Hay Dude
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2012
- Messages
- 18,301
- Tractor
- Challenger MT655E, Massey Ferguson 7495, Challenger MT535B, Krone 4x4 XC baler, (2) Kubota ZD331’s, 2020 Ram 5500 Cummins 4x4, IH 7500 4x4 dump truck, Kaufman 35’ tandem 19 ton trailer, Deere CX-15, Pottinger Hay mowers
I have heard this story before. They must have excellent sense of smell and internal compass.I had traps out to cat squirrels. Caught possums and cats and coons. I carried the coon out pass the city limits and set it free. I kept catching coons all the time. Saw a wildlife officer that I knew and told him about catching the coons and said I didn't know there was that many in town. He said how far did i carry it to release it, and I said about two miles. He said there is your problem if not taken more than five miles they will return to there home. He said I was probably catching the same coon. To test what he said, the next coon I caught I sprayed orange paint used to mark utility lines. Three days later I had another coon in the trap and yes it did have the orange paint i put on his back. End of story.
I like deer, fox, hawks, and other large predatory animals and generally have no desire to kill them, but these mangey ground hogs, coons, etc….I’ve no use for them, and they serve no purpose but to inflict damage to property, pets, people & livestock.
Kill em off as much as you can.
I have a customer, older couple. They have a perfect small gentlemans farm. The stables are ravaged with ground hogs. Inside the stalls, there are 2’ high mounds of dirt. Horses get injured by den holes. The outsides of the walls look like freakin bomb craters every 5 feet. He can’t kill them fast enough.