Sounds like a good bear bait (of course increasing the volume). Good job with the raccoons!
I don't know whose cats you guys are talking about,but my cat loves peanut butter and I have to put any chocolate where she can't find it. She ate half a reeses and was sick for a week. And guess who gets to clean it up? It aint my blushing bride-O,- Ever get out of bed and step in a pile of cat vomit? Aghhhh.Peanut butter and chocolate, will keep cats out, and the ***** love it.
Page 8 of the furbearer guidebook: "You do not need a license to hunt, harvest or trap coyote, muskrat, raccoon, red fox or striped skunk."Any special rules for raccoons? The only thing I find in the furbearer guide is this...
Raccoon
The Department of Agriculture regulates
the possession of live raccoons.
Its been decades since I trapped anything but raccoons around our chicken coop... but I'm surprised to see "red fox" on the list of things no license is required for.Page 8 of the furbearer guidebook: "You do not need a license to hunt, harvest or trap coyote, muskrat, raccoon, red fox or striped skunk."
And there are lots of them in some places.Its been decades since I trapped anything but raccoons around our chicken coop... but I'm surprised to see "red fox" on the list of things no license is required for.
-DallanC
I don't have any great recommendations for ya, but I will say that ya should pick somewhere close enough that ya can check the trap daily while it is set. Even though I don't care too much about *****, suffering is suffering and they should be dispatched the same day they're caught. I knew some fellas down to the south end of this state that would set coyote traps way out in the boonies and check em maybe once a week. Being trapped for that long the dogs will either starve slowly or chew their own leg off to get away. Not sure which is worse.I live in an apartment in PG, so I can't really trap raccoons here. Where would be a good place to start to look?