CT hillbilly wrote:Ok would anyone else like to share any lures they have made for trapping dogs, cats or foxes??? The lure my wife made to catch the last bitch in my posts( trapping dogs in Queensland) was a basic one made from sausage fat ( after cooked) blood from defrosted meat , steak from memory with 2-3 blobs of tomato and barbecue sauce, 5 drops of vanilla essence done put in a squeeze sauce bottle and left out in the sun for around 4 weeks until everything melts together to a liquid and add about 2-3 tablespoons to a log on your set so it soaks in and hangs on the log better, I’m sharing this to help everyone try and knock down a few more dogs cheers joe,
CT hillbilly wrote:Yeah ya right, but as I’m only a rec trapper they are only in the ground for around a week to 10 days in one area then we move to different locations and properties and reset
animalpest wrote:Your own scent last 2-3 days at the trap if you use basic ways to minimise it. No more. .
animalpest wrote:As I said, if you take normal precaution in not leaving scent, then it will only last 3 days..
animalpest wrote:Die Judici - you can take it or leave it. When I train people to be professional doggers, I don't reference everything I say back to published research papers or our huge data base we have, or why during my 40 years experience do I say that.
I will make one exception. One of my staff (A zoologist) has spent months entering the data from our last couple of years of trapping. We interrogate that data to determine trends in lures used, trap sets, clean traps/dirty traps/ remakes and trap/nights for captures and much more. This data is collected by my 6 trappers. The data is scientifically accurate as it is collected in a standard format and the data set is amply large enough to be statistically valid.
Additionally, I base this on the collective knowledge of 27 doggers, employees of a State government that totalled the equivalent of 1000 years of knowledge and that government agency training.
Grandadbushy wrote:Yes animalpest weather is a major contribute to scent strength but that goes without saying as it does for any other hunting when the weather changes also as i see it people ie dog hunters can put too much emphasis on scent depletion over a period of time, to prove my point the next dog you shoot take a piece of sticky tape and take a print of the dogs paw leave it for however you like ie 5mths or more then stick it to a post in your yard where your male dog can reach it and i can tell you he will piss on it because he will smell the wild dog still you see this is why we have to be careful of what we read about scent in books the book is not always right but on saying that the weather, sun, rain does have an affect on scent strength but takes a very long time to erode the scent with water being the best in my opinion and experience