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  2. Williams: Bobcats need protection, not killing for their pelts

    www.aol.com/williams-bobcats-protection-not...

    Traps must be checked every 24 hours, but there’s virtually no enforcement, so live-trapped bobcats sometimes suffer for days. When traps do get checked bobcats get bludgeoned or strangled.

  3. Jigger Johnson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jigger_Johnson

    Albert Lewis Johnson. (May 12, 1871 – March 30, 1935), better known as Jigger Johnson (also nicknamed Wildcat Johnson, [1] Jigger Jones, or simply The Jigger), was a legendary logging foreman, trapper, and fire warden for the U.S. Forest Service who was known throughout the American East for his many off-the-job exploits, such as catching bobcats alive barehanded, and drunken brawls.

  4. Trapping plan for Indiana bobcats, once listed as ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/trapping-plan-indiana-bobcats-once...

    Indiana's Natural Resources Commission will hold final public hearing on the proposed trapping season set to begin in fall of 2025. Trapping plan for Indiana bobcats, once listed as endangered ...

  5. Letters: Re-elect Dave Hall, bobcat trapping, reasons to vote ...

    www.aol.com/letters-elect-dave-hall-bobcat...

    The Commission proposes allowing 250 bobcats a year to be killed in the cruelest way imaginable, with strangling neck snares, steel-jawed leghold traps and cage traps.

  6. Trapping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trapping

    Bear trap at Großer Waldstein in Germany A British spring trap set in a wire tunnel for small mammals Live trap with shade cloth to protect animal from heat. Cage traps are designed to catch live animals in a cage. They are usually baited, sometimes with food bait and sometimes with a live "lure" animal. Common baits include cat food and fish.

  7. Bobcat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bobcat

    The bobcat (Lynx rufus), also known as the wildcat, bay lynx, [2] [3] or red lynx, [4] is one of the four extant species within the medium-sized wild cat genus Lynx.Native to North America, it ranges from southern Canada through most of the contiguous United States to Oaxaca in Mexico.