Raccoon War

   / Raccoon War #51  
Down here, I'm most appreciative of them keeping the cormorants, nutrias, and turtles away from my pond. Watching a gator eating a turtle is quite something.

Crunch, crunch, crunch- I'm sure.

That would save me from having to relocate the occasional snapping turtles that show up from our pond to to the Erie Canal.

...and our 2 dogs are 60-70# mixed breed rescues, so it'd have to be a pretty big gator to want to eat them.
 
   / Raccoon War #53  
That's a funny image in my mind. :thumbsup:

Like John Candy in Great Outdoors.

It should be funny- It would have been hilarious because I grew up left-handed at a time when you couldn't find a baseball glove for a lefty hardly anywhere- so I was always using right-handed gloves, and spent almost as much time throwing righty as lefty- as a result, I'm not a [very good] great shot with either arm- but I can throw a little with both.

If it had come down to that, I guess I'd have grabbed a raccoon-sized rock to throw down at it using both hands from overhead...
 
   / Raccoon War #54  
The problem with the bucket trap is that it isn't very forgiving; how would you feel if your dog accidently got into it? t.

Not really. Anything caught in my foothold trap gets shot.

A dog or cat can not get caught in this trap,, but,, a coon can not resist it,,

Amazon.com: Duke DP Coon Trap: DUKE PECAN: Sports & Outdoors

71QYMhwCvvL._SL1500_.jpg


I have been protecting my chickens with this type trap for close to a decade,,
Dry cat food will get most,, some ornery ones need tuna in oil,,

Load the trap, put a tomato soup can over it,, the trap is even rainproof,,
 
   / Raccoon War #55  
Crunch, crunch, crunch- I'm sure.

That would save me from having to relocate the occasional snapping turtles that show up from our pond to to the Erie Canal.

...and our 2 dogs are 60-70# mixed breed rescues, so it'd have to be a pretty big gator to want to eat them.
Not necessarily. To explain the importance of a gun dog that listens, in his book Game Dog Richard Wolters told of a lab who dove into the water to retrieve a duck, just as an alligator went in on the other side of the stream. The owner couldn't get the dog to turn, and the 'gator took him down in one grab.
 
   / Raccoon War #56  
Quote Originally Posted by CajunRider

Never had any [living in NYS], but my understanding is that as long as you don't feed them, they're pretty much good neighbors- until [as CR said] they get mature- then they're more terror-torial and protective of their young too...[/COLOR][/SIZE][/FONT]

Right around the time I left FLA, there where three gator attacks on people. One was on a canal out in the "Everglades." The first report from the people involved said they were cleaning weeds from the prop. I called Bovine Scat. I had spent many a day patrolling that canal from start to finish, it goes from western Broward county down to Dade county, that there is very little weed in that canal. Eventually, the bozo that was bit by a gator admitted he was trying to wrestle with the gator, which I took to mean he was hand feeding. :rolleyes: MORON.

Once had a little chat with a mother and her 5ish year old daughter. They were standing right next to the water edge looking at a large gator. The gator was looking right back at them. :rolleyes: That gator was expecting to be fed because that is what people would do even though it is against the law, and for very good reasons. I am guessing that the the gator was a good 8-10 feet long based on its head size and when I told mom how large the gator was, how fast it could move, and her daughter was right size for a gator meal, mom backed both of them away from the water edge.

The other gator attack was on a man who said he slipped off the sea wall and there just happened to be gators where he fell. Turned out he had been feeding the gators and fell off the wall which explains why the gators were down below. He said he escaped by pulling a Marlin Perkins and poking a gator in they eye.

The third attack killed a boy on a river. Just by happenstance we went kayaking down that river shortly after the boy was killed. As we where putting in our kayaks, a trapper was loading up his boat to get the gator. We eventually saw the gator and he was maybe 8 feet long but not real wide. Got a fuzzy photo of that gator. The report said the family had stopped at a sand bar for lunch and the gator killed the kid....

Now, this was on a river. River is a big word and eventually this river does live up to the name river but where the boy was killed the river was a little itty, bitty creek. My kayak is 17 feet long and where the boy was killed the "river" was no wider than my kayak is long. The sand bar was also not very big maybe 10 feet by 20 feet. The water at this point of the river was crystal clear and the sand bank was about 2-3 feet below the grade of the land. We found it hard to understand how the gator could not be seen since we easily saw him where the attack took place. I don't know how one could miss seeing the gator which makes one wonder if the gator was being fed when it killed the boy.

Gators can be territorial, especially during nesting season. My FIL was once in a canoe in a eastern NC. He was on a river or lake and noticed a small water way which he followed. The water way opened up into a large pond/lake which was likely loaded with fish. The problem was the master of that lake was a monster gator sun bathing on the bank. My FIL said the hair went up on the back of his neck and he got the heck out of there as fast as he could go. That gator scared the hoo hoo out of him. :shocked: My FIL was a big man, 6'2 or 6'4", was an avid outdoors man, and part of the first group of Green Berets. Not a man easily scared but that monster gator was something else.

Later,
Dan
 
   / Raccoon War #57  
Hoping folks will enjoy this story.
About 20 years ago my in-laws had a Tom cat named "Meece". A solid gray cat, about medium sized...not real friendly. I would pet him, he was muscular, long fangs...he didn't like to be held for long.
He controlled everything on their property including raccoons! No small feat for a housecat. It was amazing to see him in action. He disposed of several, including opossums, snakes, ground hogs, etc.
One day he was eating dinner on their back porch and along comes a neighbors Pit Bull. This I had to see...I went around the house in time to see the Pit going for Meece's food. Meece was like seeing fan blades on high...the dog fell back...nose and face bleeding.
Dog limps home...then phone rings...wife answers..."your cat just tore up my dog!"
Wife says, "your dog was on our porch eating our cats food!". Neighbor hangs up. If I was the neighbor I would have been too embarrassed to call! :)
 
   / Raccoon War #58  
Now there is a cat worth having.
 
   / Raccoon War #59  
AMEN. Lost too many ears of sweet corn and too many laying' hens to the peckerwoods to even consider letting' them carry on their mischief on some poor unsuspecting neighbor by relocating.
The FIRST thing EVERYONE should learn about a "Raccoon War" is,

YOU DO NOT TAKE PRISIONEERS!!!

SR
 
   / Raccoon War #60  
We had a cat here "Reggie". Gray striped Tom. He was almost like Meece in temperament , lived to be 21. All our neighbors are great friends...but couldn't attend Reggie's burial...too upsetting. He kept everything in order...he just didn't know what not to kill! We always knew where he was by the birds squawking.
In Fall when mice started coming in house he kept them out.
A good cat is worth a lot.
 

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