All the young men i see today are walking into light poles looking at their cell phones. sitting in cars looking at cell phones, falling off curbs, playing fantasy something. You sir are refreshing. maybe there is hope!!!!GRIZ
Hunters are the best conservationists. Look at the lengths he has gone through to train his dogs, yet protecting the squirrels and even providing them nutrition.
Man this is such a wonderful video. I’m so impressed with these ideas. Right now I’ve just trained my goldendoodle to tree squirrels but I really want to get a true squirrel dog soon and will def use these ideas
I have recently discovered that a mature neighborhood opossum will feed from a grey squirrel carcass, so I have been saving every other grey squirrel carcass for our opossum. He actually takes the entire carcass back to his den to eat it there. I hate that Americans judge wild animals based primarily on how cute they look. At first glance, the opossum are ferocious looking but I am currently compiling a playlist that will demonstrate how harmless they are in suburban neighborhoods. Farmers with chickens could also be trapping grey squirrels and placing the carcass near their chicken coops to help protect their chickens from opossum. On the other hand, grey squirrels which look cute to many people, are extremely destructive and they are wreaking havoc in the US. I take great pride in trapping and disposing of greys. Feeding them to a harmless scavenger, makes it all the better. WRZ Delaware County, Pennsylvania USA
Also if the cup with the corn proves to be too heavy for your traps latch. you can also just place the cup or bowl in the bottom of the trap and it seems to work just as good.
The biggest thing is hanging them on the side of a tree to keep unwanted things out of the trap. I'm still catching birds according to the type bates I use.
All the young men i see today are walking into light poles looking at their cell phones. sitting in cars looking at cell phones, falling off curbs, playing fantasy something. You sir are refreshing. maybe there is hope!!!!GRIZ
Hunters are the best conservationists. Look at the lengths he has gone through to train his dogs, yet protecting the squirrels and even providing them nutrition.
I question the intelligence of hunters who protect grey squirrels.
@@ccdogpark I question your intelligence on training a squirrel dog also so I guess we’re in the same boat
@@ccdogpark lol you really hate them don’t you?
@@Volsby90
Were you high when you wrote this, genius ?
@@jeremyblackwater439
I hate the destruction they do.
I take no joy in disposing of them.
Man this is such a wonderful video. I’m so impressed with these ideas. Right now I’ve just trained my goldendoodle to tree squirrels but I really want to get a true squirrel dog soon and will def use these ideas
Great ideas. I’m working on training my first squirrel dog now. I love the ideas of the traps
Enjoyed the video good setup you have their buddy. Thought the tube was very interesting and smart way to train your dogs everything good job
Great video and awesome ideas! Definitely going to use some of these myself. Thanks!!
Sub number 101 here from Oregon. 👍
Brilliant Idea!
Reaaly cool setup! Id like too teach my dog how to hunt small game like this
Excellent video 💯
I have recently discovered that a mature neighborhood opossum
will feed from a grey squirrel carcass, so I have been saving every
other grey squirrel carcass for our opossum. He actually takes
the entire carcass back to his den to eat it there.
I hate that Americans judge wild animals based primarily on how
cute they look. At first glance, the opossum are ferocious looking
but I am currently compiling a playlist that will demonstrate how
harmless they are in suburban neighborhoods. Farmers with chickens
could also be trapping grey squirrels and placing the carcass near their
chicken coops to help protect their chickens from opossum.
On the other hand, grey squirrels which look cute to many people,
are extremely destructive and they are wreaking havoc in the US.
I take great pride in trapping and disposing of greys. Feeding them
to a harmless scavenger, makes it all the better.
WRZ
Delaware County, Pennsylvania
USA
Cool
Great idea
Where are you from? Accent sounds like south GA.
SC near Clemson uv
I got it to play very good video.
What kind of trap are you using. I’ve tried this and can’t keep my doors to stay latched when I place the trap vertical
You may have to use a pair of pliers to adjust the hook so it will lock in this position.
Also if the cup with the corn proves to be too heavy for your traps latch. you can also just place the cup or bowl in the bottom of the trap and it seems to work just as good.
How do you attach the can to the trap? I know you said screws but metal screws? Where at in can do you screw it down? Nice video.
I use a small nut and bolt. You dont need but one. I have just set the can in the bottom of trap and they usually trip it coming in or out.
@@squirreldogtraining4914 thanks....i zip tied mine since i asked and caught one today for some training.....worked great....i appreciate the video.
The biggest thing is hanging them on the side of a tree to keep unwanted things out of the trap. I'm still catching birds according to the type bates I use.
Can't get it to play .
I tell you what… dat dere is a dang spiffy set-up right dere.