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  #1  
Old 05-05-2014, 11:49 AM
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Default Name that Trap

Trappers certainly are ingenious. Too much time alone?

Let's see some unique traps and hear about the history....

Here is one to start. What is it?

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Old 05-05-2014, 03:23 PM
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I don't know WB , but it sure looks like it's gonna leave a mark .. lol .
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Old 05-05-2014, 04:00 PM
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Gibb's armadillo ?
I think this trap was featured in FFG a year or two ago in their antique trap column.
The trap looks like an armadillo once its fired, hence the name. It was used to
trap small animals like muskrats...... alive!
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Old 05-05-2014, 06:38 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Strix View Post
Gibb's armadillo ?
I think this trap was featured in FFG a year or two ago in their antique trap column.
The trap looks like an armadillo once its fired, hence the name. It was used to
trap small animals like muskrats...... alive!

You got it.





http://www.furfishgame.com/featured_...pline_9_07.php

"Before making traps, W.A. Gibbs surveyed, developed and managed electrical railways in the United States and Canada. When he retired in 1913, he bought a marsh on Maryland’s famous Eastern Shore to serve as a duck hunting preserve. But the marsh was overrun with muskrats, and it was not long before the businessman in Gibbs saw the commercial possibilities. The engineer in him attacked the problem in predictable fashion, and in the process, Gibbs started a second career as a trap manufacturer that would last another 20 years.

Gibbs was a very inventive man. In fact, he patented 16 different trap designs including the No. 111, the Two Trigger, the Hawk trap, the Dope trap, and the Single Grip. He also patented an apparatus for deboning fish, a device for anchoring a live duck decoy, and a fur stretcher.

By 1925, there was a growing market for live muskrats to restock depleted marshes. Being ever the inventor, and having a marsh overrun with muskrats to test his designs, W.A. Gibbs began developing a live muskrat trap. The finished device looked very much like an armadillo, with a retractable dome that automatically deployed to enclose the live muskrat inside. This ingenious device also had a platform that held a No. 1 size coilspring trap and a set of legs that raised the platform out of the water about 4 inches.

When a muskrat was caught in the coilspring trap, automatically and at a precise moment, the dome unrolled over the platform, the coilspring trap released its grip on the muskrat’s leg, and the live, unharmed muskrat was then elevated safely out of the water.


A man who worked at the Gibbs marsh described setting several of the traps, each having a carbide torch somehow attached to the triggering device. The man waited in a small shanty in the marsh, and whenever a light appeared, he went out, retrieved the live muskrat, and reset the trap. This allowed multiple catches with each trap.

The Live Catch Muskrat Trap was produced in at least two versions, one having a slide bar attachment to accommodate a stake and the other basically the same but without the stake holder. A tool was supplied to help in setting the small trap and to activate the dome.

The complicated trap was only on the market three or four years. In 1930, Gibbs brought out a simpler live-catch muskrat trap called the Live Net Trap.

The Gibbs armadillo trap is prized by collectors for both its rarity and ingenious design. One in very good condition will bring $1,200 or more."





Who's got another one?
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Old 05-05-2014, 08:19 PM
Secret coulee Secret coulee is offline
 
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That is really sompthin else wow thanks for sharing WB
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Old 05-05-2014, 08:41 PM
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How about the names of these oddball traps?
Deadly little things.
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File Type: jpg trap.jpg (100.0 KB, 108 views)
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Old 05-06-2014, 10:16 AM
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I have no idea what they are called but they look like a killing trap to be used at a den, burrow or tunnel. Hard to judge the size but maybe for ground squirrel, pocket gopher or even mole. If used for commercial fur it would leave four holes in the pelt.
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Old 05-06-2014, 10:42 AM
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mole trap
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Old 05-06-2014, 12:17 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Red Bullets View Post
How about the names of these oddball traps?
Deadly little things.
This oddball trap is:

C. Jillson Patent Killer Mouse Trap.
This early, unusual and rare killer mouse trap was first granted a patent on January 6th 1857 and another in 1858. The brass trigger parts are stamped with the inventors name c. Jillson, the 2 patent dates, and the maker name Dodge & Wellington of Worchester Mass. This small killer trap is in very nice condition noting the tip of one of the spears is a bit turned. These were offered is various sizes from small 2" models like this and up to 6 inch or larger ones for really big critters. All are hard to find.
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Old 05-08-2014, 05:08 PM
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  #11  
Old 05-08-2014, 05:50 PM
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WB: Isn't the new round trap you posted the 'bobbittizer' developed by Lorena bobbitt.

Kidding.

I think this is an interesting trap. These kind of traps have helped to lead us to todays approved traps.

Research started.
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  #12  
Old 05-12-2014, 07:54 AM
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An Adirondack Instant Death muskrat trap







One more....

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Old 05-13-2014, 02:02 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by walking buffalo View Post
An Adirondack Instant Death muskrat trap







One more....

woman trap.
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  #14  
Old 05-13-2014, 01:19 PM
pickrel pat pickrel pat is offline
 
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actually....bait...not trap.
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Old 05-13-2014, 07:04 PM
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Thanks for the name of the Airondack trap. Deadly.

The money is what they call the Alberta bait. I've seen alot of young guys and gals fall for that trap. To bad they didn't know better.
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