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Steel Traps / Describes the Various Makes and Tells How to Use Them, Also Chapters on Care of Pelts, Etc. cover

Steel Traps / Describes the Various Makes and Tells How to Use Them, Also Chapters on Care of Pelts, Etc.

Chapter 4: INTRODUCTION.
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About This Book

A practical, illustrated manual for trappers that describes trap makes and sizes, the inventor Sewell Newhouse and his methods, construction and tempering, and comparisons of popular models. It explains how to fasten and set traps (including tree, water, jump, webbed and double-jaw types), where and when to set, baiting, scent control and preventing theft, troubleshooting mysteriously sprung traps, and care and marking of equipment. Later chapters detail skinning, stretching, handling and grading pelts, preparing furs for market, and offer miscellaneous field hints and step-by-step routines for seasonal, land and water trapping.

The Project Gutenberg eBook of Steel Traps

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Title: Steel Traps

Author: A. R. Harding

Release date: November 7, 2010 [eBook #34229]

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Linda M. Everhart, Blairstown, Missouri

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STEEL TRAPS ***



NEWHOUSE TRAPS — ALL SIZES.

STEEL TRAPS.


Describes the Various Makes and Tells How
to Use Them — Also Chapters on
Care of Pelts, Etc.


BY
A. R. HARDING.


PUBLISHED BY
A. R. HARDING PUBLISHING CO.
COLUMBUS, OHIO

Copyright 1907
By A. R. Harding.

CONTENTS.


































LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.




































































































































INTRODUCTION.

To those that have followed the setting of Steel Traps there is a fascination or "fever" which comes over them every fall about the time of the first frosts. The only remedy seems to be a few weeks on the trap line.

While some look upon trapping as an unprofitable business, yet the number is becoming rapidly less, for more and more people are yearly deriving pleasure, profit and health from out-door life such as trapping, hunting, etc. There are thousands of trappers scattered over America who are reaping a harvest of fur each year from their Steel Traps valued at hundreds of dollars in addition to the healthful sport they enjoy.

In some parts of Canada and the Northwest a trapper in a year catches fur the value of which together with the bounty brings him $1,000.00 to $2,000.00. It is said on pretty good authority that a trapper in British Columbia a few years ago caught upwards of $6,000 worth of fur, principally marten, in one season.

There are many thousands of trappers scattered from the Gulf of Mexico to the Arctic Ocean and from the Pacific to the Atlantic that make hundreds of dollars each year with Steel Traps.

There is also a vast number who trap only a few weeks each season. This includes boys and farmers after the busy season.

The actual number engaged in trapping is not known. Neither is the actual value of the raw fur catch, but it is thought to exceed $10,000,000 yearly. Is it any wonder then that so many want to know more about Steel Traps and Trapping?

Considerable of the information herein in regard to traps, scent, decoy, etc., is gathered from old and experienced trappers from all parts of America as well as from the great trap manufacturers, Oneida Community Ltd., so that readers can rely upon the information imparted in this book as being trustworthy. Some books, purporting to be of value to hunters and trappers, are written by men who have never followed a line of traps or been in close touch with trappers.

The author of this work has been engaged for many years in trapping and collecting furs and has come into close contact with many of the leading trappers of the country.

Steel Traps are far superior to Snares or Deadfalls from the fact that they can be used for both land and water trapping while Snares and Deadfalls are adapted to Land Trapping only.

A. R. Harding.