Tree rats!

Oh thanks. I didn’t read the posts above mine. I used a Havahart. And I’ve trapped a possum and bird too in to!

No cages!!! Spread throughtout the orchard on batches. They learn that “this restaurant does not measure up” and don’t come back.

… and they run for the hills.

BUT, I prefer my .25 cal Benjamin Marauder pellet rifle - got a new Red Dot for it . SBD …silent but deadly.

Mike

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I caught one this morning in this. Lots of good reviews on Amazon but was more expensive there. The Kania looked way to hard to set for me. Many folks who wrote reviews for the WCS tube trap recommended chunky peanut butter and sunflower seeds. Worked.
I mounted the tube on a board, put holes in the board to hang on a wall to make unloading the prey into a grocery bag easier. Ugh. I also put 2 screws in the side of the board to hold the grocery bag while I released the prey. Double ugh.

Do you mount the trap horizontally?

I don’t really ‘mount’ the trap to catch the squirrel; only to unload it from the trap and then it is mounted on a nail and hangs vertically with a bag attached to catch the dead squirrel as it slides out of the tube when I release the snare. I just caught another this afternoon. I’ll post a picture next time I unload one.
Edit: But you can mount the trap on a tree vertically to avoid catching undesirable prey, like maybe stray cats (?) and it supposedly works well that way too.

I have been using Conibear for squirrel control. The caveat is that you will need fairly strong hands to set them.
http://www.amazon.com/Duke-Single-Spring-Muskrat-Weasel/dp/B0047EDBZ6

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JustAnne4 – how do you keep the bait in the trap if you mount i vertically? I may pick one of these up to add to my arsenal.

Good price but not good if there are dogs or cats around. Squirrels have been a big problem this year for me, possibly because of the mild winter. A bait that causes sterilization would be nice to have for long term control.

Here is the trap. I smear chunky peanut butter on the board and on both sides of the trigger pan inside. Then I throw some sunflower seeds around to bring them in. Supposedly squirrels are attracted to enclosures like this.

I don’t think the smeared peanut butter will go anywhere if hung vertically.
I drilled a hole on both ends of the board (shown in the foreground of the picture) for mounting when releasing the prey . You’ll see one screw in the side edge of the board around the middle and there is also one on the other side. That is where I hang the grocery bag (when hung vertically) so that when I pull the snare back the squirrel just falls right in the bag.

Great picture! I am going to pick one of these up today to try out. I like the fact that it masks the dead squirrel from prying eyes. That’s the only downside I see with the Kania traps.

I use peanuts in the shell, unsalted. I tie one to the trip bail with a twist tie, as well as placing more behind a screen in the bait compartment at the rear for a good smell. It really seems to lure them.

I happen to have a fence (squirrel highway) next to the peach tree they raid. So I mount it just below the top, with the opening angled down about 20 degrees. They smell it when they scurry by heading for the peach tree or elsewhere.

Yeah, you can see the carcass hanging out. Makes it easy to see from inside the house when it needs to be emptied. It isn’t ideal for the front yard, however.

To those of you using lethal traps how are you disposing of the cacasses? Does general trash exept that?

Our trash service never looks to see what’s in there, and they’ve never asked; I don’t think a squirrel/rat carcass is any different to the landfill than a leftover chicken or roast leavings.

A friend gives his carcasses to the university, which feeds them to birds; some people compost them, and some good recipes are available for those so inclined.

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Apple tree fertilizer.

Well, I capture them (dead) in a grocery bag as described above, and double knot the top and toss it in the trash. So I guess it gets ‘buried’ in the trash pits. When I used to use poison (warfarin or vitamin D) they would die someplace around and sometimes I would smell it rotting, ugh. So removing them for burial elsewhere is a better solution for me.

Anne, I had one of those tube traps but I never caught anything in it. It looks like the same design, but the latch seemed too stiff, it would never fire.

I have been using Kania traps for 6-8 years now. They are the most reliable method I found. I once trapped a bird and once a raccoon but other than that it has been squirrels only, hundreds of them. They need regular baiting as birds will steal the bait (they are generally too light to trigger the trap). http://kania.net

Hey Scott,
You are right. It takes time to see how to set the ‘hair’ trigger. I can’t set it in the garage and then place it out in the yard or sometime in that process it can go off. I made a little jig to help me set the trap in situ because I don’t have the hand strength of a man. I think the hair trigger setting skill is more important than the baiting and it does take practice. Might give it another try. You can’t have too many traps. :wink:

Anne the tube trap rocks!!! I purchased one after reading this and have gotten a thief every day since it arrived! The trigger takes some muscle to set but so far it has worked like a charm!! Thanks for the awesome recommendation!

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My tube traps arrived today after Anne’s post. Going to set them right now, in fact. Now, if I can just figure out how to keep the birds out of my trees (too many trees to net), then I’m golden.

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Anne I looked more closely at your trap and it has a different trigger mechanism than the one I have. Mine I can set easily but it never goes off, the sqirrels would just steal all the bait. These newer ones sound a lot better than the old ones.