I’ve trapped over 40+ beavers in the last 14 months, I’ve had about 7-8 50 pounders, still chasing the 60 pound mark. 80 pounds is dang impressive, that’s a big damn beaver. The North American record I believe is around 110 pounds from Iron county Wisconsin. They are decimators if left unchecked.My neighbor got one of the last beavers off my place a few weeks back. 80+ pounds. Glad he got him too because the area around my creek looks like a Vietcong booby trap field with all of the small oak tree spikes about 16 - 18” tall.
The work is real. I volunteered my trapping over the last two years on the same ranch in exchange for duck and goose hunting access. The amount of work that goes in to the trapping alone is significant, then you have to take into account pelt care. Stretching and drying is significant in its own right, and I don’t know what’s more Western than that. Most of my beavers came trapped through the ice; I thrive when pulling beavers out of inches thick ice at below zero temperatures.Thanks for posting those trapped beavers. I know this is a western hunting forum but I have a soft spot for the water trapper. Most people have no idea the amount of work put into a trapline. I paid a lot of bills in my younger days trapping beavers for landowners and timber companies in the south.
Are you allowed to use cable restraints? I honestly think they're the most humane way to live trap beaver. Beavers don't really have a neck, so they always end up wearing the cable over the shoulder or around the waist like a seatbelt. A beaver in a cable restraint usually just swims in lazy circles until I you come and grab them. Meanwhile, I have seen a lot of beavers in box traps break their teeth trying to get out. Or drown because boxes don't allow them to move with rising water levels.Stoked to see everyone's success, trapping beavers in CO has been almost impossible being limited to box traps /live traps. Anyone have any experience live trapping beavers in the winter?
I haven't bothered putting up beavers for NAFA because fur prices are at an all-time low. At the last auction I went to there were a lot of nice pelts done up by a lot of guys who knew what they were doing, but the average beaver price was only about $11. I still put up pelts because beaver fur is beautiful, but at those prices I just use them for personal projects.Love this thread. It's been a few years since I put up fur. Are you guys selling your furs to NAFA?
No, not selling the fur as of now. I am using the pelts I’ve put up for a personal projects as Marmots said as well. My main goal is to make a real blanket for my bed. After that I am planning to make all of my winter hunting gear out of beaver fur.Love this thread. It's been a few years since I put up fur. Are you guys selling your furs to NAFA?
Whats the progress on this?No, not selling the fur as of now. I am using the pelts I’ve put up for a personal projects as Marmots said as well. My main goal is to make a real blanket for my bed. After that I am planning to make all of my winter hunting gear out of beaver fur.
I thought I replied here. YES beaver meat is excellent if you process it right. Do everything to avoid getting castor or the oil on the meat or its gross. Brine in salt water for an hour or so and change the bloody water once or twice. It tastes like beef but 40% more calories, less fat and more nutrients. I use it in all my beef recipes. burgers, smoked and pulled on nachos, sammiches, beaver stew, beaver au jus and tacos. be sure to cook it above 165 because ya know, wild meat. Anyone I have ever fed it to has loved it.When I shot my buck, my buddy showed up with a freshly trapped beaver in the back of the mule. I laughed when we got back to the lodge and the fellow who trapped it gave me the beaver… a first for me!
So I skinned it and froze the fresh carcass for cooking this spring. Read a bit about cooking it up but thought I’d ask… do you guys EAT BEAVER? (Ya, I know… sounds like college here ). But joking aside… and off topic a bit- but what say you trappers?