Is this Interior alaska? Nice video, i remember snaring a few coyotes on the Tanana river with the same kind of sled.....did you make that underseat compartment yourself?
Good coyote , I shoot them between the jaw and the ear sorta like in the jtop jaw muscle and then that way there is hardly any blood at all . Seems to work really good . I find some head shots are too much blood to deal with . IMO !!
I have to agree with Tossdart. Bullet to the brain as quickly as possible. Wouldn't be that many opportunities you would have to dispatch one anyway. A couple of busted skulls, but a more efficient and effective kill.
@oldfish1234 well considering i can get 20 bucks for a coyote skull while fur prices for coyote around the country aren't much more than that i'll stick to shooting them in the heart.....30 seconds is not a long death, thanks for the feed back tho
@oldfish1234 the coyote was dead in seconds the reason why you dont shootem in the head because of all the blood it quicker behind the shlulder because there is less nerves.
snaring coyotes sounds kinda unethical but i understand if your live in a heavy wooded area . i only hunt fields. feels more like the fair chase thing to do. just my opinion though
@corylehman1 well hunting is hunting and trapping is trapping.....i wouldn't really call trapping fair chase as your not really chasing, however the animals are smart and dont always get caught.......i have done a lot of calling in this area and have yet to call one in...i think too many people go out there and call as it is easily accessible public property.....but a certain number of animals need to be taken out of the ecosystem each year, trapping takes over where hunting stops
@79Testo In many places footholds are much more effective at catching fox and coyotes..however where i live in alaska we get quite a bit of snow and often have several periods of freeze and thaw during the winter which can put foot holds out of commission. with snares all you have to do is raise or lower the snare according to snow depth...sometimes they will lock up if we get some freezing rain but usually stay working for the entire season, or until some critter comes along and tangles it up
@79Testo well as far as i know a properly waxed foothold that stays clear and dry will work at severely low temps -50 to -70 and such......you can effectively use footholds in the snow, however they require alot of up keep and digging out if you continue to get snowfall....i know guys who use them alot for lynx and marten in cubby sets where the trap is protected from snowfall....also windblown ridges are great places to use leg holds for wolves using pee post or dirt hole sets
Well having grown up on a trapline I am concerned to see a snare of much longer length than goes around the head of animal. As well your shot should go in ear hole exactly & out the other this way he won't then still wait around to die. A very poor example & I am sorry to see this.
@Tossdart i agree....i will never extend a snare that long again, i am sure that the straight pulling caused the snare to fur up and not deliver a quick kill...i have since moved to using only 30-34 inches of 1/16 cable swiveled on 11 gauge wire and anchoring as high as possible.. the next video shows that set up...however on the shooting in the head i disagree...i collect skulls therefore shooting them in the head would be counterproductive
I prefer head shots. They do bleed a little more but the animal is brain-dead instantly and unaware of the dying process. Also, face fur is worth much so you don't have to sew up the hole.
im new to trapping and i have some questions about snaring. i like the baited snaring, but can you find a thick thicket and throw some bait and make it to where there are only a few ways to the bait and place the snare in the way?
@DiabloFlames557 well realistically i'd go with the 25.06......but i'd like to see what a .50 would do to one if hit one.....then again my .338 might put a nice sized hole in one too
I'd be real interested to see a video of how you set your snares. Good work! I'm looking into to snaring some of my own, and would appreciate some pointers.
I had a small bait maybe seventy yards away. I do my best to walk off the trails the animals are using, which usually means alot of snow down the back of my coat. I dont use any lure near the snare itself. Maybe at the beginning of the trail or down the trail anyways. I want them walking with their head up and not looking or sniffing around near my sets. The faster they are walking the better.
@TheSnakeeater09 ...no i dont' use any lure around the snares....just the bait pile...and i try to not walk on the trails the animals use if at all possible
i gonna blow evrey coyotes head off for what they did to my cat and dog.three tools 12 gauge,snares and my bowie knife
MegaJt2000 1 week ago
Is this Interior alaska? Nice video, i remember snaring a few coyotes on the Tanana river with the same kind of sled.....did you make that underseat compartment yourself?
slimkillac 3 weeks ago
I hate coyotes! They kill pets, livestock, and even trash cans! What kind of gun, 22LR?
zxeros 1 month ago
fucking piece of shit heartless cruel soulless sub-human! I hope someone shoots you in the head!
Bruineca 1 month ago
Good coyote , I shoot them between the jaw and the ear sorta like in the jtop jaw muscle and then that way there is hardly any blood at all . Seems to work really good . I find some head shots are too much blood to deal with . IMO !!
BigGameOutfitters 2 months ago
Great video, great meal!
willghass 2 months ago
Is that the harmless snare??
MyMarley3 3 months ago
@MyMarley3 no it was just really long and didnt' pull right so the lock got furred up and i think that once it got tangle up there it stopped pulling
sniperbate 3 months ago
@sniperbate you really shold use a harmless snare im a hunter and fisher but you should use harmless snares
MrRandomVideos012 2 months ago
@MrRandomVideos012 the idea is for the snares to kill them before i get there so harmless would kinda be counter productive
sniperbate 2 months ago
@sniperbate I would like to snare your goofy fuckin ass.
rd2fst 2 weeks ago
Oh he was so cute as well
createrman1999 3 months ago
I have to agree with Tossdart. Bullet to the brain as quickly as possible. Wouldn't be that many opportunities you would have to dispatch one anyway. A couple of busted skulls, but a more efficient and effective kill.
oldfish1234 3 months ago 2
@oldfish1234 well considering i can get 20 bucks for a coyote skull while fur prices for coyote around the country aren't much more than that i'll stick to shooting them in the heart.....30 seconds is not a long death, thanks for the feed back tho
sniperbate 3 months ago
@oldfish1234 the coyote was dead in seconds the reason why you dont shootem in the head because of all the blood it quicker behind the shlulder because there is less nerves.
TheKota76 3 months ago
snaring coyotes sounds kinda unethical but i understand if your live in a heavy wooded area . i only hunt fields. feels more like the fair chase thing to do. just my opinion though
corylehman1 3 months ago
@corylehman1 well hunting is hunting and trapping is trapping.....i wouldn't really call trapping fair chase as your not really chasing, however the animals are smart and dont always get caught.......i have done a lot of calling in this area and have yet to call one in...i think too many people go out there and call as it is easily accessible public property.....but a certain number of animals need to be taken out of the ecosystem each year, trapping takes over where hunting stops
sniperbate 3 months ago
@sniperbate
Are snares more effective on catching coyote and Red Fox than foot holds?
79Testo 3 months ago
@79Testo In many places footholds are much more effective at catching fox and coyotes..however where i live in alaska we get quite a bit of snow and often have several periods of freeze and thaw during the winter which can put foot holds out of commission. with snares all you have to do is raise or lower the snare according to snow depth...sometimes they will lock up if we get some freezing rain but usually stay working for the entire season, or until some critter comes along and tangles it up
sniperbate 3 months ago
@sniperbate
I hear you.
We get snow here too but winter is not that hard here like Alaska.
At what temperature do footholds start to not work properly?
(without snow)
No doubt snow writes off foot trapping for the season
79Testo 3 months ago
@79Testo well as far as i know a properly waxed foothold that stays clear and dry will work at severely low temps -50 to -70 and such......you can effectively use footholds in the snow, however they require alot of up keep and digging out if you continue to get snowfall....i know guys who use them alot for lynx and marten in cubby sets where the trap is protected from snowfall....also windblown ridges are great places to use leg holds for wolves using pee post or dirt hole sets
sniperbate 3 months ago
Well having grown up on a trapline I am concerned to see a snare of much longer length than goes around the head of animal. As well your shot should go in ear hole exactly & out the other this way he won't then still wait around to die. A very poor example & I am sorry to see this.
Tossdart 4 months ago
@Tossdart i agree....i will never extend a snare that long again, i am sure that the straight pulling caused the snare to fur up and not deliver a quick kill...i have since moved to using only 30-34 inches of 1/16 cable swiveled on 11 gauge wire and anchoring as high as possible.. the next video shows that set up...however on the shooting in the head i disagree...i collect skulls therefore shooting them in the head would be counterproductive
sniperbate 4 months ago
I like to keep the skulls
sniperbate 4 months ago
I prefer head shots. They do bleed a little more but the animal is brain-dead instantly and unaware of the dying process. Also, face fur is worth much so you don't have to sew up the hole.
TheNakedGypsy 4 months ago
good job killing them fuckers are out of control around here and need to be dead
2009blahblah 4 months ago
im new to trapping and i have some questions about snaring. i like the baited snaring, but can you find a thick thicket and throw some bait and make it to where there are only a few ways to the bait and place the snare in the way?
extremekansastrapper 4 months ago
@extremekansastrapper yes and no they prefer deer or cattle but always place your snares 7-10 ft away from the carcass so you dont spook them
troutcreekkid 4 months ago
What do you recommend? I'm stuck between 2 rifles.
A Ruger Federal 25-06 or a Traditions Buckstaller 50 cal?
Please respond fast as summer's soon which means animals come out early hahaha.
DiabloFlames557 8 months ago
@DiabloFlames557 well realistically i'd go with the 25.06......but i'd like to see what a .50 would do to one if hit one.....then again my .338 might put a nice sized hole in one too
sniperbate 8 months ago
Great video
tao521 11 months ago
Good job! ;)
xarvex 11 months ago
I'd be real interested to see a video of how you set your snares. Good work! I'm looking into to snaring some of my own, and would appreciate some pointers.
johnromolo 1 year ago
Awesome video! There should be more trapper who aren't afraid to show the reality of trapping!
kyhunterjim 1 year ago
I had a small bait maybe seventy yards away. I do my best to walk off the trails the animals are using, which usually means alot of snow down the back of my coat. I dont use any lure near the snare itself. Maybe at the beginning of the trail or down the trail anyways. I want them walking with their head up and not looking or sniffing around near my sets. The faster they are walking the better.
sniperbate 1 year ago 10
Nices coyote snareing do you use any coyote lure around your snares set,did you walk down the trail be for you set your snares......................
TheSnakeeater09 1 year ago 10
@TheSnakeeater09 ...no i dont' use any lure around the snares....just the bait pile...and i try to not walk on the trails the animals use if at all possible
sniperbate 1 year ago