We took a few days earlier in March to address the muskrat population on a creek I often get invited to for late season duck hunts. The idea was to show another trapping series and then prepare them for a meal differently than we prepped them last time.
Our YouTube channel audience is mostly hunters and I am often surprised by how many misunderstand trapping; something I grew up doing to fund my hunting/fishing. So, I try to mix in some trapping content whenever opportunity allows.
So, here is Day One, out setting a few traps and explaining the damage muskrats do to spring creeks. Wish I had time to get after the seriously like a I did a few years back.
My name is Randy Newberg and I approved this post. What is written is my opinion, and my opinion only.
"Hunt when you can. You're gonna run out of health before you run out of money."
Ya I work with a colored feller from Mississippi that says coons are good.... And that's not a pun....
Ping pong balls for the win. Once you've wrestled everything else in life is easy. Dan Gable I keep my circle small, I’d rather have 4 quarters than 100 pennies.
We always saved the hind legs off the muskrats. We usually dredged them in flour, browned them and stewed them with onions and chicken broth. When done thickened the gravy and served them with drop dumplings and sweet/sour red cabbage.
But then we would make stew and jerky from the hind legs and backstraps off the beaver we caught, slice up the liver and fry it with onions and serve it alongside our eggs in the morning.
Thanks, Randy. We always had plenty of rats but never trapped for them (NE Mont.). They were always in our mink sets and once skinned they went into the mink bait bucket. I learned a great market lesson as a kid when I had a hundred rat skins and the market was $.75 and the conventional wisdom said they had to go up to a buck. Wound up sellin them for $.40. ;-{>8
Day 3: On this second day of checking the traps I can see we are already cleaning up the local 'rats. If it was not frozen, there would be a lot of traveling rats and the catch rates would stay the same.
My name is Randy Newberg and I approved this post. What is written is my opinion, and my opinion only.
"Hunt when you can. You're gonna run out of health before you run out of money."
Day 4: Due to a crazy calendar, it's time to pull these traps, finish with the skinning and butchering chores, then get these muskrat hams over to Marcus (camera guy and wild game cook) for tacos tomorrow.
My name is Randy Newberg and I approved this post. What is written is my opinion, and my opinion only.
"Hunt when you can. You're gonna run out of health before you run out of money."
For sure. If you run "floats" in the spring or even the setup that Randy is demonstrating, the biggest problem will be that the other rats come to fight and eat on any of their brethren that are anywhere near the surface of the water.
We have gone to #2 size traps for the simple reason that they are plenty enough heavier to sink a muskrat to the bottom post-haste and thus avoid being chewed on.
Actually, here we can trap inside huts as well, and if the weather is cold enough to hold iceup until late February, the muskrats just start eating each other inside the huts also. Once the water is severely cold, they won't dive out of the hut to drown anymore. Then they are sitting ducks for the rest of the clan to eat up fast.
Not high on my menu list but I’ve ate Muskrat before. Back when I trapped I would give 3 or 4 carcasses to my grandma to make for grandpa. She would make a stew. And nice professional made videos.