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  2. Deadfalls and Snares - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deadfalls_and_Snares

    Deadfalls and Snares is one of Harding's Pleasure & Profit Books.First published in 1907, is an instructional book for trappers on the art of building deadfalls from logs, boards and rocks, and making snares and toss poles, for catching all types of furbearers, such as skunk, opossum, raccoon, mink, marten and bear, and coop traps for catching wild turkey and quail.

  3. Coon hunting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coon_hunting

    Coon hunting is the practice of hunting raccoons, most often for their meat and fur. It is almost always done with specially bred dogs called coonhounds, of which there are six breeds, and is most commonly associated with rural life in the Southern United States. Coon hunting is also popular in the rural Midwest. Most coon hunts take place at ...

  4. Coonhound - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coonhound

    A coonhound, colloquially a coon dog, is a type of scenthound, a member of the hound group. They are an American type of hunting dog developed for the hunting of raccoons and also for feral pigs, bobcats, cougars, and bears.

  5. Trapline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trapline

    It is an offence to trap an animal on a registered trapline that does not belong to you in BC. [ 2 ] Manitoba has had registered traplines since 1940; they were brought in at that time to stop a wave of new arrivals in Northern Manitoba from trapping out an area that was already overharvested by the local, mostly First Nations , population.

  6. Common raccoon dog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_raccoon_dog

    Unless they retreat in their burrows, hunted common raccoon dogs can be quickly strangled by hunting dogs. Traps are usually set at their burrows, along the shores of water bodies, and around marshes and ponds. [3] In Finland, 60,000–70,000 common raccoon dogs were hunted in 2000, increasing to 170,000 in 2009 and 164,000 in 2010.

  7. Raccoon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raccoon

    The colloquial abbreviation coon is used in words like coonskin for fur clothing and in phrases like old coon as a self-designation of trappers. [ 18 ] [ 19 ] In the 1830s, the United States Whig Party used the raccoon as an emblem, causing them to be pejoratively known as "coons" by their political opponents, who saw them as too sympathetic to ...