sharing that pro tip! That is by far the best map I have seen to date. I appreciate your stance on educating the newbies to the sport and supporting growth, instead of keeping useful information a closely guarded secret.
Whats a cat pelt bringing there