Fur Facts
Fur Facts
O ^jVINfcttStf
*Vr*
UBRARP
OF THE
UNIVERSITY
OF t
PALIFOR^b-
a
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2006 with funding from
Microsoft Corporation
http://www.archive.org/details/furfactsOOaherrich
THE AUTHOR RESPECTFULLY
to the
ODD
ALBERT M. AHERN
QOO
Copyright, 1922
By Albert M. Ahern
All Rights Rtstnei
OD
Illustrated by
\$
II
III The Future Supply of Furs --------23
American Furs are popular all over the World
---------32
81
TV
V
Is Fur Trapping Cruel
Hints on How to Judge Furs w -------34
-------
VI
VII
VIII
The Natural Color of Furs •'-
Taking Care of Furs *^-
FUR FARMING
--------
---_-_-__
^\
54
66
IX MUSKRAT—How to Raise, Trap, etc. - - - - - - 58
X
XI
SKUNK—How to Raise, Trap, etc.
MINK—How to Raise, Trap, etc. -------80
------
- 70
XII
XIII
RACCOON—How to Raise, Trap, etc.
OPOSSUM—How to Raise, Trap, etc. ------
------
97
104
XIV
XV
OTTER—Habits, How to Trap, etc.
SILVER -----
FOX—How to Raise, Habits, etc.
100
115
Red
Blue Fox -----------137
Fox, Grey Fox, Cross Fox, White Fox
---------188
- - - - - 1S6
XVI
How to Trap, etc.
------
BEAVER—Habits, How to Trap, etc. 142
XVII
XVIII ------
THE BLACK BEAR—Habits, How to Trap, etc.
WOLF—Habits, How to Trap, etc.
- - 151
iff
XIX
XX
XXI
------
ERMINE OR WHITE WEASEL—Habits, How
------
FISHER— Habits, How to Trap, etc.
WOLVERINE—Habits, How to Trap
to Trap, etc. - 178
182
185
XXII
XXIII ---.----197
LYNX, LYNX CAT OR BAY LYNX, WILD
--------
BADGER—Habits, etc.
CAT, Etc. - - 187
XXIV
XXV CIVET CAT ----------205
MARTEN—Habits, etc.
----------
199
XXVI MOLES
Mountain Lion
Ringtail Cat
-----------208
-------- -
206
212
XXVII
XXVIII GINSENG—How ------
SEAL—Habits, Color, Killing, Dressing and Dyeing
-
-
-
-
-
«4
222
232
PREFACE
The object of this book is to encourage the man and boy in the
country, on whom the future supply of fur depends, to take an in-
terest in the small fur bearers that live in his district, and protect
them during the summer and during the breeding season, and to only
trap and hunt in the Fall and Winter, when the pelts are prime and
the fur is valuable. Trapping in season will never deplete the supply
of furs. Most of the fur bearers are very prolific and attain maturity
quickly and are found in large quantities in nearly every state in the
Union.
The question is often asked "is trapping cruel", and the answer
from anyone who knows wild life is unhesitatingly "it is not". Agnes
Laut, who is probably one of the best informed women on wild animal
life in the country, has pointed out that there is less cruelty in trap-
ping than there is in the slaughter house. Anyone need only go into
the wilds to at once realize that natural wild life is more cruel by far
than the most careless and thoughtless hunter. To begin with
there is hardly such a thing as natural death in the wilds. The weak
fall victims to the strong. The weasel hunts the rabbit and kills
indiscriminately; the fox hunts the weasel and so on through the en-
tire list; and if fur bearing animals did not multiply with such ter-
rific rapidity they would soon exterminate one another. To give an
idea of the rapidity with which wild animals multiply, a number of
years ago a settler in Australia, whose home had been in England,
decided to have a pair of rabbits sent over to Australia as pets for
his children. Previous to this time there were no rabbits in Australia
and the rabbit was not a native of the soil. The pair of rabbits
which this English immigrant had sent over from the old country was
the beginning of the Australian Rabbit. In due time the rabbits
had a litter of young. Some of the young were given to neighbors
as pets for their children
. Finally some of them left the barn yard and
took up their home in the wilds. This was the beginning of the wild
rabbit in Australia. There was no other wild life to destroy them
with the result that they multiplied so rapidly that in a compara-
tively short number of years they overran the country. It became
necessary for the Australian Government to build hundreds of miles
of rabbit-proof fences to protect farms and ranches from their de-
predations. Their number ran into the millions and no headway
seemed to be made against them. The pest, however, turned out to
be a profit for the reason that their fur is valuable, the hair being used
in the making of felt, most of our felt hats being made from Australian
rabbit skins. The finer grades of skins are used for furriers' purposes
for making low-priced furs, and are known in the trade as dyed coney.
The carcasses are used for food, being shipped frozen by the millions
in refrigerator boats to England, and constitute a very important
meat supply.
So far as trapping is concerned, all the trapping that could be done
in Australia would never keep pace with the increase of the rabbits.
It is only extreme measures such as wholesale poisoning or immense
drives that will cut them down in numbers. As before mentioned
there was no other wild life to destroy the rabbit and from their small
beginning in a few years they increased to countless numbers.
The man, and the farmer boy, in the country has come to realize
that the small fur bearer is a valuable asset, and he should value
them in much the same way that he does any other live stock. It is
hoped that the suggestions in this book will help to further this
thought. It is the desire of the real trapper to take only the super-
fluous males. A few animals, like the fox and the mink, are monog-
amous, but for the most part the male furbearers fight for a harem,
and when these fights are on, the young are killed and torn and the
females are injured, and the full grown young males are left in the
majority to prey on one another. The trapper has come to realize
that his source of profit is dependent on the increase in the number of
the furbearers in his district. He only wants to trap when the fur is
prime, when the females are not bearing young, and when the young
are full grown. He plans his trapping so that the animal will be
killed quickly and not injure the fur, and if he is well informed he will
never use poisoned bait under any circumstances, for the reason
that it kills the old and young alike and is a wasteful and profit-
less method.
In addition to the killing that goes constantly on between wild
animals, dogs are also very destructive, and this fact will be vouched
for by any sheep raiser. Dogs destroy quantities of sheep and fur-
bearers every year.
As one authority has pointed out, it was not the fur trapper that
exterminated the buffalo, it was the sport hunter and the barbed wire
fence of the settler, and it was the fur trade that saved the buffalo from
total extermination and brought it back, as they have done with the
beaver and other fur bearers. A few years ago one of the rarest furs in
the world was the silver fox. A short time ago the writer visited a
silver fox farm on which there were over eight hundred young foxes
that had been raised within one year. This ranch was started with
three young foxes. Some of the finest silver foxes that have ever come
to market have come from fox farms, which proves conclusively
that fine quality furs can be raised successfully.
FUR FACTS
CHAPTER I
THE EARLY FUR TRADE IN ST. LOUIS
The
history of the fur trade in St. Louis dates back to about
the
year 1763. It was at this time that a young Frenchman, Pierre
Laclede Liguest, then of New Orleans, received news of the profits
being made in the bartering of furs and lead by the white men among
the Indians.
From his earliest boyhood days young Laclede, as he became
known, had nourished a great ideal—that of some day forming a
colony or settlement of which he would be leader. It was this more
than anything else which prompted him to leave his ancestral home
near Bordeaux, France, in the year 1755 and embark for the New
World.
So with the news of the development of the fur trade, came the
desire to move out into unexplored territory where the dreams of
his youth might be realized. Partly through his friendship with
Colonel Antoine Maxent, and partly through his own initiative,
Laclede, with a party of men, obtained permission from the colonial
authorities to undertake a trading expedition up the Mississippi
River. A grant was issued them, conferring the privilege of "ex-
clusive trade with the savages of the Missouri and with all the na-
tions residing West of the Mississippi River for a term of eight years."
Several months passed before supplies and provisions for the
journey had been procured, but on August 3rd, 1763, everything in
readiness, the little fleet started on its journey.
Through three long months they toiled against the current of
the river, traveling at the speed of eight miles per day. (Now the
trip from New Orleans to St. Louis can be made by Rail in 20 hours.)
It was November before the party finally reached St. Genevieve
on the west bank of the Mississippi
at that time the only French post
that could furnish shelter or the comforts of frontier life.
vention on the part of the authority of the United States. Had this
16 FUR FACTS
occupation remained undisputed for a few years longer, it is not im-
probable that it would have been necessary to reclaim it through the
force of arms.
River to the Pacific Coast, and including the entire Columbia River
region, belonged to the United States, and when the Chouteau's and
Lisa sent their officers and agents and employees and shortly after-
ward followed themselves into the upper Missouri region the great
Northwest became ours in fact as it had already been by right.
The then extended operations of the St. Louis traders under the
new organization were extremely gratifying. During the last 25
years of French ownership of Louisiana, including the post of St.
Louis, annual value was estimated at over $200,000. The annual
its
Kentucky and Tennessee, the two oldest states west of the Alle-
ghenies, were settled by explorers and hunters from Virginia and the
Carolinas in search of adventure who were attracted by the abundant
game that roamed at will in their boundless forests and, perhaps,
by the danger they would encounter in hunting, from the Indians
who claimed the game and the hunting grounds along with it as
their ancient right.
The red sons of the forest were extravagant in their offers for
anything that suited their fancy, but refused to accept, even as a
gift, anything which was not in line with their established customs.
Trading companies soon learned that they could not depend upon
the red men and peltries sufficient to make the
for supplies of furs
trade profitable. The savage hunted simply to supply his necessi-
ties; hence the quantity of skins and furs available from the Indian
over the whole field in the West, south of the domain of the Hudson's
Bay Company.
Some of the men who pioneered in developing and establishing
the early fur trade in St. Louis were:
Pierre Laclede Liguest Joseph Miller
Pierre Chouteau Robert McClelland
Auguste Chouteau Donald McKenzie
Manuel Lisa Robert Stuart
Daniel Boone Wilson P. Hunt
John Jacob Astor Lewis Clark
William Clark David P. Mitchell
Rueben Lewis John A. Sire
John Pierre Cabanne James A. Hamilton
Charles Gratiot Alexander Culbertson
Barnard Pratte Andrew Henry
John B. Sarpy Jim Bridges
Bartholomew Barthold Elijah B. Matthews
Thomas L. Sarpy Thomas Fitzpatrick
Peter L. Sarpy William H. Ashley
Russell Farnham William L. Sublette
Ramsey Crookes Robert Campbell
Kenneth McKenzie Milton Sublette
Daniel Darling
Fur and peltry currency in St. Louis, and, indeed, in the whole
—
West in transactions between St. Louis and New Orleans, Louis-
ville and Pittsburg —was a necessity of the times, for gold and silver
money was scarce and inadequate to the needs of business. Furs
and skins commanded a ready sale and they further possessed the
quality of being easily transferred and containing a great value in
a small compass.
In 1807 Judge J. B. C. Lucas bought a house in St. Louis from
Pierre Duquochette, for $600 and paid the entire sum in furs and pelts.
FUR FACTS 19
in St. Louis. Ten years later, in 1887, the receipts had increased
to 22,045 bundles.
Now the bulk of all of the furs produced on the North American
continent come from within a radius of 600 miles of St. Louis, and
St. Louis is the center of the raw fur industry of the world. In 1877
there were 12,386 bundles of furs and peltries received in St. Louis.
In 1881, Robert Emmet Funsten, William Fitzhugh Funsten and
Johnson Funsten, came from Virginia and established Funsten Bros.
& Co., which firm eventually became the largest fur house in the
world. Through the efforts of this house and with the support of
other big fur traders, St. Louis became the largest fur market in
20 FUR FACTS
the world, and the number of shipments of furs for the season
of 1919-20 is estimated at 1,068,000 shipments, as compared with
12,386 in 1877, and totaled the gigantic sum of $60,000,000.00.
This includes fur shipped to St. Louis from all over the world.
The value of fresh pelts trapped during the winter season of
1919-20 in surrounding territory and shipped to St. Louis is
so much greater than the business of the early fur traders that
there can hardly be any comparison. In 1810 the value of pelts
marketed in St. Louis was estimated at thirty thousand dollars
($30,000.00) a year. In the Fall of 1919 and early Winter of 1920, a
little over one hundred years later, the value of the shipments of
the fur bearers in his neighborhood are protected and should encour-
age his neighbors to protect them, and he should preach the gospel
of saving and increasing this tremendous source of wealth. "The
commercial history of America begins with furs, and from the early
days down to the present this has been an important article in the
domestic and foreign trade. There are few commodities in common
use which distribute their benefits so widely. From the country
boy who traps a few muskrats to the professional who patrols miles
of country, the money received for pelts goes at once into various
channels of circulation. " Today the great fur centers of the world
are in the United States. The amount of capital invested in the fur
trade is greater than ever beforeand many thousands of people in
the great cities derive their support from it in the different branches
of dressing, dyeing, manufacturing, selling, etc. The investment on
the part of dealers, manufacturers and retailers runs into hundreds of
millions of dollars. This gigantic industry and this tremendous
source of profit to the trapper and the man and boy in the country
would of course cease the minute the supply of furs was shut off;
and this industry would naturally decline in proportion as the supply
of fur declines, or increase as the quantity of furs increases. There-
fore it can be readily seen that the future supply of furs is a very
finally got together and agreed to stay out and did stay out and later
FUR FACTS 25
when they held a conference and compared notes they found that
they were getting three times as much fur outside of the park as
they were when they were admitted to it and that all of the fur
bearers were on the increase and increasing rapidly. If you are
located in a good fur section, take an interest in conserving the fur
bearers and interest your neighbor in agreeing to set aside a certain
district of swamp land or any other land suitable for the purpose,
and get your county authorities to co-operate with you in forming
a game preserve. If necessary have a local game warden to protect
it. If the people of the district will agree not to trap on this ground
thus set aside and only trap a certain distance from it, they will
be surprised at the wonderful results, and you will help insure a
constant supply of furs for yourself, your children and grand-
children.
Since the time of the earliest settlers, children in the open country
have been taught to look upon the wild animals as their natural
enemies. Did a gray squirrel appear in the barnyard, it was stoned
to death. Did a fox scamper through the wheatfield it was shot.
Did a muskrat appear near an icy pool, it was a signal for healthy
boys to stop skating and give their attention to its extinction.
There were numerous reasons for this, parents handed down this
theory that all wild animals were enemies to their sparse crops.
They also encouraged killing them off because animals meant food
when food was scarce.
But the boy of today must be taught to look on animals of the
open not only as friends, but friends who will make money for him.
He should be taught also to foster their growth in every way, to
hunt them only when the pelt is prime, to protect their young and
to take an active interest in all methods that multiply their numbers.
The United States has taken first place as a fur producer and mar-
keter and the world looks to America for its supply of raw furs.
The skunk, long held in repute for such deeds as wholesale
ill
chicken snatching (which he was not guilty of) has within the
last
places. Do not molest them but make them feel "at home". Trap
only in the open season and then take only furs at their best. Let
the young ones go to propagate later.
The man who is in business for himself is ever watchful of any
conditions that may affect that business harmfully, in other words,
bring loss of capital to himself. Now the professional and amateur
trapper alike may well consider that they are in business for them-
selves and with the real business man's foresight should take care
that no harmful influence be allowed to affect it.
will bring the best price on the open market. The big fur houses
which make it a policy to help the trapper in his work and diffi-
culties, are always more than willing to give the best information
on
these subjects.
Always rememberthat the fur-bearing animals in your
neighborhood represent the wealth on which your trapping business
is profitably conducted.
Insuring the Stability and Growth of the American
Trapping Industry.
Trapping is a real industry and has proven itself to be such from
the time the few colonial settlers went forth into the wild country
of the West and began to establish the first trading relations with
skins, and furs
the Indians. From the beginning the value of pelts,
those engaged m
of all kinds was recognized by the white men; and
this remunerative work gave all their time to
trade and barter with
them.
the Indians— who trapped and secured the furs for
28 FUR FACTS
The old methods, of course, have long since vanished from the
fur industry; but the salient point to note is that the fur industry
is a big industry and that from a very small beginning it has in-
creased to the immense proportions of today. That there is stabil-
ity and a sound foundation can not be contested for the proof lies
in the centuries of success it has enjoyed, that the market for furs
has been continuously open, and that an even heavier demand may
be looked for in the years to come.
The trapper is the real backbone of the trade, for it rests on him
to supply the immense quantity of furs required by the trade.
Protection
Until a few years ago there was a general prejudice against musk-
rats among farmers whose bottom lands they inhabited. The
farmer's chief complaint was that they burrowed under his fields and
occasionally nibbled his crop, thus causing him losses, seldom stop-
ping to consider that the muskrat pelts would more than pay for the
trifling annoyance the animals caused. Farmers often set out to
exterminate them by draining the land, poisoning, shooting and
destroying them in every way possible.
For every case where it is shown that the muskrat attacked
crops on lands near marshes, there is another which shows that he
left crops entirely alone, even though they were near at hand.
farmer has and there ought to be and can be three times as many of
them as there are now; but it is up to you. Any boy or man living
in the country can have two or three dozen skunks working for him
all of the time. They w ill
r
help the farmer by destroying mice,
grass-hoppers, crickets, white grubs, etc., and will furnish from
fifty to one hundred dollars worth of fur every year, and all they
ask is a little kindness; Don't shoot at them every time you see
one run across the yard. If .they kill your poultry it is your own
fault. Keep your poultry shut up out of the way in animal proof
houses. As a matter of fact skunks are often more valuable to you
than your poultry and will pay you bigger dividends, and the same
can be said of many of the other fur-bearing animals. If you have
any muskrat on your place, take care of them. You can trap all
you want when the fur is prime, but do not blow up their houses,
and do not hunt them day and night, Summer and Winter, give them
a fair chance.
A fine dog is a nice animal to have and some one has said that the
dog is man's best friend. This may be true but a lot of people will
keep three or four old hungry hounds on their place and allow them
to run down every fur-bearing animal that comes around and chase
them and scatter them for miles and then waste money feeding the
hounds valuable food. Dogs are alright where they are needed
but they have killed countless sheep, and destroyed millions of fur-
bearing animals, especially the young and the weak. If you have to
decide between the hungry hound and the fur-bearer, decide in favor
of the fur-bearer and shoot the hound. Get the thought firmly
fixed in your mind that the fur-bearer is a part of your stock and
belongs to you just as much as your sheep, hogs, or chickens and
FUR FACTS 31
the slaughter and crack its skull with the blow of a hammer, or
to load live stock into a crowded box car and transport them for
days at a time, often without food or water, and crowded in such
a manner that if one gets down it can not get up. It must be
remembered that wild animals have not the same delicate nervous
system as the human being and consequently does not suffer in a
like manner. On the whole taking it by and large the trapper is
humane, the very nature of his calling makes him so. Fur bear-
ing animals were created for the use and benefit of mankind and
should be so considered.
CHAPTER V
HINTS ON HOW TO JUDGE FURS
The wearing of fur garments dates back to the time of Adam and
Eve. We read in the Book of Genesis Chapter Three, Verse Twenty-
One, "And the Lord made for Adam and his wife, garments of skins,
and clothed them."
The American woman is the best judge of values in the world.
She knows silks, linens, cotton goods, shoes, stockings, hats and furs.
She instinctively knows quality, and the enterprising wide-awake
retail merchant has come to a realization of this fact, and con-
sequently the reliable retailer does not try to pass skunk as black
marten, or muskrat as river mink. As a matter of fact the leading
retail furriers take pride in calling furs by their right names and there
is hardly a woman shopper in any of the big cities today but knows
a genuine silver fox when she sees it, and that can judge fine mink
almost as well as the furrier himself. She knows that fine muskrat
sheared will take the dye and make as fine a coat as Alaska seal,
with the advantage that the muskrat is lighter in weight and lends
itself to nearly any style of garment and on this account she does
not hesitate to pay almost as much for a fine muskrat coat dyed seal
color as she does for dyed Alaska seal.
Some furs are made up into garments in their natural color, others
are dyed, and some are merely blended, that is the top hairs are
tinted by barely touching the hair with a feather dipped in dye;
other furs are plucked and still others are both plucked and dyed.
Plucking
Beaver is one of the staple articles of the fur trade and thousands
of them are used every year for trimming, but very few if any are
ever used dyed, the furrier using the beaver fur in the natural color.
Beaver used to trim coats, capes, etc., and has a soft, thick, dense
is
the back of the animal than it is on the sides. But the change in
shade is very gradual, so that any way it is looked at it is a beautiful
rich soft color and one of the best wearing and most dependable furs
FUR FACTS 35
that money can buy. The fur is about three fourths of an inch in
depth and is very thick and compact. The nutria which is found in
South America is very similar to the North American beaver and is
very much the same color, but the fur is shorter and looser, the
nutria fur being about one fourth to one half of an inch in depth.
Both of these furs are plucked before they are used by the furrier.
The beaver pelt, as well as the nutria, when taken off of the
it is
carcass of the animal, has long coarse guard hair which covers the
entire pelt, this long hair is from one half to three quarters of an inch
longer than the underfur. This top hair, or guard hair, is coarse
and wiry, and the uninitiated seeing a beaver skin before it is plucked
would hardly recognize it as beaver fur. Before the manufacturer
cuts the skins up into garments they are sent to the dresser and
plucker and all of these long coarse guard hairs are pulled out. This
work is done by experts who use a large dull knife. The skins are
laid over a circular beam and the guard hairs are literally plucked
out, leaving the soft velvety underfur. The same thing is done with
the otter, the nutria and also with the Alaska seal. One difference
between the beaver and the seal is that the beaver is very rarely
dyed. They are so beautiful in their natural color and shade that
the furrier rarely if ever dyes them. The beaver and otter are furs
that cannot be imitated successfully, and the nearest approach to
it is the nutria, and nutria in itself is a very fine and dependable fur.
The seal skin, however, is dyed after it is plucked. The natural color
of the seal after it is plucked is somewhat similar to the beaver, being
of a light brownish cast, but after it is dyed it is black with a brownish
sheen.
that the art of dressing and dyeing Alaska seal is only of compara-
tively recent origin. Less than one hundred years ago seal skins were
used very by furriers for garments. The pelts were taken in very
little
large quantities but they had little or no value for fur purposes;
and
side was
in England their principal use was for trunk lining. The pelt
then
softened and tanned until the leather was pliable and they were
that
used as lining for cases, trunks, traveling bags, etc. It seems
makers
the trunk makers were brick layers in the Summer and trunk
It is also said
in the Winter, in other words they had two trades.
to drink
the bricklayer-trunk maker prided himself on being able
36 FUR FACTS
more beer and not show than any other tradesman with the pos-
it
sible exception of the printer. They were always ready to show their
prowess if the time was ripe and funds were available.
It so happened that the proprietor of a trunk making establish-
ment was called away from his place of business for a day to another
city and the night before he left he appointed one of the workmen
to take charge of the shop the following day, and gave him very
explicit instructions about a certain order that was to be filled.
Everything went along well the next day until one of the men sug-
gested getting a pot of ale which was forbidden during working
hours when the proprietor was around. A vote was taken and it
was decided that a pot of ale would not be out of order, and one pot
called for another, until after a short time there was more thought
of ale than there was of work. A dispute arose and a scuffle followed
with the result that a large barrel of water was knocked over and
drenched a pile of seal skins that were lying on the floor. This
accident tended to sober some of the more serious minded of the
workmen, and they were at a loss to know what to do with the wet
seal skins. If the boss came back and found the skins wet they
would probably all lose their jobs, and so they decided the best
thing to do was to dry them quickly before anyone could discover the
accident. They built a roaring fire in the stove and draped the wet
seal skins around it and waited for them to dry. In due time they
dried out alright, but when the workmen came to handle them they
found that the hair came out and this put them in a worse plight than
before. They made another discovery, however, that it was only
the top hair that came out, and that after the top hair was loosened
and pulled out, there was a soft velvety underfur strong and beauti-
ful and much better looking that the seal skin had been before. One
genius in the crowd suggested that they pull out all of the top hairs
and line the trunks with the skins having only the underfur, and as
there was hardly anything else to do under the circumstances, they
went ahead with the balance of the skins, wetting them and hanging
them by the hot stove, pulling out the top hair, and lining the trunks.
The trunks were finished in time and were sent off to the customer.
When the proprietor returned he congratulated the men, not knowing
of course anything about the accident and the fact that the cases
had been sent to the customer lined with plucked seal.
Some time afterwards the customer who had received the trunks
placed another order and this order was lined with the old fashioned
seal. The customer sent them back and refused to take them and
FUR FACTS 37
said that he wanted trunks lined like the last order. The manu-
facturer quite naturally was very much bewildered and set out to
investigate. He called on the merchant to whom he had sold the
trunks and for the first time he saw one of his own cases lined with
the plucked seal. He hurried back to his shop and finally after a
lot of scolding and threatening he managed to get the story bit by
bit from the workmen as to how the accident had occurred, they of
course feeling that something terrible would happen to them on
account of the mistake. After hearing the story the manufacturer
tried the same method of wetting the skins and heating them. The
result was amazing; the top hair pulled out easily leaving the soft
beautiful under fur; and this, so it is said, was the beginning of the
plucking process. This trunk manufacturer had a great rush of busi-
ness and he had practically a monopoly, until the story got out and
every trunk maker began dumping barrels of water on the seal skins
and plucking them after they were dried before a hot fire.
Later on, more careful study was given to the matter and a more
scientific method evolved for the plucking of seal; but today seal
skins are plucked in much the same manner, they are placed in a
room with a very high degree of heat for a certain length of time
and then taken out and a man with a long dull knife, known as an
unhairer, plucks out the guard hairs.
The reason that the top fur will pull out and the soft underfur
remains in, is deeper seated than the soft under-
that the guard hair is
fur, the bulb of the guard hair being closer to the surface of the pelt
side. The pelt side is scraped down until the bulb of the guard hair
is almost exposed. The bulb of the guard hair is a little sack or
pocket similar to the root of any other hair; and when it is exposed to
a strong heat this bulb explodes by the steam that is formed in it
many years seals were brown in color, in fact it created a new color
known as "seal brown". Later on they were dyed a color almost
black but still retaining a brown glaze and the rich brown under-
ground.
The muskrat is treated in a similar manner to the Alaska seal
is the
sheared, that
except that the muskrat fur is not plucked but is
38 FUR FACTS
muskrat fur is cut down to almost the same length as the Alaska seal
and is dyed by much the same process and produces much the same
effect, except that seal made from muskrat is lighter in weight than
the Alaska seal.
Plucked Fur
The plucked furs are the beaver, the otter, and the Alaska seal.
The Alaska seal is always dyed after it is plucked. The otter is
sometimes dyed, but it is more often used in its natural state as it
resembles the beaver but is a little shorter in nap and finer in quality.
The beaver is rarely, if ever, dyed, but it is always plucked before it
the finer seal, but it is poor in quality, will not wear, and is not de-
sirable. This is readily distinguished however, from the muskrat or
Alaska seal, as it has a longer soft nap, does not stand up, and looks
likewhat it is, namely rabbit skin. No large department store or re-
would attempt to sell sheared and dyed coney,
liable retail furrier,
which is known as French seal and electric seal, as muskrat seal or
Alaska seal. The great popularity of muskrat and the fact that musk-
rat are bringing high prices is due to the fact that it makes such a
wonderful seal fur, known as Hudson Bay seal. Firms specializing in
the dressing and dyeing of muskrat have developed this art until the
finished product is a thing of beauty and a joy to most women who
like a light weight, stylish, and beautiful coat.
Silver Fox
The highest priced pelt in the worldis the American silver fox.
brush should be full and of the same rich black color as the mane,
with a white tip on the point of the tail. The skins that bring the
highest prices are full-furred, with the guard fur intact, (no rubbed
or damaged spots), with the long hair standing straight up and full
of life. Skins that are a shade off, that is skins that are called "rusty'*
are not so valuable. They may come from the same section, but
when the animal wanders around in the sun the fur is liable to lose
its gloss and its rich black color. Some silver foxes are gray in
color all over and these skins are also very popular and high priced.
Silver foxes range in price up to one thousand dollars per skin, and
even more for exceptional specimens. The average price in the Retail
store for good skins is about five hundred dollars. Some manu-
facturers have attempted to imitate silver fox and sell what is
known as "pointed fox"; but American women do not care much
for imitations, and the "pointed fox" has about played out. How-
ever, it is rather interesting to know how the silver fox is imitated.
This is done by taking the ordinary red fox and dyeing it black,
and then using the white badger hairs, taking a single hair at a time,
dipping one end of it in glue and then inserting it among the hairs
of the dyed fox. Enough of the badger hair is added to the dyed
fox to give it the appearance of silver fox, in that it is sprinkled
with white hairs. But this imitation is readily perceived, except by
the most inexperienced women shoppers, and no reliable retailer
would attempt to "pointed fox" as genuine silver fox. They
sell
are very attractive, but it shows plainly that it is the imitated and
not the genuine article.
Strange it may seem, many people believe that "taupe foxes",
"platinum foxes", "sitka foxes", etc., are natural colored skins.
As a matter of fact there are only seven kind of foxes: silver fox,
which has been described heretofore, the red fox, which is a bright
lemon colored red, the white fox, which is snow white, the gray
fox, which as the name indicates, is gray in color, the tip of
the hair
being white and the lower part of a bluish cast, the swift fox, which
is very similar in color to the gray, the blue fox which has a brown-
color with
ish cast, and the cross fox, which is a reddish brown in
across the
a distinct and darker cross down the top of the back and
shoulders. All as "sitka fox", "isabella fox",
other foxes such
"taupe fox", "platinum fox", etc., are dyed, the red fox and white
fox being used for this purpose.
splendid rule in judging fox fur as to whether
dyed or not
A it is
white leather exposed. This can not be done successfully with thin
pelted furs so that if there is a question about judging the skin as
to whether it is dyed or not, the color of the pelt test will usually
settle all argument. This does not apply, however, to blended furs,
that is, furs that are tinted by the feather dye process described in
another chapter.
CHAPTER VI
THE NATURAL COLOR OF FURS
Gray Furs
The Russian squirrel is probably the most popular of all of the
gray furs, especially for coats. It varies in shade from a light sil-
very gray to a dark bluish gray; and there are some that have a
reddish tinge. There are others that have almost a pronounced red
stripe down the back, the sides of the skin, however, being gray.
This reddish tinge is caused by the animal lying out in the sun on
bright sunshiny days. The sun will soon draw out the natural color
and tinge the top hairs along the back. They may be just as fine
in thickness of fur and quality as the perfect gray skins, and usually
are, but they are not as valuable on account of being off color. The
expert dyers and dressers take these skins and blend them. This is
done by just tipping the top of the hair with dye the tone of which is
about the same as the sides of the fur. This tipping gives the skin
an even color all over and they are very hard to distinguish from the
natural clear colored Russian squirrel. The clear colored skins are
preferable, but the wearing qualities of the blended skins are pro-
bably just as good. We have millions of squirrels in this country,
but they are not suitable for furriers purposes, as the pelt is too
thick and the fur too thin and coarse. Therefore, the supply of
squirrel pelts for furriers comes from Siberia, and from the Northern
part of Manchuria. They are in great demand in this country as
well as in Europe, and it is one of the most beautiful furs that we
have and is reasonable in price.
Chinchilla
Chinchilla is the most beautiful of all the gray furs as well as the
highest priced. It is found in a limited area in South America.
The pelt is very light and thin, and the fur from one half to three
quarters of an inch in depth, very silky, soft, and beautiful. The
color might be described as a delicate French gray, darker and mot-
tled on the surface with a bluish slate tint beneath. In recent years
the Chilean government has enacted laws for the protection of
chinchilla. They are not allowed to be trapped or taken in any
,
42 FUR FACTS
manner and cannot be exported for a number
These of years.
measures number, and no
will allow the chinchilla to increase in
doubt we will have a large quantity of them in the future, but for
the present the skins are very scarce, and hardly any of them find
their way to market.
Viscacha
Viscacha is similar to chinchilla in color and it also is found in
South America. It is a much larger animal, but the fur does not
compare with the chinchilla, and there is only a small percentage of
the pelts that are fine enough to be used for fur purposes.
Caracul
Most caracul in its gray. The caracul fur comes
natural color is
Krimmer
Krimmer one of the natural colored gray furs and comes from
is
the Far East. It was formerly used almost exclusively for child-
ren's sets, but is now in vogue as trimming on coats, capes, etc. It
is a light gray with a small loose curl.
American Opossum
The American Opossum is a very light gray in color. The top of
the guard hair, which is the long over hair, is almost black in color
the underground being almost white. The fur is about one inch
deep, the long guard hairs being about one and one half to two in-
ches long. The finest skins make up very beautifully in their natural
color and in recent years have been used very largely for trimming.
It lends itself to dye beautifully and can be dyed almost any color,
but it is principally dyed black. When dyed black skunk color it
is very similar to the skunk; in fact it would require an expert to tell
the difference. However the skunk is a natural black color, and the
opossum is of course dyed, and the dyed fur never has the real lustre
and gloss of the natural. The American opossum is in big demand
in Europe and large quantities are shipped to London, Paris and
Liepsic.
Lynx
The lynx is usually sold in retail stores after it has been dyed
black, although occassionally the furrier makes it up natural. The
natural color of the lynx is gray with a slight brownish tint. The
FUR FACTS 43
fur is very thick and soft and from one to two inches in depth, the
fur on the sides of the skin being longer than on the back. The
Liepsic dyers perfected the art of dying the lynx, and before the war
Liepsic dyed lynx was one of the most popular black furs on the
market. The American lynx was sent to Liepsic where they were
dressed and dyed black and shipped back to this country to be made
up into garments. The Liepsic dyers dyed them a beautiful shade
of black with a very high gloss. During the War, the American
dyers, such as Hollander and Chapal, succeeded in dying the lynx
equally as well as the Liepsic dyers, and if the black lynx comes back
it was a few years ago, the demand no doubt will
into popularity as
be for the American dyes. The lynx is found throughout Canada
and Alaska and South as Minnesota. The lynx cat which
as far
is found in the western states, Colorado, Idaho and Montana, is
similar to the lynx and belongs to the same family, but is very much
shorter in fur and not as valuable for fur purposes as the Alaska and
Canadian lynx.
Alaska Seal
The Alaska seal skin as it is taken from the carcass of the animal
isgray in color, the top hairs being a yellowish white with dark tips,
which gives the skin a decidely dark grayish appearance. These top
hairs are plucked out as described in another chapter, leaving the
soft brown underfur, and this is dyed seal color. Strange as it may
seem, some people think the dyed color is the natural color of the
seal skin.
Australian Opossum
The finest skins are a beautiful bluish gray. The fur is very
thick and close and is about one to one and a half inches in depth.
The Australian opossum is made up by the furriers in its natural
color, that is it is seldom, if ever dyed, and then only the poorer
quality skins are dyed. The Australian opossum is very popular in
America and large quantities of them are imported each year for
trimming on coats, capes, etc. The finer skins are a clear bluish
gray. Some of the inferior skins have a slightly yellowish or brown-
ish tinge.
Wolf
The come from Canada and the north western part
finest wolf
of the United States and are very popular with furriers for
trimming.
These wolf are a light white gray. The fur is very soft and deep,
especially on the sides and under part of the pelt. There is a coarse
wire like mane across the shoulders and part of the way
down the
44 FUR FACTS
back, which the furriers cut out and do not use for trimming on fine
garments. The fur from two to three inches in depth, the guard
is
hair being even longer. There are some few wolf used in their nat-
ural color, but most of them are dyed. The wolf on account of its
soft, silky texture and light gray color can be dyed very satisfactorily
in almost any shade, which is one of the reasons for its great popu-
larity, and the price of wolf for the last few years has advanced very
materially on this account. The wolf is found in nearly every state
in the Union, but only those from the more northern sections are
valuable for garment purposes. The southern coyote from Texas
and Arizona is a reddish gray in color, and the fur is coarse and short.
The pelts are used for robes, and purposes of that sort.
Gray Fox
The gray fox is used by furriers for trimming and is made up
into sets for children. It is the lowest priced of any of the foxes, the
average price being about three or four dollars per skin in the raw state
as compared with the silver gray fox which is worth up to four to
five hundred dollars per skin in the raw. The gray fox is found
generally throughout the United States, the largest quantity coining
from the central and southern states. The tip of the hair is white
in color with a reddish cast, and the lower part is a bluish slate color,
the general appearance being a bluish gray. They are used in very
large quantities and it is good wearing fur and very reasonable in
price.
Ringtail
The ringtail gets its name from the fact that it has a long tail
about the same length of the body. This tail is striped very similar
to the raccoon with black and white rings. The body of the ringtail
is about 12 to 14 inches long, and the fur yellowish gray in color.
The fur is about one half inch deep and of about the same softness
and texture as the mink. Ringtail is principally found in Texas,
but some come from Oregon, Washington and California. The
ringtails are almost invariably dyed before being made into garments.
After they are dyed they resemble Kolinsky and usually sell at about
the same price.
Badger
Badger is found in the far western states. The fur is yellowish
gray with black tips, and on very long and
the finer skins the fur is
the hair is too coarse; and these skins are sold to the brush manu-
facturers who make the hairs up into shaving brushes, etc.
Mole
In recent years the mole has come into great vogue. It is said
that Queen Alexandria on a visit to Scotland was very much im-
pressed by the stories told her of the ravages of the moles in certain
farming districts. In fact the mole had become such a pest that it
was hard for the farmers to make any headway against them. Some
one suggested that the Queen have a coat made of mole skins, which
would create a market for the pelts, and thus a loss might be turned
This she readily consented to do, and one of the leading
into a profit.
London furriers designed a beautiful mole coat for her, and since
that time mole has been one of the fashionable furs.
The fur is a bluish slate color. It is about one fourth of an inch
or less in depth, very smooth and even, and resembles heavy velvet.
Due to the fact that part of the fur slopes one way and part another,
when it is made into a garment, gives an effect similar to watered
silk. As the color of the moles in their natural state vary in shade,
they are blended, that the very tops of the fur are lightly touched
is
with dye in order to give the fur an even color. It is very light in
weight.
BROWN FURS
Russian Sable
The Russian sable is one of the
found only in Siberia, and it is
sables are the highest priced furs in the world. The finest Russian
sable come from that part of Siberia known as the Barguzin district.
This is a heavily timbered part of Siberia and the sable found here
is a
are rarely exposed to the sunlight. The result is that their fur
rich deep dark brown color that glistens with life and lustre. These
fine skins have a few white hairs scattered through them which really
to the Czar and most of them were used by the Imperial Family.
Of late years these skins have been coming to America, and they
very highly by the woman who wants the finest fur garment
are prized
that money can buy. These skins have sold as high as two thousand
dollars per skin. The writer was told by a leading Fifth Avenue
Russian
furrier that he once sold a neck piece consisting of twelve
or a little over an average
sables for thirty five thousand dollars,
-
46 FUR FACTS
of twenty nine hundred dollars per These of course were the
skin.
choicest selected Imperial Barguzin sables. The average Russian sa-
ble is about fourteen inches long and when cut open and spread out
would average five inches in width so that it would contain about
seventy square inches of fur. The average Russian sable skin raw
sells for two to three hundred dollars per skin. The exceptionally
fine skins are very much higher, and the poorer skins somewhat less.
The very finest Russian sables as described above are a rich deep
dark brown in color, appearing almost black, with a few white hairs
sprinkled along the back of the pelt. The average Russian sable
is a rich brown, and the sables coming from the Kamchatka district
are the largest and most heavily furred. The fur is from three
fourths to one and a half inches in depth and very dense, and a little
lighter in color down near the pelt than it is at the top. Some few
Russian sables are blended, that is just the tip of the hairs that have
been singed by the sun, are blended by tipping them with dye. This
is very hard for the inexperienced to detect, and while it is does not
decrease the value of the skin, skins treated in this way are not as
valuable as those that are naturally perfect in color. The Amur
sable which comes from the Amur river, vary considerably in color,
some of them being a light mouse color. They are very beautiful in
fur, and the quality of the fur is splendid, but they are not as val-
uable as the Barguzin or the Kamchatka sables, on account of their
color being very much lighter. Some of them are very heavily
sprinkled with white hairs, giving them a silvery gray effect, and while
they make up very beautifully in their natural color they are not as
valuable as the finer sables.
Hudson Bay Sable
Hudson Bay sable belong to the same family as the Russian
sable and it is similar in its habits and color. They are found in the
forests of North America, the finest and largest skins coming from
Yukon Territory in the Stewart and Pelly River district. There
are large quantities found in the Hudson's Bay Country, and it is
due to this fact that they are called Hudson Bay sable. In the raw
fur trade, however, they are known and sold as marten and they are
thus distinguished from the Russian sable. Some of the finer skins
are very beautiful and compare favorably with some classes of Rus-
sian sable, but as a general rule they are not as deep in fur or as fine
in quality, nor have they the wonderful color and richness of the
fineRussian sable. They vary in color from a rich dark brown to
a very light yellow, the light yellow skins coming from along the
FUR FACTS 47
Yukon River in Alaska. These light skins are large in size and very
deep and heavy in fur. These skins are all blended, and when this
is done by an expert dyer the effect is wonderful and they compare
very favorably with the natural dark brown skins. The fine dark
skins come from the Stewart and Pelly River districts in the Yukon.
Labrador also produces some very fine skins. Martens are found as
far south as California.
Mink
The finest mink are found in America.They are a rich dark
brown color, but coarser than the marten and shorter in fur. The
mink from China and Japan are very light brown, almost yellow.
The China and Jap mink are all dyed; the American mink is made
up natural. The fur is about one half inch deep. When mink are
made up into coats they are often cut up in small narrow strips and
sewed together in order to heighten the effect of the dark stripe
down the back. In fact all of the finer garments are made up in this
way. So that in examining the inside lining of a mink coat if it
should appear to be made up of small pieces of fur sewed together, it
does not indicate that it is made from scraps of fur. On the contrary
it would mean that it was made by the most approved process.
Mink fur is one of the most satisfactory furs that money can buy.
It holds its color well and lasts for years and is always in style for
coats and trimming. For a while there was a prejudice against
mink, because people often connected mink with the old fashioned
fur coats of our grandmothers. Mink like any other article will lose
its original color in time and will fade out and become yellow, es-
pecially the poorer quality of skins, but this takes a long time.
Fresh new mink have life and lustre, are a decided brown in color
and make very beautiful fur garments.
Kolinsky
The kolinsky, or Siberian mink, found in the district east of
is
the Yemesie River and in its natural color it is a very light brown,
or yellow. All kolinsky are dyed before they are made up into
garments for the retail trade. In recent years the art of dyeing
kolinsky has been developed in America to a very high state of
perfection, and kolinsky wraps on this account are very popular.
The kolinsky is about the same texture and length of fur as the
American mink, but as they are all dyed, in judging kolinsky it is
well to keep this fact in mind and buy them according to the lustre
and quality of the dye.
48 FUR FACTS
Muskrat
The muskrat brown in color and while a great quantity of them
is
are sheared and dyed seal color, a large number are used in their
natural color which is a dark rich brown. In some sections of the
country, notably Maryland, the muskrat is black, and this black
muskrat makes up very beautifully. The dyed muskrat is first
sheared, that is about one half of the top fur is cut, leaving the
underfur about one half of an inch long. This is dyed black, and
is sold as Hudson Bay seal.
Beaver
The beaver is another of the brown furs. It varies in color from
a light rich brown to a deep chestnut brown, and is one of the most
beautiful natural brown furs that we have.
Otter
The otter very similar to the beaver in both color and texture
is
of fur, but the otter is a little shorter in nap and more compact, and
will not curl after it is wet as quickly as the beaver.
Wolverine
The wolverine has a long brown coarse fur and is used very little
by furriers. The biggest demand for this fur comes from the Es-
quimaux of Alaska who use it to line the inside of their parkes. They
claim thatit is the only fur on which the breath does not congeal and
and form into ice. This may or may not be true, but it is a fact
that the esquimaux prefer the wolverine fur to any other for trim-
ming.
Fisher
The fisher is one of the most satisfactory and durable furs that
money can buy. It is very popular for chokers and other small neck
pieces. It varies in color from a light brown around the neck and
shoulders down to a deep dark brown at the rump and tail. The
medium sized small skins are the finest, the larger skins being coarser
in fur and heavier in pelt. The small silky dark skins are in big de-
mand.
Stone Marten
Stone marten have been very popular in recent years for chokers.
They come from Russia and parts of India and Germany. The top
guard hair is light brown in color and the underground is a gray
stone color, from which it gets its name.
Blue Fox
Blue fox is really not blue in color, but brown. There is a bluish
cast to the underfur, but the top fur is brown. Most well dressed
FUR FACTS 49
women are very fond of Blue fox and they make up into very
beau-
tifulneck pieces. There are several shades of blue fox varying
from
the darker blue brown skins commanding the highest prices,
the
coming from Alaska. They are found also in Siberia
finest colors
and Greenland and have been very successfully raised by the United
States Government on the Pribiloff Islands.
Marmot
The marmot is usually dyed by furriers and is found in Northern
Manchuria. It is classified in the fur trade as
blue marmot and
yellow marmot, the finer qualities coming under the heading of blue
marmot. The blue marmot are bluish brown in color, and the yellow
marmot are yellowish brown. However, the marmot are usually
dyed and seldom made up in their natural state. It is a coarse
wiry sort of fur and is used principally for coats.
Nutria
The nutria is brown in color and closely resembles the beaver,
except that it is shorter in fur.
WHITE FURS
White Fox
The white fox Alaska and Siberia and other far north-
is found in
ern regions. The white is pure snow white.
fox The finer skins
are used in their natural color, but the poorer and stained skins are
dyed platinum color, taupe color, blue fox color, etc. The white fox
lends itself to dye better than any other fur on account of its pure
white color.
The Arctic Hare
The Arctic hare is snow white
in color and its fur is very similar
in density and thickness to the white fox, except that it is not so
long, being about one half the depth and not nearly so good in quality.
In fact the fur is very brittle and will break off. The difference
between white fox and Arctic hare can be readily detected by
simply brushing the fur the wrong way. If the small tips of the
hairs break off, you can be reasonably sure that it is Arctic hare and
not white fox. The Arctic hare are found principally in Russia
and are dyed into different colors and used as cheap imitations of
other fine furs, but it is easy to distinguish this class of stuff from
furs of fine quality. An one given above, as the
infallible test is the
Arctic hare will always break off and the white fox never will.
iO FUR FACTS
Ermine or White Weasel
Ermine, the fur of royalty, is snow white. Some of the skins
have a yellow stain, but these are not as valuable as the clear pure
white skins. The Russian ermine is a little larger in size and a little
deeper in fur than the American ermine, and consequently a little
more valuable; otherwise there is no difference. Both the Russian
ermine and the American ermine have a small black tip at the end
of the tail. Because ermine has been connected with the robes of
royalty, there are some people who class ermine with the more val-
uable furs such as sable and silver fox, but it does not compare in
price with these furs. The ermine is a very small animal and it
takes a large number of them to make up a garment, but they are
less in price than mink and usually bring about the same price as
BLACK FURS
Skunk
The skunk is coal black in color and is really the only natural coal
black fur that we have with the possible exception of black fox,
and most specimens of the silver black fox are sprinkled with white
hairs. The skunk pelt as it is taken from the animal is not really
all black. It is black and white; that is there is usually two white
spots or white stripes down the back of the skin that look as though
some one might have painted a white stripe on a black surface. The
black fur of the skunk is coal black and the white fur is snow white.
The hairs do not mix as in the case of the silver fox where the white
is sprinkled through the black. There is no black fur that has the
richness and lustre of the natural black skunk when it is made into
a fur garment. The top hairs are a rich lustrous black, and the under-
fur is a bluish black. The American skunk fur is prized very highly
in Europe where its beautiful black color and its wonderful wearing
qualities have been long known. In recent years it has become very
popular in America, and the word "skunk" no longer frightens a
woman from buying a skunk fur garment. They are dressed and
deodorized and make a beautiful fur that is a delight to furriers and
a joy to the wearer.
Black Bear
Some bears have a natural black color. The young yearling
black bear skins from Alaska and Canada are used in some cases for
FUR FACTS 5i
fur trimming, but as a rule bear skins are not used in the manufacture
of fur garments, but are used solely for rugs, robes, etc.
Black Fox
The highest priced of all the black furs is black fox or silver
fox. There are some specimens that are entirely black without a
white hair on the pelt, although all of the black silver foxes have a
white tip on the end of the tail.
Raccoon
The raccoon might be also called a black fur in that there are
some specimens that are solid black, but as a rule they are brownish
black. The raccoon is a splendid fur and is very much in vogue for
trimming. The best skins are very dark in color and thick in fur,
the fur being from one and a half to two inches deep. The yellowish
light brown raccoon are usually blended or dyed brown, and in some
instances dyed black, and when dyed black they resemble skunk as
they are very similar in thickness and quality of fur.
Civet Cat
Civet cat is one of the naturally black furs. It belongs to the
same family as the skunk and has the same habits. Unlike the
skunk, however, it does not have two white stripes down the back,
but has white spots sprinkled over the body. It is smaller than the
skunk and its fur is not so thick or fine in quality. Civet cat are
usually used by furriers in their natural color.
YELLOW FURS
Jap marten, Jap mink, China mink, kolinsky and some marten
found in Alaska and Canada are all quite yellowish in color and are
rather coarse in fur. They are usually dyed brown to imitate Hud-
son Bay sable and American mink.
RED FURS
Red Fox
The come from Kamchatka, and this fox
richest finest red fox
surpasses all other varieties in the quality of its fur and the depth
and richness of the red color, which is a dark rich almost mahogany
red, and the skins are very large. The next best red fox come from
Alaska. The Eastern Canadian dark red in color.
red fox is also
The foxes from the Western part of Canada and the Northern part
of the United States are a yellowish red. Large quantities of red
fox are trapped in the Central and New England States, but the fur
is a little shorter and little more mottled, that is there are yellow
. . .
52 FUR FACTS
hairs scattered among the red. The finer shades of red fox are
made up natural, but all others are dyed, taupe color, Isabella color,
etc. The cross fox is also reddish in color.
In buying furs it is well to remember the natural color of the
different pelts and the following table will serve as a guide to the
natural color of the different fur-bearing animals grouped under
several general heads.
GRAY FURS
Russian Squirrel (used natural, though sometimes blended)
Chinchilla (seldom, if ever dyed).
Viscacha (used natural, though sometimes dyed and blended,
very few of them suitable for furriers* purposes).
American opossum (almost always dyed, though the finest skins
are used natural).
Lynx (almost always dyed, though some are used natural).
Alaska seal (always dyed).
Australian opossum (used in the natural state, only the poorer
skins being dyed).
Wolf (usually dyed, though a few fine skins are used natural).
Gray fox (used natural).
Ringtail (almost invariably dyed).
Badger (used in the natural color).
Krimmer (used in the natural color)
Caracul (invariably dyed).
Mole (usually blended).
BROWN TURS
Russian sable (never dyed, but sometimes blended).
Hudson Bay sable or marten (seldom dyed, but often blended).
Mink (American mink used natural; Jap mink and China mink
always dyed).
Kolinsky (always dyed)
Muskrat (used both natural and sheared and dyed into Hudson
Bay seal).
Beaver (always plucked, but never dyed).
Otter (always plucked, but never dyed).
Wolverine (used in the natural color).
Fisher (used in the natural color).
Stone marten (used in the natural color).
Blue fox (used in the natural coor).
Marmot (usually dyed).
Nutria (always plucked, seldom dyed).
. . .
FUR FACTS 53
WHITE FURS
White fox (usually dyed, the fine skins are used in the natural
color).
Arctic hare (always used to imitate other furs).
Ermine (used in the natural color).
Polar bear (used in the natural color, but always for rugs, robes,
etc., and not for fur puposes).
BLACK FURS
Skunk (never dyed, though sometimes blended).
Black bear (never dyed, seldom used for fur purposes)
Black fox (never dyed)
Broadtail persian lamb (dyed)
Raccoon (mostly used in the natural color, but sometimes blended,
and sometimes dyed black to imitate skunk).
YELLOW FURS
Jap marten (usually dyed).
Jap mink (usually dyed).
China mink (usually dyed).
China kolinsky (always dyed).
Certain sections of Yukon marten (usually dyed).
RED FURS
Red fox (usually dyed).
Cross fox (used natural).
CHAPTER VII
start a muskrat farm, even if on a small scale, and if given the proper
care will prove to be a very profitable undertaking.
Muskrat farming is already a prosperous business. On a marsh
at the mouth of the Maumee River, near Lake Erie the muskrats
were allowed to breed undisturbed for a period of two years. At
the end of that time 5000 were taken in one month. The pelts
brought a high price and the carcasses were also sold in the market
at $1.00 a dozen.
Muskrat farming has probably reached its highest development
on the eastern shore of Maryland, where there are extensive marshes.
This land, a few years ago, was considered almost worthless, but
now owing to the fact that the muskrat thrives in these marshes
and have been allowed to develop, it has become a source of profit
to the owners as well as the trappers, who take the muskrat, the
trappers being allowed one half of the proceeds from the skins for
their work. As an example, the owner of one tract stated that he
bought it several years ago for $2700.00. He leased it for half the fur
that would be produced and in one year his income was $1000.00.
Another example is that of a man who bought a small piece of swampy
ground for $150.00, leased it for the trapping rights and the owner
has received $100.00 a year on his investment of $150.00.
With the prices of muskrat as high as they are to-day these in-
comes would be considerably more. Another owner of a 100 acre
tract of marsh, who does his own trapping, with the aid of his sons,
secured in one season over 12,000 muskrats. At the present market
value these skins would be worth about $18,000.00, and this is prob-
ably all net profit.
In addition to this, muskrat meat is an additional source of in-
come and will no doubt be used in larger quantities as people become
familiar with it. In Dorchester County, Maryland, it is estimated
that the income to the community from muskrat farming is fully
$100,000.00 a year.
Trapping is done only in the winter and there a closed season
is
the balance of the time. In spite of all the trapping that can be
done, the muskrats in this section are on the increase for the reason
that where they are only taken by trapping methods they can never
be exterminated — in fact, will always show an increase.
CHAPTER IX
THE MUSKRAT
Muskrats require little feeding. The plant life of the ponds and
marshes usually furnish an abundance of food. It is a very easy
matter to plant the right sort of vegetation in the ponds and marshes,
which will develop and grow very rapidly. In many sections the
area adapted to the successful raising of muskrat is extensive, and
there are no doubt numerous places that are now considered value-
less that could be turned to profit by turning loose a few muskrat, and
The muskrat houses are mostly for winter shelter and food and
are seldom used as receptacles for the young. Occasionally,
when
they are driven from their houses or when excluded from under-
BREEDING
The Honorable David E. Lantz in his comments on muskrat
breeding says "It is now well established that muskrats breed from
three to five times in a year and that the litters average from 6 to 8
young. The early spring litters are usually less in number, and those
of midsummer are somewhat above the average. The muskrat in
their breeding habits are very much like field mice. Where they are
depleted by vigorous winter trapping, they are replenished before
the opening of another season, and it can be seen from a glance that
they breed very fast and multiply quickly. Normally the animals
mate in March and the first litter is born in April; the second litter
is due in June or early in July; and a third in August or September.
MIGRATIONS
Muskrats sometimes wander over fields and along highways quite
a distance from water. This occurs late in fall, early in spring, or
during severe droughts late in summer. The causes are not under-
stood, although the spring movement has generally been attributed
to the beginning of the mating season. When met away from water,
the animals sometimes show considerable ferocity and have been
known to attack persons savagely without apparent provocation.
FUR FACTS 0i
FOOD
Muskrats live on roots, etc. as a general rule
and seldom indulge
in animal food, it's principal food being pond lillies, arums, sedges
—
and the like but in some localities it feeds on mussels and also on
carp and other sluggish fish that bury themselves in mud. When
ponds are frozen over, muskrats are restricted almost wholly to food
under the ice. In rare cases they leave the water and
accessible
burrow under the snow in search of grasses and sedges.
The summer food of the muskrat is far more extensive, being
made up of many aquatic plants, roots, stems, leaves and fruit, and
in addition to supplies from near by fields or woods. Muskrats are
fond of nearly all —
garden vegetables cabbage, onions, carrots, pars-
nips, beets, peas, beans, corn, celery and the like —and some times do
damage to unprotected gardens close to their haunts.
In Louisiana the muskratis something of a pest to the rice planter,
ing or draining of fields at the wrong time, and often feeds on the
growing crop and breaks down the plants. In irrigated sections of
the far West, ditches and reservoirs are sometimes injured by musk-
rats, requiring costly repairs, etc., and it is well to take this into
consideration when starting a muskrat farm, but as a general pro-
position they can be raised in most sections without fear of damage,
except where dams and irrigated ditches are necessary. Musk-
rats sometimes eat fish, but they capture the sluggish kinds and very
seldom, if ever, harm game fish.
MUSKRAT AS FOOD
The flesh of the muskrat is on sale in the Baltimore market all
during the winter season. They are received by the commission
houses from the lower Chesapeake Bay, and sell at from 10c to 20c
each. The flesh of the muskrat is dark red in color, but fine grained
and tender. used in the method of skinning, and the hair
If care is
side of the pelt does not come in contact with the flesh, the musk
glands come off with the skin and do not effect the meat at all.
Where the skinning is done by the proper method the flesh of the
muskrat is delicious. The flavor is somewhat like the wild duck
that has been caught in the same marshes, as it on
lives principally
animal, when he dives for deep water, will be held there and soon
drowned. It is therefore advisable to stake the trap chain down in
deep water, as the weight of the trap on the animal's foot will soon
drown it.
MUSKRAT
above the pan. The animal in reaching for the bait sets his hind
foot upon the pan and in this manner is securely caught. As soon
as the jaws close, the muskrat will dive for deep water, and if the
chain is properly fastened to the stake, the animal is drowned in-
stantly.
64 FUR FACTS
An old wide plank can be used to advantage as a support
log or a
for traps. The
is moored to the shore by fastening it with a
log
piece of wire or rope and anchoring the end with stakes out into the
water by attaching a heavy string and a wire. Nail some light
cleats at the upper^side with space enough between to hold the trap
when set. Notches can be cut in the log and the trap set a little
low and then covered with fine leaves or grass. Secure the end of
the trap chain in such a manner that the animal can reach deep
water. A
few drops of animal bait sprinkled along the log will
attract themuskrat and you are sure to get them.
The box trap is also used. This consists of a wooden box with
a gate at each end. The gate is all wire and arranged to swing in-
ward, but not outward. The box is set just under the water, with
one end at the entrance to the muskrat burrow. The animal lifts
the gate on leaving the burrow and is imprisoned and drowned.
Others follow and a considerable number of muskrat can be taken
in this manner.
A may be made entirely of heavy wire netting of
similar trap
half inch mesh. Muskrat may be taken alive in this manner and
used to stock other ponds and streams.
Another plan is to use an open barrel sunk in the soil close to
the bank of the stream or pond. The top of the barrel should be
levelwith the surface of the ground. The barrel is half full of water,
in which place pieces of carrots or apples. A piece of board about
8 inches square and a few floating chips will delude the animal into
jumping into the barrel to secure the food. Once in the barrel, it
cannot climb out, and this is a good method to take them alive.
A floating barrel is also used. A hole 8 by 12 inches square is
sawed in the side of the barrel having both ends intact. A strong
cleat is nailed across each end, projecting 6 or 8 inches on the sides.
Enough water is placed inside the barrel to make it float with the
platform level of the pond. Carrots and apples are placed inside of
the barrel so that they can be secured, or sprinkle a little animal
bait on top of the barrel. The muskrat will dive into the barrel for
the bait and are thus caught.
Another way is to build up a mound of mud and stone in shallow
water. On the top of the mound, just above the water line, sprinkle
a few drops of animal bait and set the trap just under the waters
edge. Leave very little of the mound above the water, just enough
to place the bait upon. The muskrat, in climbing to the top of the
mound, will catch its hind leg in the trap if properly placed.
.
FUR FACTS e5
"I have trapped muskrats in the following way with great suc-
cess: Find a place where they run; take a piece of carrot and put
a little of Funsten 's Bait on it; then get a stick about two feet long,
put your carrot on one end, stick the other end in the bank, so that
the bait will be about eighteen inches above the water, where it is
about four inches deep. Then take a No. 1 trap, set it under the
bait and stake it out in the water the full length of the chain. This
will keep Mr. Rat off the bank, for if he gets out of the water he is
apt to get away."
FUR FACTS 67
« iNinwofi pin.
SKUNK
The wild skunk comparatively easy to trap and is taken in
is
large quantities each winter. Nearly every state in the Union has
strict game laws protecting skunk by closed season, and the farmer
himself is very anxious to protect the skunk and allow them to in-
FUR FACTS 71
crease, as he has come to realize that the skunk is not only a big
source of profit in
its pelt, but is useful in destroying noxious
insects,
and a fuller understanding of the economic value of skunk will no
doubt result in greater protective measures by the farmer in order
that the supply of skunk will increase from year to year.
Any farmer boy can start a skunk farm, and as they are abundant
in nearly every state in the United States, it is not a difficult problem
to get a start if one really wants to begin.
The skunk lives in dens, and they prefer to use natural cavities
in rocks or burrows dug by other animals such as fox, badger or the
woodchuck, but they will also often dig their own dens in ordinary
soil. They are said sometimes to attack and kill woodchucks before
taking their burrow. Fallen logs, recesses under stone walls or fences
and cavities under tree roots furnish the skunk convenient retreats.
If the floor of a building is near the ground, the space below is often
used by a family of skunks. Also they nest under well covers,
board walks, hay scales and stacks, as well as in culverts, covered
drains, abandoned cellars and caves for storing vegetables. In
winter the warmth of the floors of occupied dwellings or country
schoolhouses seems to be especially attractive to them; and the
animals often take up their abode in carelessly filled trenches con-
veying steam pipes from boilers to distant buildings, no doubt
attractedby the warmth.
When skunks dig their own dens the burrows are seldom very
long or deep. They go down below the ordinary frost line, and after
they dig a short way, end in a rounded chamber where they make a
nest, a bed of leaves or dried grasses. Occasionally there are two
entrances to a den.
In Northern latitudes skunks housed in their dens during the
lie
coldest part of winter, but in mild weather they move about freely
in search of food. Usually a considerable number occupy the same
den, possibly members of a single family of a preceding summer,
but sometimes the number seems too great to be only one family.
As many as fifteen to twenty-five have been captured at one time
from a single den in the winter. When ^hus disturbed skunks are
found lively enough to prove that hibernation is not complete. As
spring approaches the animals mate, and the pairs betake themselves
to separate establishments. In the South this gregarious habit is
not so marked, although the young usually remain with the mother
until mating time in the late winter.
72 FUR FACTS
Skunk are mainly nocturnal, but when not harassed by enemies
they often hunt in broad daylight. They usually come out about
sunset and spend the summer twilight in catching grasshoppers and
beetles by springing upon them with the fore feet as the insects rise
from the ground in flight. After dark the skunk depends upon its
sense of smell and hearing to locate its prey. It digs many beetles
and their larvae from the ground, leaving the surface thickly pitted
with small conical holes where the insects were obtained.
It would seem to be advisable in raising skunk to start on a small
scale and not attempt a big skunk farm.
As a rule the most successful stock breeders are those who make
a special study of the stock they have in hand and give their animals
special attention. Too much attention, however, to the skunk will
cause it to become domesticated, and if petted and over fed their fur
deterioratesand is of little value, but if allowed to live in as near a
wild and natural state as possible they will breed rapidly and produce
good fur. They will become tame and lose their fear of man if not
frightened or disturbed. Two or three pair is enough to make a
start, and forty or fifty isthe maximum amount recommended for
a successful skunk farm. With full furred skunk bringing the high
prices of today, this will show a very nice return for the investment,
which is very little.
Almost any piece of ground can be used for the purpose. After
you have selected your location it is well to build a suitable enclosure,
Pick a piece of ground on which there is a small stream or spring,
but not a wet, swampy place; in fact, a side hill with a spring or
stream at the bottom is preferable. A piece of rocky bluff makes
an ideal location for a skunk farm. The skunk is not a water animal
although they like plenty of water.
Make the enclosure as large as you can, depending, of course,
upon the number skunks you expect to start out with. In other
of
words, the secret of a successful skunk layout
is to have the conditions
netting into the ground or lay a piece of the wire netting flat on the
ground at the foot of the fence, inside, of course, or protect it in the
best way possible, depending upon conditions, so that the skunk
will not dig under the fence and escape.
Breeding
Skunks in captivity breed once a year, but occasionally a second
litter is produced. One male should be kept for three to five females.
74 FUR FACTS
The mating season is usually in March and most raisers re-
commend keeping a few females and a single male in one run together.
If two males are kept in a single pen they are likely to fight. The
period of gestation is about nine weeks and the young come usually
in May. Before the young are born the females should be placed
in separate breeding pens containing a den or nesting box supplied
with straw or similar material. As soon as the young skunks are
about two months old they should be placed in a run set apart for
them. The young skunks are full grown and their fur will begin to
turn prime in December. In many cases skunks that are raised in
captivity have poor fur as compared with the pelt of the wild animal
and this is the result of keeping the animals in small pens and over-
feeding them. They do not get sufficient exercise and they run to
fat. The pelt becomes heavy and there is no under fur, conse-
quently the fur has little or no value for fur purposes. The male
skunks that are to be raised for the fur should be turned into a large
enclosure in September, when they are three or four months old, and
kept there in order that they may have ample exercise and can find
their natural food such as insects, etc. If they are allowed to lead
a natural wild life they will develop as fine a coat of fur as the wild
skunk in the same locality. If they are penned up in small en-
closures the fur is likely to be poor and the farmer will have all of his
trouble for nothing; so that you can see that this is a very important
point and should be watched closely. Select the largest and finest
skunks as you go along for breeding stock and breed to the all black
kind. The broad striped and rusty colored skunks should be taken
at the time when the fur is at its best which is usually in December
and January. Careful selection of the breeding stock will result in
better skunks year after year and if the blacks are selected in a few
years they will produce all black skunks, or what is known to the
trade as black, and will have very little white on them.
rather a dangerous thing with the older ones. The best time to
perform the operation is when the skunk is from four to five weeks
old, and even then it is advisable to have some one who is fairly
expert to do this work. To remove the gland make a sharp in-
cision on each side through the skin and enveloping muscles. This
exposes the round hard gland and duct. Care must be taken not
to cut the duct. When the round hard gland is exposed a clamp-
ing forceps should be placed over the duct close up to the gland. The
gland is then cut and the duct severed just beyond the clamp. The
gland with the clamp attached is then lifted out. It is not neces-
sary to use an aenesthetic for this operation on young skunks, and
we do not recommend it for the older animals unless it is found
absolutely necessary and then it should be performed only by one who
is really expert at this kind of work. Two men are needed to perform
the operation on the young skunk. After the operation the wound
should be dressed with a weak solution of carbolic acid. One promi-
nent raiser recommends that the scent sack be left in and not tak-
en out of the skunks that are to be killed for their fur, and this is
sound advice. For skunks that are to be sold as pets or for advertising
purposes it may be advisable to remove the scent sacks, but unless
there is some good reason for it, the sack should be left in and the
skunk allowed to lead as natural an existence as possible. Some own-
ers advise the method of cutting so as to expose the duct leading from
the gland and snipping out a short piece of it. In healing, the duct
is permanently closed and the animals are prevented from using its
The skunk is not particular about his residence, but can be found
in hollow logs, woodchuck burrows, caves and any open-
in the rocks,
ing that will suit its purposes. The
grown skunk is about the
full
size of the house cat and the tail of the skunk is broad and plume like.
The skunk is one of the most valuable fur bearers that we have in
America and is being properly taken care of and conserved in nearly
every state in the Union. The big fur houses of the country have
contributed a great deal to this conservation by calling the attention
of the farmer and trapper to this fact and urging him to take the
same care of the skunks and other fur bearers in his section as he
would of his own live stock, and to trap them only during certain
months of the year, when the fur is prime, and at a time that will not
interfere with the breeding season. The skunk is not at all suspicious
and for this reason can be trapped comparatively easy. One
method of taking skunks that has come into vogue in recent years,
and which has many advantages if it is done properly, is that of
smoking the skunks out of their hiding places and then killing the
large prime male skunks, letting the others escape to be taken at a
more opportune time. For this purpose there has been developed
several devices for scaring the animals out of their dens. The
majority of the skunks are taken in the steel trap, and this, after all,
is the simplest and safest way. Traps are now made that not only
catch the animal but also kill it. We recommend this style of trap
which is known as the Two Trigger Trap. Most trappers use Fun-
sten Animal Bait in connection with their food bait, and as the
Funsten Animal Bait is designed to attract the large male to the
FUR FACTS 77
trap, for this reason if for nothing else, it is very desirable to use it.
The bait is made from odors that arouse the passion of the particular
animal for which it is made. As soon as the male skunk smells the
odor of the Funsten Animal Bait he will make an effort to get to it
and even fight frantically for it. The three prize winning methods
of trapping skunk in the $500.00 contest of Funsten Bros. & Co.,
are given herewith. All of these men are experienced in their line
and have been successful trappers for many years.
run along. Set your trap as I have directed you, then take a piece
of rabbit or a part of a mouse or bird, put it on a small forked stick,
and stick it within five or six inches of your trap, and then put about
six drops of Funsten Skunk Bait on it, and if any skunks come close
you will get Place the covering as thinly over the top as
them.
possible, just so you hide the trap from view. Make a round of
your traps every day, if possible every other —
day at least.
I have been using Funsten skunk Bait, and I have caught many
skunks."
J. R. POYNTER
Winner of Second Prize
"Having had considerable experience in trapping, I will give
move the tail bone. Care should be taken not to cut into the scent
gland. No other cuts in the carcass are necessary. Turn the skin
back from the body, using the knife only when necessary to cut the
ligaments. Care should always be taken in cutting around the eyes
and nose to avoid tearing the skin. Keep the skin as clean of meat
and fat as possible. It is well to suspend the carcass from the limb
of a tree, using the Funsten Gambrel-Stretcher for this purpose.
This consists of a regular fur stretcher with two hooks on it to which
the hind legs of the carcass may be fastened, and this enables the
trapper to peel the skin off very easily. After the skin has been re-
moved it will be in the form of a long pocket with the fur in. In
order to dry the skin to the proper shape, dry it on the Funsten
Perfect Stretcher, but if this is not available a board cut to the
proper size and shape may be used. Stretch the skunk skin out
smooth with the hair side in and allow it to dry in a shady cool place.
Never dry skunk by the fire or in the sun. Scrape the skin off clean,
FUR FACTS 79
but do not scrape the pelt too close as that will injure the roots of the
fur. Never use any preparations of any kind in curing skunk skins.
Always remove the tail bone.
Any of the following traps may be used in trapping Skunk, Victor
No. 1, No. 1 Giant, No. %
No. 91, No. 91^, Jump Traps No. 1,
No. iy2i No. 91 and No. 913^, Newhouse No. 1, No. 81 and No. 91,
and the Funsten Two Trigger Trap Coil Spring No. 1. We also re-
commend the use of the Funsten Perfect Smoker for smoking skunks
out of hollow logs, but do not use it in bitter cold weather when the
skunk are hibernating. The finest device yet invented for scaring
skunks out of the den is the Funsten Spitz-Devil. Unlike muskrat
there are very few skunk skins dressed for home use; however, if
it is desired to dress them the same methods may be used as de-
trap a fine mink pelt. Mink follow the streams, and feed along the
banks of creeks, lakes, and ponds. They are killers and it is believed
that they often kill just for the pleasure of it. They are more diffi-
cult to raise than the skunk, but they can be made very profitable
and it is to be hoped that many more will take up the raising of mink
for profit and try to make it a successful industry. There is not much
practical information at hand on the subject for the reason that it
isan undeveloped industry and has been attempted by comparatively
few men. Some of these have been very successful, others have
become discouraged and quit. Those who have become successful
are reticent and not inclined to give information on the subject,
others are only too glad to help in any way in order that others may
start that they will have more customers for their live stock.
There is a demand for live mink for breeding purposes and there
will no doubt be more money in raising mink for this purpose than
for their pelts, as good prices can be obtained for live pairs. Live
mink sell as high as fifty dollars per pair, and it is claimed by some
men that the business of mink farming is more profitable than any
other kind of fur farming, with the possible exception of Silver
FUR FACTS 81
may be used instead of boards, but in this case the top should be
turned in so as to prevent the minks from climbing out. Boxes should
be provided for the nests as described heretofore. It is best to furnish
the boxes with a hinged lid, so that they may be opened and ex-
amined, but this should not be done too often, in fact not at all
unless it is absolutely necessary, as the mink should be left absolutely
alone. If a little water can flow naturally through the pen, it will
be a big help. There is a big demand for live mink, so that the time
to start raising them is now, and we advise that every effort be made
to catch a pair of live mink and start in a small way. Every boy
can get a lot of pleasure and satisfaction out of raising mink and you
can make a big profit besides.
Mink are found throughout the United States and a greater part
of Canada and Alaska. The finest mink come from Maine and the
Northern part of New York. The largest mink come from Minnesota
and the Dakotas. The State of Louisiana is probably the largest
producer of mink, and the quality of the fur is good considering that
they are produced in an extreme southern climate. It is a small
carnivorous animal, belonging to the weasel family. A distinct
species is found in Europe and Asia. The mink has a small
also
head, a long slender body, rather short legs and bushy tail. It is
very graceful in its movements. They are very fond of water and
get much of their food from it. They usually follow their same
tracks back and forth, sometimes traveling in water and sometimes
on land. If you can locate their tracks and make your sets accord-
ingly, you should have good results. They are flesh eating and are
fond of trout, muskrat flesh, frogs and rabbits. Any of these baits
used in connection with Funsten Mink bait are almost sure to produce
results. Mink is one of the staple articles of the fur trade. The
color varies from a light brown to a very rich dark brown, almost
black. The darker skins are more valuable. The finest, silkiest
skins come from Maine and the Northern part of the United States.
Mating season commences about the first of March and ends about
the middle of March. The young are usually born in April, there
being from four to six in a litter. The fur of the mink is best during
the latter part of November, December and January. Mink trapped
out of season are, as a rule, poor in quality and of little value.
Trapping Mink
Most experienced trappers recommend the setting of traps along
small streams. They are more winding and crooked and more drift
84 FUR8FACTS
is lodged along the way, affording hiding places for the animals and
therefore good places for setting traps, both in and out of the water.
If there is a bluff on one side of the stream and it is low on the other,
the low side is recommended mink traps,
as the best for setting
Wherever there are plenty of fish is usually a good trapping range
for mink. Whenever it is possible, sets should be made in water.
Select a place where the indications for mink are favorable. If
possible, place some old drift or logs so as to make a guideway.
Place the trap about the middle of the guideway and on the far side
of the trap drop a half dozen drops of Funsten Mink Bait. The
bait should be placed so as to make the animal cross the trap to get
to the bait. Never put the bait on the trap itself.
MINK
Find a hollow log along the edge of a stream. Use some muskrat
flesh or trout well scented with Funsten Mink Bait, then put the
bait well into the log. Set a trap at each end of the log.
Another method is to secure a medium size tile and wedge a stick
into it crosswise. On the stick place a few drops of Funsten Mink
Bait. Place the tile in shallow water so that the water just covers
FUR FACTS 85
the bottom of it, and place a trap at either end of the tile under the
water.
Another way is to place the trap close to the bank in shallow water
underneath some overhanging grass or weeds, and drop a few drops
of Funsten Mink Bait on the weeds just above the trap.
In extremely cold weather when streams are frozen over, find a
place where there are ripples and thin ice, where it will be possible
for the mink to come out. There are any number of ways and places
that might be suggested, but the trappers' own individual judgment
will guide him best as to the exact spot to place his traps. For trap-
ping mink we recommend the use of Funsten Animal Bait and New-
house or Victor Traps No. 1, or No. 1 Giant, or Jump Traps, No. 1
or l}iy Coil Spring No. 1, or the Funsten Two Trigger Trap.
Mink never den up during the severely cold weather and will go
out every night in the coldest climate. Their favorite haunts are
along the banks of creeks, ponds, and lakes. Mink will go off on
long tramps and will be away from his headquarters for a week at a
time, stopping wherever he can and finding little hiding places during
the day. The mink is suspicious, and has a keen sense, and is there-
fore very hard to trap. For this reason it is advisable to use a good
scent, and Funsten Animal Bait is best for this purpose, as it has been
successfully used for twenty years by experienced trappers all over
the world.
Successful mink trappers run from twenty five to one hundred
traps and where they can afford it they buy the Funsten Two Trigger
Trap, as it is sure death to the mink. A fine prime mink pelt is so val-
uable that care must be taken that they are not damaged in the trap-
The Funsten Two Trigger Trap is recommended for this purpose,
as it does not injure the fur in any way and is humane as it means
instant death to the mink.
mink trappers of recent years have recommended
All of the great
the Funsten Animal Bait for the successful trapping of mink, and we
herewith publish the three prize winning methods in the Funsten
trapping contest. These methods are written by men who know
their business and who rank with the great trappers of the world.
R. E. Orr of Paris, Texas, has probably trapped as many mink in his
time as any other one man in this country.
Winner of the First Prize for the Best Method of Trapping Mink
The trapper, like the fiddler, the singer, the orator, is born to
his calling. Born with the inclination, tact and genius in him,
FUR FACTS
it does not follow that many others may not become good trappers
by training and experience. The trait of the trapper is seen in the
boy while quite young, and all opposition will not stop his tendencies.
The trapper should be a good walker, and one who is fond of ramb-
ling walks, for much walking is required by the trapper. He need
not necessarily be a fast walker, except at times. Indeed, most of
his walking should be done slowly, in order to give him opportunity
for making inspection of tracks and signs in his territory inspection —
of all that pertains to his information. The trapper should be an
early riser, and should visit his traps frequently.
It is important that the trapper should be fully acquainted with
the habits of the animal he attempts to trap, and this can be acquired
only by long and close attention to the places it frequents, its ramb-
lings, the peculiar place where it stops and slides or wallows; its ins
and outs, its ups and downs, from and to the water. All this can be
best learned in time of snow, but the old trapper does not necessarily
need the snow. The trapper must learn his art, for nothing but the
outlines can be put on paper. The trapper must make himself fam-
iliar with his territory. He must learn to know the main stream and
tributaries, or branches, the hills and hollows. He should note
everything pertaining to signs of the animal, its place of passage; in
short, tracks, holes, hollows, hollow logs, hollow stumps, and such
holes, for in so doing he will often find them burrowed up in places
not suspected.
The small streams and branches tributary to larger ones, are
much better for the trapper than the large ones. The large streams
clear themselves of passing drift, and they wash out the holes and
hiding places of the animals. The small streams are more winding
and crooked, and much drift is lodged along the way. They afford
more eddies and ripples and rocky places, which afford hiding places
for animals, and, therefore, good places for setting traps, both in
and out of the water. The small ones have more thicket and willow
on their margins. Now, if there is a bluff on one side and low on the
other, the low side is best for setting traps. Quantities of muskrat
and fish are signs of good trapping range. The muskrats make holes
and hiding places for the mink, also good setting places for the trapper
especially those not in use by the rat.
—
The Habits of the animals This is doubtless the most important
subdivision of the guide to the trapper. The trapper should know,
from his own personal knowledge, the habits of the animal he attempts
FUR FACTS 87
to trap. He must know the kind of places they frequent most, and
learn their motives for going there, and this can be done only by
the closest imspection (what they do there is mink or coonology,
and can only be guessed at) but it will be sufficient for trappers to
note their signs with care, and be careful not to tramp around much
or disturb their haunts, for sure as you do they will quit the place.
In tramping much about their holes, dens and frequented places
fact,
will drive —
them away. (Note never take your dogs with you when
you go to set your traps. The mink can scent a dog for days. Never
set a trap where dogs frequent.)
It requires much care and ingenuity to trap the mink. The trapper
must know his habits well in order to be successful, for he is cer-
tainly the most cautious of all the wild animals in the woods, except,
perhaps, the fox and the wolf. At times the mink seems bold, but
he is always prepared for retreat. He is sometimes seen in open
daylight, but never without nearby retreat.
The mink that visits your chicken roost has his advance and his
retreat all planned before he makes his venture. He always comes
in the rear along some fence through weeds or through any sort of
hiding. In fact, he always has his eye on some way of retreat.
If you track him you find him under cover in every way
possible, traveling in the most secluded places; through thickets,
along the hedges, under shelving banks, under logs, drift, rock fences,
and rock piles. When he puts up for the day he seeks, generally,
some inaccessible place, but he is found sometimes in temporary
places, and I regard that as more a matter of strategy than
security.
you track him you will find him crossing and doubling on his
If
making many crooks and turns, going in and out of holes; and
trail,
you may believe that you have located him, when at the same time,
he may be a mile away. The only certain test is to make a circle
and count the ins and outs. If there are more ins than outs, you
can say he is here, and if you think best to trap him, find his retreats
and select the best one for a trap. If this one does not leave room or
place for the trap, make room, then place the trap, leaving a peep-
hole, but not enough for him to get out. That is, stop all but the
peep-hole. Do the same at the main entrance in the same way.
then see that the retreats are well stopped up. Go early next morn-
ing, and you are very sure to get him. The writer seldom or never
failed. I counted him as caught, unless he had some retreat I failed
to find.
88 FUR FACTS
The habits of the male and female are quite different. The female
confines itself to a given locality, the limit of which does not extend
more than a mile from a common center, and within this area she
has from two to three places of frequent habit, and it is of much
importance to the trapper to locate them, for the male mink visits
—
them from two to three times a week. (Note Such places, when
found, should not be in any way disturbed, for they are a common
attraction to all male mink.) Any suitable place in this territory
is the best place to set your traps.
Female mink are found from half a mile to a mile apart, up and
down the main stream, or not far up some branch of it. The line of
travel of the male is from three to four miles up or down stream,
including its branches, with their adjacent territory, and the whole
line of this territory is visited from two to three times a week by the
male mink.
The female mink is really local, her travel being about a mile up
and down the main stream, and also its nearby tributaries. She has
certain places where she frequents, hunts for food, and bathes, leaving
her signs. She has from two to three places where she burrows up
for the day. The places range from a quarter to a half-mile distant
from a common center. Caution! When you find these places never
disturb them, for sure as you do she will leave. The male has a line
two miles up and down from a given point, which makes a distance
of about four miles' travel. You can trap around and near by her
—
domicile any suitable place near by is advisable.
Never set your trap in a hole you suspect as being a den or living
place for the mink, for they will surely leave that point. You should
find a stump, or tree-root, shelving bank or drift near by, and leaving
as few signs as possible, set your trap. The mink, like all other ani-
mals, wants to capture his prey, or find hidden as though some
it
other animal had placed it there, so you should dig back carefully
and hide your bait in such a way that the mink will be forced to go
over your traps to get it. The bait should be made secure by means
of a stick stuck through the bait, and stuck firmly in the back part
of the pen made Then set and place your trap in
for the purpose.
front of it, pushing the end of the spring just under your bait. See
that no sticks or brush will interfere with your trap, then get some old
leaves and cover lightly. Don't use the staple for fastening, but
get some pieces of light, soft wire, say about twenty-four to thirty
inches long and attach them to the chain. You can fasten to any-
FUR FACTS 89
thing near by, such as a dead limb, for what you tie to need not be
very heavy. Then it is best for you to throw water where you have
been tramping around.
Many animals slightly caught get away, and to avoid this most
of the sets can be placed by the water, and by using a wire attached
to the chain, you give the animal a chance to go into the water. The
impulse of the animal is that the water is his protection. He lunges
at once for the water, and is soon drowned, for a No. 1 Trap will
drown a mink or rat in a foot of water.
I have had good luck with water-sets, and with Funsten
Animal Bait. I regard a spring coming out from the banks as
sure places for a catch. When I find such a place I keep my trap
there; in fact, it is a bad habit to move traps often. Be sure you
make a good set.
a little to settle the trap. Then find some water-soaked leaves to cover
the trap; fasten trap to a drag, say a dead limb; for, if caught the
trap will drown him, and the stick is only a means of keeping trace
of your game. —
Again you will notice bluff rocks any large rock at
either end of which there is a gradual slope from the water up to the
land, furnishing good water-sets. A mink is almost sure to pass
around these rocks, so such places form good water-sets. The trapper
ought to carry with him a cup or can so that he can dash water all
about where he puts his hands, or does much tramping about.
The trapper should take his time in selecting a place to set, and
in making the set he should do the same; first, feeling confident that
he has made a good selection, then taking pains and making a careful
set, then he will go to his traps with confidence. (Note Where —
you catch one is the place to catch another, provided you do not tramp
around and make too much sign.) In going to your traps you
should go cautiously, and when near enough to see that they are not
to other trappers, and hunters can trace you to your traps. If you
are cautious, you can set a trap, and if no one sees you, no one can
find your trap.
At times during the winter the creeks and large branches are
generally frozen over, but the water soon runs down leaving what
90 FUR FACTS
may be called "hollow ice", but on ripples, about rocks and around
roots of trees, also small inlets on sides of the streams and springs,
the water is open, and here I suggest that at such times and places
is the trapper's opportunity. At such times the mink is under the
ice, both day and night, fishing for minnows, crawfish and mussels.
Go to the open ripples, rocky places about tree roots, logs, inlets and
springs where they go under or come up, and if the water is not too
deep, say enough to cover your trap to a depth of five inches (I mean
that five inches is not too deep), place your trap in the direction that
it appears they jump from the opening. The best fastening for your
trap is a rock to which you wire the trap. Slip the rock under to
one side, dash water and leave the place carefully.
The trapper can use bait under the ice at such times to great
advantage; indeed, I regard sets under ice more successful than on
land, for they can be made with less trouble and less exposure to
animal attention than upon land. The trapper can use almost any
place where the water is not too deep, and the opening suitable to
put traps and bait under. The bait should be tied to a stick of such
a length as the place seems to require; then fasten or fix the bait by
pushing the stick down, then bending it so as to press the upper end
against the ice above; then put whatever you tie to underneath.
Next, place trap at, or about a foot from the stick, if the stick stands
straight; if not, place the trap under the bait. A rock is the best
fastening; You can often pick up a rock so shaped that you can
wire trap to it. I prefer to use a rock to fasten to, for you make less
—
sign than with any other means. (Note If it can be done, dash water
about where you have been setting.)
There are many devices which are good, but in any thickly settled
community they are not practical, on account of hunters and dogs.
The steel trap is the best adapted to the trapper, for they can be
secreted in such a way as to be inaccessible to dogs and out of sight
of fishers and hunters. The best is the cheapest, for cheap traps get
out of order soon, and more is lost in catches than is gained in cheap-
ness. Among the best is the Newhouse, Victor and Jump. The
trapper should provide himself with pieces of wire thirty inches long
with which to fasten his traps. (I never use the staple.) More
length is needed to let the animal into the water. A No. 1 trap will
drown a mink or rat in ten inches of water. I have a device called
trap in box. Cover box with wire net; put trap in; leave it in all
season; cover with leaves; put wire on so it can be moved.
Among fresh baits, the rabbit, partridge, jaybird, redbird; in
short, any large bird, is good; fish of any kind; that is, fresh fish.
A rabbit will make The hams make two,
six baits, if rightly cut.
cut two more between hams and shoulders, make one of the head
and neck together. No bird will make more than one bait. The
bird bait should be tied. Tie head and feet to the stick used in
staking your bait down. In sticking the rabbit bait, run a sharp
stick through both legs to keep them from being dragged over your
trap before the animal is caught. Always fix your bait in such a
way that the animal must go over the trap to get it. (If I am
not seen carrying a trap, no one will find it.) I suggest you carry
a trap sack. Traps in pocket render the trapper clumsy. He can
not get under in places when loaded with traps. Every trap should
be done up in such a manner as to make it handy. Much time is
lost in untangling traps.
The value is appreciated by the trap-
of a fine scent or trail bait
per of experience. During the past fifty years the writer has used
many kinds of scent and trail baits, and can, after this long ex-
perience, say that he knows no equal to the Funsten Baits.
The writer of this essay is now past seventy-four years old; does
no longer go to the frontier to trap, but confines his trapping to the
small streams and tributaries of the Meramec and Big rivers, where-
ever he can get a comfortable boarding place, his object being to
amuse himself and spend the winter season.
In closing this essay the writer will say that in this busy age of
progress trapping can hardly be regarded as business, but there
may be some whose situation in life and condition of health is such
that they can afford to spend the trapping season to advantage,
both in regard to their pecuniary welfare and their health. I am
satisfied that the labor or business-worn man had better go to the
trapping range than any springs, hot springs, or cold springs. As
a rule it is not medicine that worn-down men need, but cheerful
recreation. The mind or condition of the mind, needs more rest
than the body. Nature's true medicine and restoration of health
are found in the forest among the hills, dells and brooks.
The writer of this essay believes that he owes his good health
and activity of body and mind to his outdoor life. He is nearly
seventy-five years old; no pains of any kind; good sleep and good
appetite.
G. M. HORENE.
,
92 FUR FACTS
Winner of Second Prize
"The greatest trouble is to find a place to set the traps. I find,
after fifteen years' experience, that fall trapping must be done in
water, and I must make places for my sets beforehand in the follow-
ing manner.
Follow the streams you intend trapping along, dig pockets in
bank at water level; dig back two feet; have them eight inches wide;
dig under bank so nothing can get the bait except from the front;
place clam shells in back of pocket; stick brush slanting out over
pocket to hide from view; get short pieces of small, hollow logs, bed
them in mud at the edge of stream so water will run through; cut small
hole in top of log to drop bait through; settle stone or short log in
mud at edge of stream; cut a small trench to turn water around stone.
In this way you have your fall trapping grounds ready, and the game
finds them in hunting for frogs and crawfish, and they can be baited
beforehand.
Use a piece of wire to reach deep water, fasten stone to outer end;
bend long loop in wire near stone; set trap at front of pocket in two
inches of water, and cover with wet leaves; drive stake out in water
the length of the chain; slip trap ring over wire and fasten wire to
stake. Use live frogs or crawfish for bait, and Funsten Animal
Bait. Set trap at each end of all hollow logs you have fixed; fasten
cord to live bait, and drop through hole in log and fasten. Set trap
in channel where you have turned water around stone and logs,
and cover with wet leaves, staking with wire and stone.
Cover up dens you find carefully with brush for spring trap-
all
water several feet. Just under water, square down the bank with
a hatchet, leaving six inches between the bank and the stakes, cut
some brush and stick in the bank, letting the tops lay over the stakes
for mark. In this way you can have several hundred sets ready on
different streams for winter trapping. After streams are frozen up
solid you will find the water has and leaves a space under the
fallen,
ice at shore. Here the mink lives through the cold weather. As
they work up and down the edge of the water they must go between
the stakes and the bank. To set traps, cut a hole in the ice one foot
from shore and one foot below the stakes. Set traps between the
stakes and the bank. If the water is too deep, fill up; if too shallow,
dig down. If the traps are likely to freeze up put a hand full of salt
around them. You can pick your set to have them in running water.
Stake in the hole you have cut and cover with ice and snow. If
trapping on swr amp, where rats build their houses, mark all runs in
banks made by rats. To set here, cut a hole through to run, and set
trap, as they live here through cold weather. Set at all holes where
they have cut through the house, cut a hole in side of house and set
trap. Drop a rat carcass down the hole so the mink will have to
pass over the trap to reach the bait. Another set —Cut out a strip
six inches deep across the top of house and set trap here, covering
all traps smoothly.
Spring Trapping —This is the time to catch them in holes, as
they dodge into every one they come to. Locate all the dens you
can through summer and fall. Make by driving a sharpened
holes
stick slanting into the bank. Cut away the dirt at mouth of the
hole so the trap will set level with surface of the ground. Cover
the trap nice and smooth with dry grass or leaves; make the same
dens and holes. At this time of the year use no bait.
set at all
All you want is the musk from another mink. Put some of this
scent on a small stick; drop in hole in front of the trap, and
you are sure of every mink that comes along. It will also draw
them, as they can smell it a long distance. Set at all bridges and
tiles and holes in rat runs around swamp, using the same scent. I
also recommend the Funsten Animal Baits; they are good and re
liable."
C. S. Brewer
94 FUR FACTS
of some kind. Cheese is about the most effective bait of this kind
that can be used in this way.
The mink more suspicious than most small animals, but one of
is
the hole. If you have large lots of traps and can not make hole sets
for them all, the balance may be set in runways under roots and
bluffs, where mink travel most.
always fasten chain in w ater where mink are caught. They go
I r
directly into the water and soon drown in their struggles and you
have him safe. One would think it would take lots of work to make
sets of this kind, but if you live in a country where mink are plentiful,
you will find you will be more than rewarded for your work. I
have taken as many as nine mink from one set of this kind during a
season.
In regard to baits and scents, I have trapped for the past fifteen
years; have experimented a great deal with scents and baits, and I
have no argument to make with brother trappers. I know there
are hundreds of worthless and nonsensical ideas about baits for
different animals. A scent of the right kind about traps will largely
do away with the human scent, and often keep animals from detecting
or being shy of places where traps are set.
The following is a fair and impartial test: Some time during
January (do not remember the date) I ordered a bottle of Funsten
Animal Bait for mink. On the 27th of January I set thirty mink
traps —
as many in prepared places or holes as I had. The balance
were set in runways. I baited every other trap with Funsten Animal
Bait, placing a little back in the hole or about the trap, so I had
fifteen with bait and fifteen with no bait. The traps set for three
nights. From the fifteen baited with Funsten Animal Bait I took
six mink and one coon. From the other fifteen, not baited, I took
three mink, one coon, and one opossum.
My method of setting traps for mink is as follows: Divide 200
traps into six parts.Set six lines of them in different parts of the
country. If weather is cold I have one man to help, visiting each
line once every day. I usually have my trap lines from two to ten
miles apart. Some times much further on, according to the condi-
tions. from one to the other on horse back, or sometimes
I travel
from one station to the other on trains, when convenient. I work
every day and work hard. It is no lazy man's job to be a successful
trapper."
R. E. Orr.
Average large mink after the skin is stretched and dried for ship-
ment will be about twenty inches long from the tip of the nose to
to the root of the tail, about four inches wide and will weigh from
three and one half to four ounces.
CHAPTER XII
RACCOON
Raccoon is plentiful in the Southern States. They are found as
far north as Ontario and as far south as Florida, and a very large
number of them are trapped each year in Oregon, Washington, and
California, but practically none are found in the Rocky Mountain
region.
RACCOON
The raccoon skin is one of the most practical and serviceable furs,
and is used in the manufacture of coats for both men and women,
and in recent years has been in great vogue for trimming of sport
coats and other garments for hard outdoor usage. It is a splendid
wearing fur and very warm and comfortable. The best dark skins
are a beautiful rich color. For many years the finest raccoon came
from what is known as the New Madrid section of Missouri and
were trapped there in large quantities. But the reclaiming of these
98 FUR FACTS
swamp lands scattered the coon and they have migrated to other
parts of the state,down into Arkansas, and more especially to the
Louisiana swamps, with the result that Louisiana is now one of the
largest coon producing states in the Union.
The raccoon is one of our most staple furs, and is used year in
and year out by the coat manufacturers as well as the cloak and
suit trade, who use large quantities for trimming. The raccoon is
a fur that is very popular in the United States, also in Canada, but
comparatively few are exported to Europe, the American and Can-
adian furrier wanting them and paying much better prices than the
Europeans.
Raccoon are more easily trapped than mink and are not nearly so
prolific as muskrat or opossum. Therefore there should be more
attention paid to raising them and especially to conserving them.
If you have any raccoon on your farm or in the swamps or timber
land surrounding, lay off a district, do not trap in this district, and
encourage the coon to use this preserve for breeding purposes and
as a haven of refuge. Confine your trapping to the districts outside
of this preserve. This is equivalent to having a fur farm and the
raccoon will soon find out that the district you have set aside is a
safe place for them and they will live there as long as they are un-
molested.
Raising Raccoon
sects he can find. They usually sleep during the day and prowl
around at night. They are very clean in their habits. Some authori-
ties believe that raccoon can be raised more successfully than most
of the other fur bearers. They are very hardy, and where they are
kept in the zoos or public parks, they live for many years and seem
to thrive under conditions that are far from being ideal for any
wild animal. A few acres of timbered land well fenced and with
plenty of good fresh water, stocked with a few pair of raccoon will
prove a profitable investment. Raccoon fur is advancing in price
from year to year and will always be in demand. Its fur will always
have a market value, and in some sections of the South its meat is
prized highly as food. Therefore with the high price of the skin
and with the carcass also having a food value, there is no reason
why the raccoon should not be one of the most profitable farm
animals that the farmer could raise, and is well worth the careful
attention of every farmer that has a piece of land suitable for
the purpose.
But whether you go in for fur farming or not, champion the
cause of setting aside a district in your county as a game preserve
and have that district protected by a game warden in order that
no trapping will be done on this ground. Allow trapping only in
the districts surrounding the game preserve, and this will insure
big catches and profitable catches and a large and constant supply.
Trapping Raccoon
The raccoon have his den in hollow trees, and in the
likes to
openings and rocky bluffs, and sleeps during the day and prowls
around at night. The raccoon is very curious and will go to a great
deal of trouble to investigate anything that arouses his curiosity.
He likes to investigate bright shiny objects and often gets caught
by reason of this fact. Many trappers use the Funsten Radiolite
Fish for trapping raccoon. This is a piece of tin stamped out in the
100 FUR FACTS
shape of a and covered with radiolite. This is fastened to the pan
fish
of the trap and the trap set in shallow water close to the bank. It
radiates a yellow light at night and any coon passing along will stop
to investigate and almost always gets caught. The raccoon, unlike
most other animals after being caught, is philosophical and does not
make much of a fuss over it, so he can be taken alive with little
The raccoon also has a great habit of running his paw into
trouble.
small openings looking for grubs, and other delicacies, and the wise
trapper takes advantage of this peculiarity by using the Funsten
Surehold Trap, which consists of a piece of hard wood about as big
around as a baseball bat, and about eight inches long. This is hol-
lowed out and three or four sharp screws set at an angle around the
edge so that the points almost meet on the inside. This is placed in
the ground and a few drops of Funsten Animal Bait dropped in the
opening. When the raccoon comes along he stops to investigate
and jams his paw down into the opening and comes up with the
wooden trap enveloping his paw. He finds that it is a hard thing to
shake off, and if he pulls one way it hurts, so he simply tries to gnaw
it off, but as it is seasoned hard wood he has a difficult job and does
not make much headway. This trap takes the place of the old time
method of finding a log that had fallen across the stream and boring
a hole in the top of it about eight inches deep and setting small
sharp horseshoe nails around the edge. The Surehold Trap has
many advantages over this method. It is more humane as the sharp
screws can be set to a nicety that is impossible with the horseshoe
nails, and you can set the Surehold trap where you please. As the
Surehold trap costs only 20c, it is in big demand.
In some sections of the South the raccoon gets trapped without
the trapper having anything to do with it. It is said that he is
very fond of oysters and will wade along the water's edge and follow
the tide out in hope of slipping up on some unsuspecting oyster that
is lying on the beach with its shell open feeding. The raccoon will
stick its paw down into the shell to extract the oyster and often
times is successful before the oyster can close its shell. But every
once in a while the oyster shell closes on the raccoon's foot and
Mr. Oyster refuses to let go, with the result that the raccoon finds
himself a prisoner. These oysters attach themselves very strongly
to the rocks so that the coon finds it impossible to pull the shells
off; and there have been cases on record where they would find the
The following are the three prize winning methods in the Funsten
Trapping Contest. As all three of these men are extremely successful
trappers with a long number of years of experience, these methods
will be of value to those interested in the trapping of coon.
art of trapping.
Now the next thing is to find where the most coons are, and locate
yourself near where they are, but not too close, as your presence will
cause them to move. Now after you are located, take your traps
(size No. l}4 or 2, if the spring is not too stout), set them in the trail
of the coon, which may be in the water or on land. If in the water,
place the traps where the water is about three to six inches deep.
If there is no trail to be found, and you see tracks or other signs,
then the best way is to set on logs or by the end of a log or hollow
tree, and be sure to cover your traps up with bug dust or loose earth,
and sprinkle a few drops of Funsten's Animal Bait for coon around
your traps, and the work is done. I have doubled my catch by using
the Funsten Animal Baits. The coon is cunning and you must
study him to become perfect in catching him."
James H. Pace
to take the proper care in skinning them after the animal is trapped
and stretch them so as to bring the highest price in the market.
Some trappers tack the skins out so as to form a square. Others use
four stout green sticks about twenty four inches long and one half
inch in diameter to get the desired result. To take the skin from the
animal rip the skin down the belly, down the back of the hind legs,
and on the inside of the front legs. Care should be used in skinning
the head. Remove the tail bone and see that the scalp and pelt is
free from superfluous meat and fat. Then split the head from a
point behind the ears down to the nose. Cut small holes around
the entire edge of the skin, and then insert the sticks through the
holes and stretch the skin its full length and as square as possible.
Skins that are well handled are much more valuable than those
that are poorly handled. Cut off the feet and part of the legs to
When you
get the desired effect, as the legs and feet have no value.
hang the skins up, or tack them up, select a place where they are
not exposed to the sun. Never dry skins near a fire as the pelts be-
come brittle and grease-burnt which spoils the value of the pelt
entirely. Never use any chemicals or solutions on raw furs. After
they are dried long enough to hold their shape they are ready for
shipment.
The average large raccoon skin after it is stretched is about
twenty four inches long from the top of the skin to the root of the
tail, and about seventeen inches wide, and will weigh about ten
ounces. This is for average coon from the central and southern
section. The heavy large coon from Minnesota and some of the more
northern sections will average larger in size and heavier in weight.
CHAPTER XIII
OPOSSUM
The American Opossum is found in the central and southern
states, as far north as Iowa and as far west as Kansas. In the states
of Missouri, Illinois, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Tennessee, Ken-
tucky, Indiana, Ohio, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Virginia, West
Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Louisiana, opposum
are found in great numbers. Opossum fur is very popular with
American furriers and large quantities are also exported to Europe.
It takes most any shade of dye on account of its light grey color,
and the opossum is valuable not only for its fur, but it is also valuable
as a food. The flesh of the opossum is highly prized in some sections
of the South, especially by the colored people who are very fond of
it. In fact, fat, well-baked opossum with sweet potatoes is said to
be a dish fit for a king.
In the Fall of the year the opossum feeds on corn, berries, paw-
paws, persimmons and mice. The opossum is a splendid climber and
is able to hold his weight by encircling a limb of a tree with its tail,
thus leaving both fore feet free. According to the fruit growers
he is a big eater. The opossum is able to support itself by means
of this tail for hours at a time, and it is often said that they sleep
in this position. The opossum are hunted at night and when one or
more are found shaken out or knocked out
in a small tree they are
with a long stick. As soon as they hit the ground they will feign
death or what is known among trappers as "Playing 'Possum".
They will remain in this state as long as any one is around where
they are. Some hunters take advantage of this fact by encircling
their tail around a thus carrying them with little or no trouble.
stick,
The opossum a great climber, but rather awkward on the
is
C!>TOt4 OULl .
OPOSSUM
The body is about twenty inches in length, and the average
opossum skin it is stretched and dried will measure about
after
twenty four inches long by about seven inches wide. The opossum
skins are useless for fur purposes until the undercoat of fur is fully
developed, which usually does not take place until late in the Fall
or early Winter. At this time the opossum is usually fat, especially
if the harvest is good. The opossum is very prolific, and the female
is furnished with a pouch and belongs to the Marsupial Family
that most opossum are dyed, and the value of the pelt depends
entirely on the quality and depth of the under fur. All of this
under-fur is shed during the Summer months, and for this reason
opossum skins that are taken in the off season have little or no value
for furriers' purposes.
In recent years the finer qualities of opossum have been used
very largely in their natural color for trimming, and it is found to
be a servicable and dependable fur, and as stated before is one of
the staple articles of the fur trade.
Raising Opossum
»
foliage of the trees in the day time. The Opossum is not at all
cunning, and will eat most any kind o f meat. Use steel trap No. 1}^.
Set the trap at his den or in his haunts. Take a piece of meat or
fish, and drop some Funsten Animal Bait over the meat or fish bait.
Hang the bait in a tree, so he can just reach it, or find some brush or
limb of a fallen tree, or drive a stake in the ground if necessary to
108 FUR FACTS
hang the bait from. Cover the trap with grass or rotten wood,
making sure the trap directly under the bait, so when Mr. 'Possum
is
reaches for the bait he will come down in the trap, and you will be
sure to get him."
C. B. Dakan
Winner of Second Prize for Best Method of Trapping Opossum
"The following is our method of trapping Opossum. First,
take fish and cut in small pieces and put in a jar or bottle, and
let stand until rotten; then set your traps on logs or in holes, and use
the rotten fish and oil for bait. Put your bait on or close to trap,
so as to make the Opossum step on pedal of trap for bait.
We have always found Funsten Animal Baits reliable and satis-
factory.
Cover your trap good with rotten wood and you will get old
Mr. Opossum. We have caught 197 Opossum in one season with
this method.
If a den or hole can be found, set your trap at entrance of hole
and put bait beyond your trap. Conceal your trap good.
The above is our method of trapping Opossum. We have caught
hundreds of Opossum in the last three seasons with this method.
Ask Funsten Bros. & Co., they have our account sales."
J. M. & A. M. Rodgers
Winner of Third Prize for Best Method of Trapping Opossum
"I will give you my
method of trapping the Opossum. I take
a dead chicken or a and hang it on the limb of some
rabbit,
fallen tree, if there are any limbs on it, and if not, I drive a stake in
the ground and fasten the bait to it about twelve inches from the
ground; then I set my trap right underneath it, and if there are any
Opossums around they will be sure to get caught. Be sure to look
at your traps every morning, for the Opossum will get away."
William Knorpp
How to Prepare Opossum for Market
Opossum should always be taken off cased and stretched with
the pelt side out. Never take opossum off open. Cut off the feet
and tail as these are of no value and only take away from the appear-
ance of the skin when it is ready for market. As the opossum is very
fat in the fall and winter season care should be taken to remove all
superfluous meat and fat from the pelt before it is packed for ship-
ment.
CHAPTEITXIV
THE OTTER
The found in nearly every part of the North American
otter is
lessly. This in addition to the fact that many streams have been
polluted has tended to drive the otter out of many sections where
they would do well, especially in some of the older and more thickly
populated states. It would be highly commendable if the game
wardens in some of the older states would arrange with the game
wardens in states where otter are plentiful to secure pairs of these
valuable furbearers and restore them in sections where they have
disappeared. Everyone interested in trapping would be glad to lend
his support to such an effort, and the time to make a start in this
direction is now. The otter is a magnificent animal and its pelt is
one of the finest furs produced. They will thrive in almost any
section of the United States where there is plenty of fresh running
water. It lives largely on fish, but will also kill muskrat. In con-
finement it will even feed upon beef which they prefer boiled. They
are known to kill wild ducks, but seem to have a special fondness
for trout and prefer rapid flowing clear deep streams as their place
to live. They migrate from one river to another or from one
will
lake to another and have been known to travel long distances on
land in their migrations. When closely pursued they will turn and
defend themselves and put up a game fight. The otter loves to
play and enjoys nothing more than a side hill running down into the
water, on which it will form a slide, climbing up to the very top of
the hill, and then sliding down into the water with a splash.
The otter is a very swift and powerful swimmer and has a long
tail that enables it to glide through the water at remarkable speed.
110 FUR FACTS
It is able to catch fish with great ease and is said to wantonly kill
The fur of the otter is very similar to the beaver in color, but the
under fur more closely resembles the seal than it does that of the bea-
ver. The otter, like both the beaver and the seal, is also plucked,
that is the top guard hairs are pulled out, leaving the soft thick under
fur. The otter is often dyed by the same process as that used in
dyeing the seal. However, the otter is also largely used in its natural
state, and is valued highly as trimming on coats for both men and
women, but more especially for men's coats. It will stand hard
service and is a beautiful fur.
OTTER
The decline in the supply of otter is not due to the numbers trap-
ped by fur trappers. Many more of them have been destroyed by
FUR FACTS in
unsportmanslike fisherman, who apparently take a great delight in
shooting them on any and all occassions without any thought or
but simply for the pleasure,
desire to take their pelt for its fur value,
if it can be called a pleasure, of them. No trapper or fur
killing
gatherer would ever think of shooting an otter, for he would know
that the otter would dive and hide in deep water there to die, and the
probabilities are that the pelt would never do the trapper any good
but would simply be a waste; and trappers value fine pelts too highly
to waste them. They will plot and plan and match their wits against
the cunning of the animal in order to get the pelt, but will never
kill just to destroy.
The female otter raises a litter of from three to five pups every
year. If given a chance they will come back very quickly in sections
where they have been driven out.
can be taken only at certain times. The larger fur houses will not
handle otter that have been unlawfully taken, and there is no legiti-
mate way in which the pelts may be disposed of. If otter is getting
scarce in your section, would be well to get all trappers in your
it
caught they make a dive for deep water, trap ring runs down wire
and all his pulling only holds the trap ring tighter in loop
into loop,
and he soon drowns.
The next set is to dig a pocket back in bank four feet, or a little
below water level, to form a small pond for them to fish in. Throw
several clam back part of pocket. Do this early in the fall.
shells to
To set trap here, dig down
so you have three or four inches of water.
Dam up pocket at edge of stream to hold water. Put a number of
live minnows in water in pocket. Stake live frog to back of pocket
with thread. Break shell off one side of several clams and lay in
back of pocket. Set trap just inside of dam in three inches of water,
and cover with wet leaves. Stake as at first; set with wire loop and
stone to drown. In this way you can make a great number of good
sets. In narrow places in streams you can make good sets by placing
obstructions, leaving room for them to pass through.
In winter they live under the ice almost entirely, and have their
burrows in banks, with entrances under water. Locate as many of
those as possible before it freezes up. Drive row of stakes out into
stream several feet above and below dens, leaving room for them to
pass between first stake and bank. Drive stakes down under water.
After it freezes up solid, the water falls leaving plenty of space along
banks for them to fish, and as they work up and down they are forced
to pass between stake and bank, and are easily caught. Cut hole in
ice one foot from shore and one foot below stake. Set trap between
bank and first stake. You should have your wire, with stone attach-
ed, already laid. Slip ring over wire, drive stake down in hole you
have cut, fasten wire to stake, cover hole with ice and snow. If
danger of freezing up, use salt to keep the water open."
C. S. Brewer
Winner of Second Prize
"Set your trap at foot of slide, about four inches under water.
Set the trap on a level with the top of water, so the otter can hit
the pedal with his foot and spring the trap. You understand what
I mean —not to
let your trap lie flat on the bank as it slopes down.
Turn up on its edge, and as the otter slides into the water you will
it
hang him. Use bait in setting your traps. Fish are good, with
Funsten Otter Bait dropped on the fish.
To drown the otter, we use a small iron rod to stick in bottom of
river or lake. Tie an old ax or a piece of iron to your trap, so as to
FUR FACTS 113
weight the otter down to drown him. You can conceal an old ax
best. Try it.
Find where otter come out on the bank. Set a No. V& New-
house trap, with teeth, about two or three inches under water, and
drop a few drops of Funsten's Animal Bait for otter. Stake your
trap back in river, and when the
swims out to the bank he will
otter
pan on
spring the trap with his breast, as the trap pedal has a breast
it that sticks up. The sharp teeth on the trap will clamp him,
and he is your otter. We recommend this method, and by
all means use a Newhouse Special Otter Trap, No. %A*
l
with breast
plate."
J. M. & A. M. Rodgers
Winner of Third Prize
"Find where the otter comes ashore to play in the sand and
leaves. Look close, and you will see where his feet strike
the bottom. Set a No. 3 or 4 trap in about two or three inches of
water, and cover carefully. Get a rock of about fifteen pounds in
weight and wrap wire around it, or put it in a sack and wire trap to
it. Place stone under water and cover with sand or mud. Fasten
small rope to trap, to pull up with. Fasten one end to bush or tree
on bank. Put a few drops of scent a few feet from trap. The musk
taken from the otter is good. I have good success with Funsten's
Animal Bait for otter, and catch all that come around here.
A good way to catch otter is to find where they go up some small
ditch or muddy stream. Set trap in about four inches of water, and
stick brush in the stream in such a way that it will be impossible for
him up without going over trap. Also on bank of stream put
to go
brush or willow. Do this in summer, so the brush will grow. Leave
about two feet passage in stream, and set three or four traps, staked
,,
solid.
Wm. Hilliger
How to Prepare Otter for Market
In preparing otter for market the skin should be taken off with
the pelt side out, however, in some of the finer specimens it is best to
case the skin with the fur side out. In no case should the skin be
taken off Care should be taken to split the tail and take out
open.
the tail bone. The
feet should be cut off, but the tail should always
be left on. See that all superfluous meat and fat is removed from
the pelt. In drying the skin, do not dry in the sun as this will damage
114 FUR FACTS
the color of the fur. The long guard hairs will become sun burnt,
thus taking a great deal from the value of the skin. Do
not dry by
a fire, as the pelt will become grease burnt and and the fur
brittle
is liable to singe and curl up. Hang the pelt in a cool dry place and
You can not expect to take a pair of silver foxes, pen them up in
narrow quarters, feed them heavy and rich food, pet them, and then
expect them to have a dense, rich glossy coat of fur equal to or better
than the wild animal. The same thing applies to skunk, coon, mink,
farming was soon broadcasted all over the world. The price of
breeding stock went sky high. As an example of how rapidly the
price for breeding stock advanced, one ranchman sold his first pair
of cubs for $700.00, and other pairs successively for $3,000.00,
$12,000.00, $13,000.00, and $14,000.00. In the Fall of 1913 good
ranch bred cubs six months old sold for ten thousand to fifteen
thousand dollars per pair. Some pairs of cubs it is said sold as high
as twenty five thousand dollars, and full grown foxes that had large
litters were valued as high as thirty thousand dollars per pair.
feet longer, so that when the barrel is placed in the box there
is about two feet of space on the side and two feet of space
The advantage of this is that the entry way can be blocked up and
the lid of the house raised, and the barrel opening lifted, so that the
fox can be taken out and handled, which it is necessary to do at
times in order to sprinkle the fox with insect powder in the summer
and to examine it at other times. As an insulation the space between
end of the barrel and the box and the space on the side is packed
with shavings and sawdust. The idea is that the entire structure
will exclude moisture and light, deaden sound, and protect the foxes
from the extremes of heat and cold.
During the breeding seasons when the animals are unusually
nervous, and when the cubs cannot stand extremes of heat and
cold, these features are especially important.
The supports for the wire are wooden posts set in the ground at
intervals of ten or twelve feet. A trench is dug about twenty four
or thirty inches deep after the posts have been placed in order that
the wire may go down into the ground, so that the foxes can not
dig under the wire of about 16 gauge and
and escape. Wire netting
1 mesh is generally used. The height of the fence depends some-
y% inch
what on the depth of the snow fall, the usual height being about
ten feet, but in some cases as much as twelve feet. As foxes climb
wire fences readily, an inward overhanging of about 18 to 24 inches
in width should be placed on the top to prevent escape. This is
done by nailing a two by four cross arm on the top of the posts ex-
tending inward and laying wire netting along the top of these cross
arms. In addition to the inward overhang, it is well to have an outer
overhang of barb-
ed wire to keep
out dogs and
other intruders.
Provision is
meat until they are four months old, as it is likely to cause rickets.
Meat intended for a brood matron may be fastened to the top of a
table out of the reach of her cubs.
Milk, with some sort of bread or cooked mush, is the standard food
for old and young. Foxes, which are fed twice a day, usually have
meat in the morning and bread or mush and milk at night. In sum-
mer the proportion of meat is less than in winter. When smelts or
trout can be had they are frequently substituted, but fish is not con-
sidered good for foxes in warm weather. Coarser fishes are some-
times used, but are not very much in favor. It is not deemed well to
feed milk and fish on the same day.
Milk and eggs are often given to fe-
males about the time cubs are ex-
pected, to strengthen them, relax
their bowels,and allay fever. Fish,
liver, and tripe are other laxative
foods which may be used instead of
milk and eggs. A diet of eggs, milk,
mush, and wheat bread without
leaven or salt is excellent.
The preparation of food for foxes
deserves careful attention. All
dishes should be kept clean. Meat
that is diseased, tainted, or infected
with parasites must be boiled. It is
better to skin rabbits, as their hair readily felts and sometimes forms
in balls in the stomachs of animals which feed on them. Their heads
and removed, as these parts are frequently
entrails also should be
and small trout may be fed whole,
infested with parasites. Smelts
but larger fish should be dressed and the backbones removed.
Chilled meat should be warmed before being offered to cubs or nurs-
ing females. Oatmeal or cornmeal mush should be thoroughly
124 FUR FACTS
cooked. All food for sick animals should be cooked to make it
more digestible and to freefrom disease germs.
it
and the aggregate increase is not far from 100 per cent for the total
stock on ranches. Failure to breed is attributable to a variety of
causes, among which are sterility, injuries, worry, and mismating.
Females barren for two years in succession frequently become pro-
ductive on being mated to a different male. Prolific females, run
down by several litters in succession, sometimes skip a year in
which to recuperate.
The excitable disposition of foxes is one of their most troublesome
characteristics, and no opportunity should be lost to abate it. In
the breeding season it is very essential that nothing shall occur to
make them apprehensive. A nervous vixen is likely to refuse the
attentions of her mate, or to injure herselfand cause abortion, or,
what more probable, to destroy her young soon after they
is still
are born, by neglect, or by taking them from the warm den and
carrying them about the yard in search of another hiding place. In
her extreme anxiety she loses all her instinctive prudence. She
becomes essentially insane, and only closest attention on the part
of her keeper can save her cubs.
From the time the cubs are born until they are two or three weeks
old constant care must be taken to prevent losses in this manner.
Any unusual sight, sound, or odor, by day or night, is liable to alarm
a vixen and cause her to maltreat her young. The best way of dealing
with a worried vixen is to shut her with her cubs in the den for
several hours or until she becomes pacified. If she is disturbed
by the proximity sometimes happens, her view
of other foxes, as
should be limited by boarding in the lower 2 or 3 feet of her yard.
Behavior
During the day, particularly in fine weather, foxes are generally
up among the branches
quiet, staying either in their dens or curled
of a tree orupon a shady platform several feet above the ground,
whence they can see all that goes on around them. Late in the after-
noon they arouse and until morning engage in a variety of activities.
Sometimes they run and caper joyfully; sometimes when the soil is
soft and the yards are not floored they dig, although animals ac-
customed to captivity rarely show a determined effort to escape by
this means. When suddenly frightened they often attempt to escape
by climbing the fence.
In the majority of fox yards the inmates skulk and hide whenever
anyone approaches, although ordinary travel along a thoroughfare
a hundred yards or more away gives then no apparent concern. All
moving objects interest them keenly. Birds alighting within their
yards often fall prey to their agility. Among themselves they are
generally at peace, but a flash of treachery is likely to be displayed
whenever one animal finds another at a disadvantage. One fox will
seize and mangle another's foot that has been carelessly placed on
the intervening fence, or will maim or kill a neighbor's cubs.
FUR FACTS 127
commonly used for dipping sheep. It is well in any case to dust the
dens with sulphur and insect powder at frequent intervals.
The intestinal worms infesting foxes are difficult to eradicate.
Probably more young foxes succumb to the effects of roundworms
than to any other cause. These worms are whitish and cylindrical,
tapering toward either extremity. Among the symptons indicating
their presence are dullness, barking, frothing at the mouth, dragging
the body by the forelegs, and convulsions. The flat, jointed tape-
worm, often a foot or more in length, is a less fatal as well as a less
common internal parasite, but animals suffering from them are ema-
ciated and lack overfur or guard hairs. As a cure for worms one
breeder of long experience frequently gives his cubs a meal of crushed
flaxseed and milk, alternating now and then with six or eight drops
130 FUR FACTS
of spirits of turpentine in milk. Another doses his cubs every fort-
night after they are four weeks old with a proprietary vermifuge put
up in gelatine capsules for puppies and pet dogs, beginning with half
the contents of one capsule. Castor oil containing a few drops of
turpentine is also recommended. Any remedy administered by hand
must be pushed down below the base of the tongue, when it will be
involuntarily swallowed.
Selective Breeding
The fact that domestic animals originated from wild stock and
that improved strains have from time to time been secured makes it
silver, all of them will inherit from their red ancestors a tendency to
thrpw red. As has already been pointed out, however, this tendency
very soon disappears under the influence of careful breeding. Gen-
erally speaking, pure strains of silver foxes breed true. So also do
pure strains of red. When a red and silver are mated together, the
color of the progeny cannot be foretold. The cubs may be red with
black throats, or they may be crosses, or a mixture of the two. One
or more may be silver, but this is unusual. Random breeding from
silver and crosses of unknown pedigree is equally uncertain, as is
shown by the following results:
A silver mated with a red produced two crosses, which when mated
together produced one red and four silvers. A silver and a cross
produced three silvers and two reds. A cross and a red produced
two crosses and two reds. A cross and a cross produced two silvers,
two crosses, and one red. Another pair of crosses produced nine
crosses. A red of silver-cross parentage mated with a red of silver
parentage produced one silver and two crosses. A silver and a red
produced in two successive years thirteen silvers. A pair of reds
from the same litter as two silvers, produced three silvers, one cross,
and two reds. A pair of silvers produced one silver and five reds,
two of which, when mated together, produced three silvers and one
red the first year and two silvers the next year. Another pair of
silvers produced four crosses, while a silver and a cross produced a
litter of all silvers.
Suggestions
This cost of course does not include interest on the investment, but
merely actual labor charges and the cost of food. On a farm where
there are cows and where grain and vegetables can be raised, it is
not necessary to buy very much fox food. Except on large ranches
devoted exclusively to fox raising and where a special keeper must
be employed, the care of a few foxes will not entail much outlay.
The fixed annual charges against a pair of silver foxes will vary
with the locality, value of equipment, etc. On some ranches it
has been estimated about as follows: Interest on cost of yards, $10;
depreciation of yards, $10; food, $20; and attendance, $50; amount-
ing to $90; added to this must be a reasonable charge for interest on
the original cost of the pair. Killing foxes at the age of 4 or 5 years,
when their pelts are good, and breeding always from young stock
may be practicable, but this point has not yet been decided. As a
rule, one may expect to keep choice animals as long as they are pro-
ductive; that is, about 10 years. Deterioration, therefore, on the live
stock will be 10 per cent; and to this should be added 10 per cent for
insurance against loss by death, escape, or theft.
The value of breeding stock has fluctuated greatly in the past. In
general, it will depend on the current demand for silver fox skins;
and, in particular, on the character of the fur of individual animals.
Prolific animals belonging to choice strains, in which a superior color
and quality of fur have been fixed, are worth for breeding purposes
as much more than ordinary stock as pure-bred horses are than
common horses.
As has been pointed out under the subject of improved strains,
crosses and reds derived from silvers throw a proportion of silver
cubs. It is feasible, therefore, if one is willing to sacrifice the time
required, to obtain a stock of silvers from these more common foxes,
which cost comparatively little.
Income
The from silver fox farming have generally been large.
profits
Prior to 1910 they were derived almost wholly from pelts, but since
then they have come mainly from the sale of breeding stock. Fol-
lowing the decline of the speculative phase of the fox industry,
ranch-raised silver fox pelts reappeared in the market, and brought
encouraging prices, a few going as high as $1,000 each. January
quotations for No. 1 extra large skins during the 12 years from 1905 to
1916 average about $600 each.
The supply of silver fox pelts must always come from cold climates
beyond the more thickly settled temperate regions. They are not
136 FUR FACTS
likely, therefore, tobecome overabundant. Red fox skins have been
marketed for many years. Their numbers, while fluctuating con-
siderably from year to year, on the whole have remained approxi-
mately constant. Their average value, however, has increased. But
the supply from wild foxes will hardly be greater than it is now.
Already red foxes can be raised and their pelts sold profitably,
and it may be probable that before many years the rise in fur values
and the introduction of more economical methods of ranching will
result in making the raising of red foxes even more profitable. The
silvers are of superior beauty and many years must pass before they
can become common.
Red Fox
Red Fox are found throughout Canada and Alaska, and all of
our northern and central as well as the New England states, and in
the far west. There are very few, if any, found in the southern states.
cKAHirsu
RED FOX
The red fox can be raised in captivity in exactly the same manner
as silver fox, and while the pelts are not as valuable, it does not
FUR FACTS 137
require the investment or near the risk as a red fox ranch can be
started in a very modest way. Red fox pelts are always in demand,
especially well furred and seasonable pelts.
Grey Fox
White Fox
The white fox is found only in the arctic regions. It is snow white in
color and very beautiful. It is worn very largely in its natural color,
but it is also dyed many different shades, the most popular at the
present time being the platinum shade. White fox have never been
domesticated and no attempt has been made to successfully raise
them, except that on the government fox ranches on the Pribiloff
Islands a few white foxes are taken annually.
Blue Fox
There are numerous blue fox farms on the islands off the coast of
Alaska; in fact the trade depends almost entirely on these island
fox farms for their supply of Alaska blue fox. The United States
Government annually takes several hundred blue fox pelts from St.
George and St. Paul Islands of the Pribiloff Group. There are
independent fox ranches successfully raising blue fox on a large
scale on the Aelutian Islands and other small islands near the coast
of Alaska.
1S8 FUR FACTS
How to Trap Foxes
The following methods have been used by trappers long ex-
perienced in the trapping of fox and are given here as they were
written by the trappers themselves. All of these men are prize
winning trappers and have had years of experience trapping foxes.
bait. Every fox for miles will come to that bait, as the rabbit begins
to decay, and as sure as there is a rabbit on that stake the fox is
sure to get caught.
The Water Method —Many a foxcaught by this method. Go
is
to a spring where the water does not rise and fall, and place a flat
stone fifteen inches from the shore, with the top one inch above the
water. Cover the stone with a sod, so that the stone can not be seen.
Place trap about four inches from the shore, trap all under water
except the pan. Cover the pan with a thin, dry sod. Place bait on
sod over the stone, and cover bait lightly. Put a little Funsten Fox
Scent on the bait. Be sure and place your bait so that it can not be
reached by the fox, except by stepping on the sod covering the pan
of the trap. Stand in the water while setting trap, and bait trap
—
with small pieces of cat or rabbit. A few hints Never go near traps
—
when they are not sprung. 2nd take the foot of a fox and make
—
a few tracks over the trap. 3rd In going around to see traps drag
a piece of meat with a little of Funsten's Trail Scent on it. 4th
When the snow is deep, set traps in a paper bag and cover with snow."
John Pooley.
Another Method
"Find a place where the fox is in the habit of traveling. Pick out
a place where there is hill, and if you can not find one,
a nice knoll or
make one there. Hills should be made a month in advance, or during
the summer, so the fox will get used to it. When trapping season
opens get a couple of handfuls of chicken feathers and sprinkle
around the knoll or hill. Now should be at least two feet
this hill
high. Then get a live chicken, put it and hang about ten
in a cage
feet from the hill, and about eight feet high, in plain sight of the
mound. Set about three No. 2 fox traps and cover well with dirt
from the hill and fasten chain to drag, not solid. Use a few drops of
Funsten Animal Bait for Fox, and every fox that comes near smelling
distance of this bait will investigate it and will go on the mound to
survey the surroundings and look at the box. Do not forget that the
traps must be set on the mound, and do not touch the traps with
hands after you have handled the bait, or the fox will not go on the
mound, and your work will be for naught. Use clean mittens or
gloves."
R. G. Brachvogel.
A Missouri Trappers Method
"Fox are very shy,and they catch the most of what they eat, and
it is hard to get them to work at any kind of bait, but if the bait is
140 FUR FACTS
fresh sometimes they will eat it; but I find that Funs ten's Animal
Bait is a good helper to draw them to the meat baits. A red fox is
hard to catch, and they only den up in the spring, when they
are raising young ones, and a trapper does not care to catch them
then. The way I can catch them is to set traps in their runways.
I find where they travel up and down bluffs, and where they travel
along paths, and where they go through fences, and I take a No. \y%
or a No. 2 Newhouse steel trap, and set it in the path. If it is a
path anywhere in the woods, a fox will travel it every time. In
setting traps in the path, I always find where they step over a pole
or log, or where they go through a fence. If I set a trap in a path
by the fence, I dig out a little hole in the path where they go through
the fence, just deep enough to let trap down level with the top of
the ground and about ten or twelve inches from the fence; then take
some fine leaves and cover the trap. Then take a piece of fresh rab-
bit, bird or chicken, and lay it on the ground five or six inches to
one side of the trap, and take a stick sharpened at one end and
stick it through the bait into the ground. Then take Funsten's Fox
Bait and put a little on the meat, and sprinkle a little over the
leaves on the trap, and you will catch a fox every time they come
along, for every time they smell Funsten's Fox Bait they will go to
it. I have caught foxes by the use of Funsten's Fox Bait without
any other baits.
Traps should always be kept clean and free from all animal
scent. I have experimented with them for seven or eight years,
and I find it pays well to keep traps clean and free from animal scent,
especially if I am trapping at dens or on the ground. If I am trapping
in the water it doesn't make any difference, for when traps are under
the water no animal can smell them anyway, but I never set a trap
for a fox unless it is clean, for they are a fine-scented animal. I have
caught several foxes in my life, and I have caught more foxes by
setting traps in paths where they step over poles and go through
old rail fences than any other way. Traps set in this way will catch
more foxes if some kind of scent bait is used than any way I have
tried. It is best to use scent baits to attract their attention. Fun-
sten's Scent Baits are the best baits for that purpose I have ever
used, for when they smell it they will go to it and fool around the
traps, and, nine times out of ten, they will get a foot in the trap
while they are smelling around it.
Gray foxes are easily caught, because they den up all through the
winter season, and you can catch them at dens where they go in
FUR FACTS HI
and come out, and they can be caught by setting traps in their
runways, the same as for red fox.
J. G. Burks
Remove all superfluous meat and fat from the pelt, but do not scrape
too closely as this would injure the roots of the hair. Comb the fur
out well with a coarse comb so that it will look its best. Dry the skin
in a cool shady place. Do not dry in the sun as the bright rays of the
sun will fade the color of the fur. Do not use chemicals or preserv-
atives of any kind, but allow the skin to dry in a natural manner.
The mating season of the red fox is in the early part of
March, and there are from five to as many as nine in a litter.
The mating season of the grey fox is a little later, and its young are
usually produced in May. The grey fox is not as carnivorous as the
red, and fruits, corn, and fish form a large part of its diet. The
young foxes are covered with a soft downy yellowish-grey fur. The
color of the hair does not begin to appear until they are five to six
weeks old. Foxes as a rule hunt their food at night, and in some
sections are most active just before daybreak when all animal life
is on the move and they have a better chance to secure the small
animals and birds that they depend on largely for their diet. Natural-
alists claim that the wild fox is monogamous, that is, the male has
only one consort in a season, and while the young are being reared
he dutifully forages for them. In captivity, however, one male
sometimes has been mated successfully with several females. The
young fox when born are small and weak. They grow rapidly, however
and when about six weeks old begin to play around, and occassionally
eat solid food. No doubt the raising of foxes of all kind for their
pelts will be gradually developed.
144 FUR FACTS
off, and he does not leave in a hurry, a battle will take place im-
if
taking to himself more than one female, but that on the other hand
the female is not so particular, but is rather fond of strange company.
If the lodge house of the beaver is disturbed in any way, the whole
family will leave by the lower entrance and make a break for the
holes in the bank, which they use as a haven of refuge in times of
trouble. The flesh of the beaver is often used as food, the tail es-
pecially being considered a great delicacy. The beaver attains its
full size when about three years old, although it breeds somewhat
before that. mates in February, and brings forth its young
It usually
some time in May. The large beaver will weigh about sixty pounds
and will measure about three feet long and about thirty inches wide.
The skin after it is thoroughly cleaned and dried will weigh about
two pounds.
The beaver spends in the water and its underfur is very
its life
At one time people paid their bills with beaver skins and esti-
mated the value of their possessions by the number of beavers they
represented. In trading with the Indians the Hudson's Bay Company
measured everything by the value of the beaver skin. It is stated
that one reason why the old muzzle-loading rifle had such an extra
long barrel was due to the fact that the Hudson's Bay Company sold
BEAVER
the muzzle-loading to the Indians for beaver pelts, and the value
rifle
beaver to buy a half pound of glass beads, ten beaver for a coat, two
large beaver for apound of tobacco, two or three beaver for a looking
glass, and one or two beaver for an iron kettle. In the early days
beaver was a medium of exchange; one beaver was worth so many
muskrat, and it took so many beaver to buy a marten skin or a fisher.
On the other hand a bag of flour was priced at so many beaver, or if
the trapper did not have beaver, its equivalent' in muskrats or what-
ever furs he might have.
Old trappers claim that the peculiar claw on the second toe of the
hind foot of the beaver is used as a tooth pick, and some scientists
agree with this theory and that the beaver uses this peculiar shaped
claw to remove the splinters of wood that get between the teeth
while cutting trees.
Beaver castorium is found in both the male and female and is
very valuable. It is a secretion resembling soft beeswax and is found
in two glands situated in the hind part of the body, and ranges in
price according to the market demand from three to four dollars.
Raising Beaver
in other parts of the country who are anxious to get started raising
this valuable furbearer.
Most have lakes or ponds on their courses, and as
golf clubs
animal a constant source of interest both to old and young, es-
life is
pecially children, they should stock their lakes and ponds with musk-
rat and beaver. It will be found to be a constant source of interest to
watch the beaver building their dam and watch them at their work
and play, and at the same time will be a source of profit. If every
golf club in the United States were to install a family of beaver or
muskrat the supply of furs would take a big jump in the next few
years.
How to Trap Beaver
Before you start out to trap beaver become familiar with your
game laws. The fact that there are beaver in your neighborhood and
that you know where they have their lodges and dams, is not suf-
ficient license for you to trap them. Some states have very drastic
laws relating to beaver, and they can not be trapped or killed in any
shape or form, and their pelts can not be taken and disposed of, nor
can their houses or dams be tampered with. The larger fur houses
houses will not handle beaver that have been unlawfully taken.
In those sections where beaver trapping is permitted at certain
seasons of the year, the following suggestions and methods will be
successful. These methods have been used successfully by trappers
who have long experience in the trapping of beaver, and will be
found useful both to the professional and amateur trappers.
inches under water; bend long loop in wire, out several feet from shore,
so game will be under water when trap ring reaches loop; set small
prop under wire to hold wire out of mud, so trap ring will run down
wire easily; set up fresh popple pole high enough now so he will have to
stand on his hind feet to reach it. In this way you are sure to catch
him by the hind foot. Place calamus root (I also recommend the
Funsten Animal Bait for Beaver) just above popple pole; set at all
places you have made, also at all places where you see they go out
of water. Bait and stake all the same. With these sets you are sure
of your game, as they are not hard to catch, but hard to hold. Use
nothing but the old reliable Newhouse trap. When game is caught
they go for deep water, the trap ring runs down wire to loop, and they
are under to rise no more.
To trap them in winter, use similar places to set, having wire laid
beforehand. After it has frozen up solid, and the water has settled
away from ice at shore, they are searching all along shore for fresh
food. Make small hole at the edge of ice, where wire is laid, put end
of popple pole through hole into water at side of bank. In passing,
they stop to work at bait. To set trap, cut hole in ice length of chain
from shore, reach in and set trap near bait, stake through hole in ice,
slip trap ring over wire and fasten to stake. Cover hole with ice and
snow.
For spring trapping, use same set and bait as for fall."
C. S. Brewer.
Winner of Second Prize
"I use No. 3 Newhouse traps. Set trap as near deep water as
possible, with seven-foot chain well staked. Set trap near the bank
of the stream, put it four inches under the water; set it endwise, as I
call it, so the animal will come over one spring to get the bait, which
is on a stick six inches long, sticking in the bank four inches from the
end of the other spring. Cover trap well with some soft substance,
cotton, leaves,mud two sticks, about two feet long
or moss; then get
and the size of a lead pencil, and stick one on each side of the trap,
placing the far end from you, one up the stream and the other one
FUR FACTS 149
they can not handle the trap as well as they can with the right foot.
Now all these things being finished about the trap, go below or above
the trap as far as you can throw water with the hand, and wet all the
ground which you have been working over to set the trap. Water
will kill all human scent. I want to say that I have used Funsten
Animal Baits for Beaver, Coon, Mink, etc., and don't think they
can be beaten.
J. H. Tate.
Winner of Third Prize
Claude W. Williams.
In preparing beaver for market take the skin off open by cutting
down the belly and the back of the legs, and stretch the skin as nearly
round as possible. Remove the feet and tail and cut around the edges
of the skin so that no ends or pieces will be left on, leaving the skin
with an even edge all around. Do not dry near the fire or sun, but
150 FUR FACTS
hang the skin in a cool dry place and allow it to dry out naturally.
Scrape off all superfluous meat and fat, but do not scrape the pelt
too closely. In packing for shipment, do not roll or fold the skins,
but pack them as nearly flat as possible.
CHAPTER XVII
THE BLACK BEAR
The bear is the largest of all the fur bearing animals of North
America, and with the exception of the larger members of the cat
family, no creatures have longer held a place in human interest than
the bears. Their size and formidable equipment of teeth and claws
give a touch of fear which goes with admiration.
"The American black bear has without doubt the widest dis-
any North American bear, being found from Mexico
tribution of
up to the Arctic Circle. The Grizzly Bear is found in a large part
of the territory in which the black bear lives although the habits of
these two creatures are different. Another group is the brown bear,
the largest of all the bears, and these inhabit the territory between the
Northern border of the United States and the Arctic Circle. The
Polar Bear is found in the everlasting ice fields of the polar regions.
This species is different from all of the other bears in its color, as
well as greater length of body. The inland white bear is principally
found in Southwestern British Columbia and according to some
authorities, belongs to the black bear group.
The Polar Bear stays well inside of the Arctic Circle; the big
brown Alaska bears are only found in certain localities on or near
the Northwest coast of the Continent; the Grizzly bears inhabit the
mountainous regions in the extreme west from Alaska south. The
black bear is found in the central and northern parts of the United
States and in the central and southern parts of Canada from the
Atlantic Coast to the shores of the Pacific, and his half brothers
and first cousins are found in Florida, Louisiana, Texas and Mexico
and are so much alike that it takes a specialist and sometimes a
post mortem examination to tell them apart.
A mistaken idea, that is very old, and very generally enter-
tained about these animals, is that there is a difference in
species between the black and brown or cinnamon colored in-
dividuals of the tribe. This idea is so wide spread that one
often hears it said that there are three varieties of bears in the
—
United States the black bear, the cinnamon bear, and the grizzly
bear. This is not correct. There are many cinnamon colored bears
152 FUR FACTS
but there is no such species as the cinnamon bear. The difference
between the cinnamon colored black bear and the black colored one
is the same as the difference between a blond and brunette; while the
difference between the cinnamon colored black bear and the cinnamon
colored grizzly bear is like the difference between a spaniel and a
setter; they are of different breeds.
The black bear has a head broader between the ears in pro-
portion to its length and a muzzle much shorter and sharper than
climbing.
The black bear climbs like a squirrel and from cub-hood to old
age spends a considerable portion of his time in trees. He can climb
as soon as he can walk and his mother takes clever advantage of this
fact. She sends her cubs up a tree whenever she wants them off
her hands for a time or when any danger threatens. In the latter
case, she will try to induce the enemy to follow her, and, when she
has eluded him, will return for the cubs. In parts of the country
where there are wolves, she will usually dispose of the cubs in this
manner before herself going off to feed on berries, etc., and though
it may
be hours before her return, nothing will induce the cubs
to set foot on the ground until then. Later in life the black
bear continues to trees as its natural refuge from all
regard
danger. A some years ago, while visiting Yellowstone
naturalist,
Park, went one evening to watch the bears back of the Lake Hotel
where the refuse pile serves as their dining table. Conceal-
ing himself in shrubbery, he saw an old black bear and two
cubs contentedly feeding when a grizzly bear came upon the
scene from another direction. Immediately, the old black bear
gave a warning signal which the cubs apparently well under-
stood for they scampered off and up a near-by tree without any delay.
I have been told by experienced hunters that the cubs will not come
down out of the tree unless called by the mother and that they
FUR FACTS 153
spend much of their leisure time in the trees, often having special
ones which are used as sleeping quarters.
One sometimes hears it claimed that a black bear can only climb
a tree around which he can conveniently clasp his front legs, man-
fashion. They can climb and that with almost equal ease, any tree
that will hold their weight; from a sapling so small that there is just
room for them to sink one set of hind claws above the other in a
straight line, to an old giant so big that they can only cling to its
face, squirrel-fashion, and behind the trunk of which (also squirrel-
fashion) they can hide, circling as you walk around it.
Another curious fact about the black bear's sharp claws is that
they invariably match the owner's hide in color. A black animal always
has black claws, while a brown one has brown claws; and a
cinnamon-colored one has cinnamon-colored claws. This is not
true of the grizzly.
The its name informally, as it were, from the
black bear received
early settlers ofNew England, where the overwhelming majority of
the species happened to be black and where, by dint of saying, "I
saw a black bear in the woods this afternoon", people came to refer
to the animal as the black bear. Later on the name was sanctioned
by scientific baptism and the animal became officially known as the
American Black Bear. The designation, however, as we have seen,
is by no means universally descriptive. In the east, and in the middle
west,an occasional brown specimen is met with, but when the Rocky
Mountain region is reached there is a bewildering variation in the
coloring of the species. The majority of the breed are still black, but
at least a quarter and perhaps a third of the specimens show a dif-
ferent coloration. Of these probably the seal-brown are the most
numerous; but there are black bears of every conceivable shade, from
a light cream color, through the yellow browns, to a jet glossy black
never seen in the east. Occasionally albino black bears have been
killedand it is believed that the Inland White Bear may have origin-
ated from such albino or partly albino black bears.
What may be the span of the black bear in their free state it
life
shoots. But their appetites are not long in returning. By the end
of aweek the old saying, "hungry as a bear", is more than justified
and they begin in earnest to make up for lost time. At this season
they are especially fond of the parsnip-like roots of the skunk cab-
bage. The grizzlies work for their food like industrious men. The
black bear will work hard at any kind of mischief, but seems to hate to
work steadily for business purposes. The grizzly will dig for hours and
heap out cart-loads of earth and rock to get at a nest of marmots
or ground-squirrels. The black bear may show an interest in a
marmot burrow and do a little half-hearted scratching near the en-
trance, but never digs deep or long for them. They kill nothing larger,
in the way of small game, than field and are very
mice, gophers, etc.,
fond of young pigs. They will turn over stumps and roll logs aside
to catch an escaping mouse and will capture it before it goes a yard.
Frogs and toads are a favorite delicacy of theirs and they spend
much time in looking for them. They will walk along the edge of
small streams and pin down a jumping frog with their lightning-
quick paws.
Practically nothing in the insect line is over-looked by them.
They are everlastingly poking and pulling at rotten logs, old stumps,
loose stones, and decayed trees, looking for caterpillars, squash
and larvae. Their sense of smell is wonder-
bugs, grubs, centipedes,
fully acute and one can hear them sniffing and snuffing over the
punky mass of an old tree trunk they have ripped open, searching
with their noses for crawling goodies.
Like all bears they are extravagantly fond of ants, and they are
not only experts in finding them, but know how to take advantage
of the habits of the various kinds in order to catch them. Their
greatest feasts in this line are obtainedwhen they discover the huge
low what, in the west, are called vinegar ants. These are
hills of
only moderate in size but are extremely vicious. They get their name
from a strong odor, resembling that of vinegar, that they exhale
when aroused. They build large hills, sometimes several feet in
diameter, made up for the most part of pine needles, bits of wood,
pellets of earth, and such like stuff. They are red and black in color,
have powerful jaws, and rush by the thousands to give battle to any
intruder that disturbs their home. It is this latter trait that makes
them an easy prey to the black bear. When he discovers an ant
hill belonging to this species he runs up to it, puts one of his fore-
legs deep down into the inside of it, gives a turn to his paw that
160 FUR FACTS
effectually stirs things up below and then stretches himself out at
ease to await results, with his front legs extended at the base of the
hill.
this the fur of the yearling bear is in demand for furriers' purposes and
the larger pelts are made into rugs and robes. The bear also has a
food value and bear steaks are considered a great delicacy by many.
The writer does not know
any black bear ranch but is inclined to
of
believe that one could be startedand maintained probably easier
than a fox ranch and could be made profitable. If any of the blue
fox farmers of Alaska should decide to set aside one of their small
would be very glad to hear
islands for the raising of bear, the writer
of it, any ranchers of the northwest should set aside a piece of
or if
ground and undertake the raising of them the writer would like to
who might
get the results of their experience for the benefit of others
be interested. There is no doubt but that it would prove a profit-
able venture. There are many pieces of ground in the northwest-
ern United States and Canada that would be ideally adapted for this
purpose.
The writer on one of his trips down the Yukon River was told by
an Esquimeaux chief who was a great hunter that he had known of
cases where mosquitoes would kill a bear. The mosquitoes along
the Yukon River are very vicious and as soon as the ice goes out of
the river they will attack any living creature along the bank with
vim and vigor. It seems that when the black bear comes out of his
winter home he is weak and hungry and when prowling along the
river bank in search of dainty morsels will be attacked by the mos-
quitoes. They cannot of course hurt him through his heavy coat of
fur and his hide is too thick for the mosquitoes to have any terror
for him. But the mosquitoes are also hungry and are just as anxi-
ous for food as the bear and they finally light on his eyelids. They
attack the bear in swarms and he will fight them off with his paws
but after a while he is worn out with the struggle and weak with
the constant effort of fighting them off and will fall down from ex-
haustion, and oftentimes dies. As soon as he gives up the mosquitoes
sting his eyes out.
The bear skin is of comparatively little importance in the fur
trade, and most of the black bear skins find their way to the London
market where they are largely used for the tall hats worn by the
soldiers of the royal regiments. Bears are usually hunted by sports-
men and shot with the rifle, and a number are also taken by the
trapper; but the trapper much prefers to devote his time and energy
to more profitable pelts, as the pelts of the black bear will not justify
the labor and trouble of taking them. A fine marten skin is much
more valuable than a large bear skin, and even a fine mink will bring
162 FUR FACTS
more than a poor bear, so that the professional trapper who makes
his living on the trap line as a rule does not bother with bear. The
pelts of the bear found in the cane breaks are of little or no value for
furriers purposes, and are only suitable for mounting.
' As this is
rather expensive the bear of the southern states is not hunted for its
fur and it is rarely that a bear skin from this section is sent to market.
BLACK BEAR
How to Trap Bear
The following methods have been used by prize winning trappers
who have had long experience and successful catches for a number of
years on the trap line and will be of much value to both pro-
fessionals and amateurs.
"I go in a rough canyon at a place where a side gulch comes in
where bear travel, then hang half a sackful of partly-damaged apples
on a tree or large rock, then build a V-shaped pen in front of the
tree, build it higher than the bait hangs and right next to the bait.
This I hang four feet high. I smear some honey on the outside of
sack, and set my trap, well covered, about three and one-half feet
from the tree, in the entrance of the pen. I clean the trap and rub
it with sage brush, also sprinkle sage brush leaves over it before cov-
FUR FACTS 163
smell the apples a long ways off; then he will pay them a visit and be
caught. I have caught many that way. Try it."
W. M. Hammer.
"Find a hollow log with a hole in it of about eight inches. Cut
a piece of it about eight feet long, take it to where you know bears
travel, or where they come to drink. Place the log on a clear place.
If you have lots of traps put a No. 5 at each end of the log; make a
hole the depth of trap in ground, cover well with old leaves, grass or
loose black earth. Never make trap fast. Clog it with a short pole
that will weigh sixty or eighty pounds. For bait, get a sheep's head
or some other meat such as you can procure, put it in a pan and roast
it briskly for five or eight minutes over a hot fire or in a hot oven.
Take it out, put the a large hen's egg of bee's comb, honey
size of
and all, and a half can salmon over the bait, and put it back to roast
of
for five minutes more, then take the bait and put on some Funsten
Animal Bait for Bear over it, put cord on bait, trail it in circles 100
yards in every direction around trap, put the bait in the center of
the hollow log, go away, and if two bears come along you will have
them both, as bears can not leave an attraction like that."
John Brown.
"The following methods are the ones I used in trapping bear in
the eastern provinces, by setting your traps in the water and on the
hills in the spring of the year, and in setting on the beech ridges in
the fall season.
To Set in the Water in the Spring —In the spring, when the bear
comes out of his den he has a habit of traveling along the shores of
streams, especially those streams that have fish in them. Locate a
place where the water smooth and where the bear, in traveling
is
along the stream, is likely to pass. Set your trap in the edge of the
water, so it is covered by about three or four inches of water. Cover
it well with moss.Turn the springs of the trap well around.
Fasten the bait well to a stake and drive it out into the water
about three feet beyond the trap, so that the bait will be above the
water. For bait use bacon rind, fish (fresh or dried), dried or fresh
fruit. Also use some scent.
Beaver castor I have found very suc-
cessful. have known bear to be trapped where nothing was used
I
for bait but a small piece of beaver castor. Before yoli have set
your trap, as described, build an enclosure around your bait, ex-
164 FUR FACTS
cepting the side facing your trap. Also build the same around or on
each side of your trap. For this use dry bush, such as balsam, hem-
lock or spruce tops. Don't put any old logs around, as the bear will
be sure to climb upon them to get the bait. The bear seems to have
a horror of dry brush. It is because it becomes entangled in his long
fur. Cover the trap with a thick coat of moss, stick a few ferns in
on top of the moss, so it will appear like a stone. Fasten the trap
to a pole about twelve or fifteen feet long and large enough so the ring
of the chain fits over it at the butt end. Fasten the ring of the chain
to the pole by driving a wedge in the pole after you have slipped
the ring over it.
this green feed. Locate a place where the hill is narrow, and set
your trap as described in setting beside a tree.
The most successful method that I have used in trapping bear, is
setting on the beech ridges in the fall of the year. The bear is very
fond of beech nuts, and in a country where there are plenty of beech
nuts on the beech ridges is where you will find the bear as soon as the
nuts are ripe. Set your trap the same as described in the two previous
methods, only use fresh fruit for bait, such as crab apples, or most
any sort of fresh fruit; also use scent."
P. B. Austin.
for mounting purposes do not leave the bones in the feet, or the bone
in the skull. Take the skin off from around the feet very carefully
and cut away all of the superfluous meat and fat from around the
head. Then see that the skin is thoroughly and carefully dried
before packing it for shipment. Do not use any preservatives in
drying the pelt or chemicals of any kind, as they are liable to inter-
fere with the dressing of the skin and spoil it for the taxidermist.
CHAPTER XVIII
WOLF
baits. The writer holds no brief for the wolf. As a general rule it
large number of pelts taken annually would indicate that they have
been very successful.
The lobo wolf is usually the leader of the pack, grows to a great
size, is a terrible smart, and very hard to trap. Forest
killer, is crafty,
usually fine specimen that could be used for mounting for museum
work.
Often there is so much red tape in connection with the collection
of the bounty that trappers do not bother about it, but trap merely
to cash in the valuable pelts. In some states it is necessary to pre-
FUR FACTS 169
sent the entire skin to the county clerk and make an affidavit stating
as to where, how, and when the wolf was killed and everything about
it. Some of the bounties range up as high as twenty dollars on each
wolf.
WOLF
There is no doubt but that some advantage has been taken of the
bounty system, and probably the only safe way is to require the per-
son collecting the bounty to present the whole skin and then have
the county official remove the ears and a part of the scalp, in order
that the same skin can not be presented the second time. A satis-
factory way of marking the skin on which the bounty has been paid
is to cut a slit four to six inches long between the ears. This does
not injure the skin in any way, and prevents the possibility of col-
lecting more than one bounty on the same skin. The Bureau of
Biological Survey has prepared the following directions as an aid
to the county and state officials in identifying the scalps, and skins
of wolves, coyotes, the puppies of wolf, red, gray, and kit foxes,
young bob cats, coons, and badgers. The variation in dogs is so great,
no two being exactly alike in character, that there is no sure way
that they can be distinguished from wolf and coyote, but when there
is reason to suspect that dogs are being presented for bounty, their
skins and skulls can be sent to the Bureau of Biological Survey for
positive identification. The Department furnishes the following key
to adult wolves and coyotes.
170 FUR FACTS
Wolf Coyote
Width of nose pad lj£ to 1% inches % to 1 inch
Width of heel pad of front foot . . . 1^ to 2 inches 1 inch
Upper canine tooth greatest di-
ameter at base 5/10 to 6/10 inches 3/10 to 4/10 in.
The Biological Survey furnishes the following key to Wolf, Coy-
ote and Fox Pups.
Wolf Pups
Muzzle blackish at birth, fading in a month or six weeks to greyish.
Head greyish in decided contrast to black of back, nose and ears.
Ears black at tips, fading to greyish in a month or six weeks.
Tail black, fading to grey with black tip.
Coyote Pups
Muzzle tawny, or yellowish brown, becoming more yellowish
with age.
Head yellowish grey, not strongly contrasted with rest of body.
Ears dark brown at tips and back, soon fading to yellowish brown.
Tail black, fading to grey with black tip.
Once the wolf is caught in this trap he is there to stay, and there is
no chance for him to pull out and get away.
The No. 4}^ is used where the wolf are very large and powerful.
The most popular sizes for wolf trapping are the No. 4 and the No.
3. These are lighter traps, but will hold equally as well as the No.
43^. The nature of the drag depends a good deal of course on the
character of the trapping ground. A heavy stone or a chunk of
wood will make a very satisfactory drag, and it should be remembered
FUR FACTS 173
some other small animal from running over it and tripping the pan.
Some trappers recommend wearing gloves in the setting of traps
to prevent the human odor from being around the trap, but we do
not believe that this is advisable since the gloves will carry the human
odor as well as the hands. It is advisable to handle traps as little
as possible, and for this reason we recommend the Wonder Trap
Setter, for with this device the trapper can set the trap without
touching it with the bare hands at all.
United States Rangers after exhaustive tests say this about wolf
trapping, "Success in trapping wolves depends largely on the use of
scents that will attract the wolf to the neighborhood of the trap and
keep them tramping and pawing around until caught. Meat bait
alone is of little use, for as a rule the wolf kills ample food for himself."
placing iron eye in hole and pour hot babbit metal around it. When
trap is set, turn eye under, and no suspicion will be aroused at the
presence of the rock.
If traps are to be covered with snow, use a piece of hardcrusted
snow to level fine snow over traps, as there will be no scent left, as
if some other article were used, and if sand is used to cover traps, use
a flat rock. At all times handle traps with gloves that are used for
nothing else but that purpose, keeping them well-rubbed in palms
with beeswax.
If usinga small bait of any kind, it should be securely fastened,
so that can not be dragged away from traps.
it
spring them. After wolf has been left to walk and roll over traps all
day, it may be removed in the evening and blocks taken from under
pans of traps, which will require but little disturbance to be made to
traps, if traps have been sunken below the surface of the ground;
yet if trap should be exposed in any way, it should be recovered.
Manure should be used for covering traps, as it will remain less
compact than dirt."
O. S. McKeb.
Another Method for Trapping Wolf
"For fall trapping, locate all the long, narrow ridges along all
streams; the higher and sharper the ridge the better. If too much
brush, clear narrow path where necessary, and plow furrow along
176 FUR FACTS
ridge in summer. Cut and make brush fence up to path on each
side in several places along ridge. Early in the fall scatter fine
buckwheat chaff in path at each place where brush comes up to the
path; also, when leaves fall, scatter them along the path. In this
way the wolf gets used to the surroundings before you are ready to
trap. He travels along these ridges looking for game. Have brush
in place to fasten trap to, so there will be no new object to cause him
to shy. Set traps in the path at all places desired. Set down level
with surface, cover smoothly with fine chaff, having first rubbed
your hands and trap well with green popple bark or willow buds.
Look up all old paths or roads running through timber; fix and set
here as on ridges.
The best time to trap them is in winter, with plenty of snow, and
in snow paths made by riding horseback. Put a stone in sack and
ride out to where you intend trapping, have rope to sack and drop
down and let horse drag it. In this way you can make a fine path.
Go along all ridges and through brush which rabbits use, stop where
you want to make a set, pull drag up close to horse, and make sharp
turn. This will cause the game to come to a walk, and he will not
step over your trap. Extend your snow path across prairie from
stream to stream. Now you have a path for them to follow, as well
as the rabbits.
Toset trap, pick out your place and dig out snow so trap will set
level with surface. Lay a piece of white paper in bed to keep trap
from freezing down. Use bark or willow buds, as before; cover over
carefully with thin cotton, putting it iD around pan and spring of
trap. Set trap stiff enough so rabbit will not spring it. Pick up
plenty of rabbit-dropping and place around trap. Set at all places
where rabbits make road into patch. Now you are ready for every
wolf that comes this way, as they will use your path in search of rab-
bits. I also recommend Funsten Animal Baits in setting traps for
wolf. Rub a little under the pan of trap."
C. S. Brewer.
Wolf Trapping
"My way of trapping the wolf: Dig a hole ground to fit the
in the
trap along a cow patch, near a fence or stream, sprinkle a little dry
dirt over trap, then burn a small bunch of hay over trap. Wolf will
always dig into camp fire.
In the winter, dig hole in ground or snow, and cover trap with
dry cow chips pulverized fine. Throw a little Funsten Bait up and
FUR PACTS 177
down the trail, and put a little fish oil, rendered, in a bottle in the
sun over trap and campfire. Make everything look as natural as
possible, clean up loose dirt or snow and carry it away."
L. F. Whitney.
CHAPTER XIX
ERMINE OR WHITE WEASEL
Ermine, or white weasel, is the smallest of all the North American
furbearers, and is a vicious and blood-thirsty killer. It preys on
rabbits and all kinds of small quadrupeds, birds, and reptiles. It
is especially fond of young rabbits and is said to kill large quantities
for the pure love of killing. It pursues its game with great deter-
mination and rarely allows it to escape. It is a great plunderer of
birds' nests and its favorite method of attack is to catch the bird
by the throat and suck its blood. On account of its small size
and lightning-like quickness it is able to escape most of its enemies
and it will fight a larger animal without any provocation.
Nature has been very kind to the weasel in giving it a beautiful
white coat in the winter and a brown coat in the summer. The white
weasel running along the snow in the winter time is almost invisible
except for the black speck at the end of the tail. This really is an
added advantage to the weasel for the reason that if it is pursued by a
hawk, the bird will make a swoop for the black tip and usually miss
the weasel's body in doing so. The tail of the weasel is fully one
half as long as the body and the black tip is all that is visible when it
is flying over the snow.
The fur of the ermine is snow white and very beautiful, and has
long been prized by royalty for use on the royal robes. The Siberian
weasel is a little larger and a bit heavier in fur than the American
weasel. Some of our American weasel are just as large as the Russian
ermine, and just as fine in quality, although on the average this is
not true, the Russian ermine being the better so far as size and quality
is concerned.
While the ermine snow white in the Winter with the exception
is
of the black tip at theend of the tail, it turns brown in the Summer,
nature thus again aiding the animal in that it is very hard to dis-
tinguish it from its surroundings in its brown coat, where it would
stand out very prominently if it were snow white. The fur of the
brown coat is not as thick or as long as that of the white coat, and
up until a few years ago the summer coat of the white weasel was
considered of no value; but in recent years it has been made up into
FUR FACTS 179
and will defend her young with her life if necessary. The female
weasel is devoted to her kittens. The parallel of the weasel can
wide. Its underfur is about one inch in depth, the long guard fur
being about one and one half to two inches in length at the lower end
of the body, the fur around the neck and shoulders, being shorter
but growing longer down to the root of the tail. The tail is about
two thirds of the length of the body and is about one and one half
inches in diameter, and slopes gradually down to a point, being larger
where it joins the body.
Boys, especially those living in the South, often catch large black
house cats that have run wild and that have developed a rather heavy
coat of fur, and invariably think they have caught a fisher; but there
are no fisher found in the central and southern states, their home, as
stated, being in Canada and the northernmost states of the Union.
The color dark
of the fur varies, the finest specimens being a very
deep rich brown on the lower half of the body and a little lighter in
shade around the neck and shoulders. The very large fishers are often-
times coarse and these skins are not as valuable as the smaller soft
silky-furred ones. The fisher is one of the most powerful animals for
its size that exists and is a game fighter and never gives up. It preys
on rabbits and other small animals as well as birds, and will destroy
any animal that it finds caught in a trap and like the weasel, is a
killer.
FISHER
How to Trap Fisher
In trapping for fisher it is necessary to'use the very strongest
and the No. V/2 Newhouse Trap equipped with the Fun-
steel traps,
sten Triple Grip Jaws is highly recommended|as the mostj^efficiently
184 FUR FACTS
rigged trap for the purpose. The high grip of the Triple Grip Jaw
will hold him fast and prevent him from jerking or pulling out.
The fisher is very powerful and unless securely caught will surely
get away. Oldtimers use the deadfall for the purpose, building a pen
and a runway of boughs leading up to it and placing a few drops of
animal bait back under the deadfall which Mr. Fisher will try to get.
The deadfall is very effective for the experienced man who can care-
fully plan and build it, as it usually kills the animal instantly and
he is there when you come to look for him. The fisher is very difficult
for the amateur to trap and as a matter of fact it is not usually trapped
for by amateurs; and it is safe to say that the majority of fisher
taken are taken by oldtime professional trappers who have studied
its habits and know its runways. The methods of setting traps for
the fisher will be covered by the same general rules and suggestions
given for the trapping of marten. A little animal bait placed on a
brush or twig above the place where the traps are set will draw the
animal to the spot, and to make doubly sure of getting him it is ad-
visable to set more than one trap at each place. The pelt of the fisher
is very valuable and for this reason it will pay the trapper to exhaust
WOLVERINE
caught itself. One of its principal delights is to raid the caches of
the hunter or trapper or raid the cabin and take everything away
that it has time to move. It will even carry away pans and kettles
and bury them. However, there is no doubt but that many of the
stories told about the wolverine are exaggerated, but it is probably
the most detested of any of the furbearers on account of its mean
tricks.
When pressed by hunger the wolverine will tackle most anything.
It is greater in length of body, but has not the wonderful lightning-
186 FUR FACTS
like quickness of the fisher. The skin of the wolverine is prized very
highly by the Esquimaux of Alaska, who use the fur as a trimming
around the face of their parkas. They claim that it
is the only fur
on which the breath will not congeal and form icicles. This is probably
not entirely true, but at any rate for this reason very few of the
wolverine that are trapped in Alaska are sent out, being kept by the
natives for their own use. As a matter of fact wolverine are often
sent into Alaska by fur traders to be sold to the Indians, where the
Indian is prosperous enough to buy fur.
The wolverine has a very strong coarse fur, and has a peculiar
light stripe or patch running down the sides of the back of a lighter
shade than the fur on the rest of the body. Its marking in a way
is like the skunk, except that the color of the wolverine is a dark
rich brown and the stripes are of a lighter shade. The tail is short
and brushy. It is seldom used in the manufacture of fine furs, but
is made
principally into rugs and mats.
There are very few wolverine in captivity and as far as the writer
knows no attempt has ever been made to domesticate the wolverine
and raise them for their fur, and it will probably not be a profitable
venture to attempt it, as they are very destructive and would be
hard to keep penned up.
The wolverine is very hard to trap, and as a rule they are only
taken by the Indians who are familiar with their haunts, or by pro-
fessional trappers who become exasperated at the tricks of some
particularly devilish member of the wolverine tribe and set out with
the determination to rid their trap line of the pest and continual
trouble and loss of having their baits stolen and furs taken and
mutilated. However, the general rules for trapping fox would apply
to wolverine.
CHAPTER XXII
LYNX
Lynx is found in Alaska, Canada, and the northern United States.
It has a very soft, thick, luxurious fur, that is about one inch to one
and one half inches deep. It is about an even thickness over the
entire pelt and is a brownish grey in color. It is about two feet in
LYNX
height at the shoulders, and three to four feet long, including the tail
about five inches long. The tip of the tail of the genuine lynx is solid
black. The hind legs are longer than the front legs, and the claws
are very sharp and are concealed in thick foot pads. The fur on the
under side is finer and longer than that on the back, and when dyed
black has a beautiful rich sheen. Most lynx for commercial fur-
riers'purposes are died a rich glossy black. Trappers say that the
lynx is a good swimmer. It preys on rabbits, which is its principal
food. However, it will attack other small animals and will kill
young fawn. It has a small tuft of hair on the ear and a fringe of fur
around the jaw which gives it the appearance of having side whiskers.
188 FUR FACTS
The Lynx Cat or Bay Lynx
This is a species of the lynx, but is not as large nor is its fur as
valuable. The color and the depth of the fur varies depending on the
locality in which it is found. The lynx cat of California is dark red-
dish in cast and is marked with dark spots. The lynx cat of Idaho
and Montana is a light creamy tan, and the fur is thicker than that
>ifiV_ :jm^^a^^-^^-
LYNX CAT
of the California lynx, but is not as long or as fine in quality as the
Alaska or Canada lynx. Its habits are very similar to those of the
true lynx. It is rather destructive in the farm yard, and will kill
young pigs and lambs, and is very fon^i of poultry.
Wild Cat
The wild cat is another type of the lynx and is found in the central
and southern states. The lynx, lynx cat, and wild cat are very often
taken with deadfalls, especially in districts where the snows are
heavy and where steel traps would be easily covered up. The lynx
is found principally in timbered country. Where the lynx is taken
with steel traps, trappers set in runways, along the banks of lakes
and rivers. The lynx cat, lynx, and wild cat are more successfully
trapped with the use of scent than they are with food baits. Some
trappers recommend setting traps where there are signs that the
animal has made a killing, as the lynx is almost sure to return to
that place several times. The wild cat in the central and southern
states is often tracked down and shot in preference to being trapped.
There are various methods of trapping lynx, and the most successful
methods will depend largely on local conditions. Some trappers
recommend building an enclosure with a runway big enough for
FUR FACTS 189
the lynx to easily enter and about six to eight feet long. Inside of
this runway set several No. 3 traps, either Newhouse, Victor, or
Triumph Traps, equipped with the Funsten Triple Grip Jaws. At
the far end of the enclosure sprinkle a few drops of Funsten Lynx
Bait. In sections where the snows are heavy, this is a very good plan
as it keeps the traps from being covered up. A freshly killed rabbit
is also a good bait, and this may be suspended from the branch of a
tree, and two or three drops of animal bait placed near the rabbit,
traps being set around in a circle directly under the rabbit, so that
the lynx in jumping up for the rabbit will be apt to catch his hind
foot in one of the traps. There are usually numerous rabbits where
lynx are found, and as the rabbit is sometimes attracted to the trap
by the same attraction that draws the lynx, some trappers recommend
placing a piece of brush in front of the pen so that the rabbit will
have to jump over it in order to get inside. As the rabbit very much
dislikes to jump over or go into brush this effectually keeps him
out of the pen. Some trappers also recommend the placing of a
small bent springy twig under the pan of the trap, strong enough to
support the weight of the rabbit, so that if he should step on the
trap he will not spring it. However, great care should be exercised in
doing this, for if the twig is too strong the lynx will not spring the
trap,and then you have missed out on a good catch. It sometimes is
advisable to set traps for lynx on a log that has fallen in such a manner
that it is high enough from the ground so that the traps will not be
sprung by rabbits or other small animals. Arrange the traps in such
a manner that the lynx will have to pass over them in order to get
to the bait.
The following methods have been successfully used by men who
have had much experience in the trapping of lynx.
Winning Method
Take the entrails of a deer, beef or sheep, take a part of them
and hang on the where two trees grow up together,
side of a tree
so they will be about four feet from the ground. Then set one or
two No. 4 traps about one foot from the tree, cover well with leaves,
put a few drops of Funsten's Animal Bait on the tree, so as to attract
attention. They will smell the bait a mile away when the wind is
blowing a little, and as soon as they get a scent of it they usually
come to find out what it is. They will try to get the bait, and they
usually will get their foot in it. When you get a Bob Cat
or Lynx, take and skin it and put the carcass in the end
190 FUR FACTS
of a hollow log, or in a fence corner; then, set one or two
No. 3 or No. 4 traps in front of the carcass about fifteen
inches, and cover well with leaves. Stake the carcass down
so they can not get it away, for every one of them that smells
the carcass will try to take it away. Put a rope around the neck and
drag the carcass through the woods a mile or so, and as soon as they
come to the trail they will follow it up. Leave part of the carcass
where you start from. This gives you a chance both ways, as the
animal is liable to go both ways on the trail.
I now use Funsten Animal Baits in all my trapping. A friend
of mine gave me my first bottle of Funsten Animal Bait. I put a
rabbit in a drift pile with five drops of Funsten Animal Bait on it
and caught thirteen Mink and one Coon in eight days, when I was
trapping on the creek. This was the best at one single set, and
only used five drops of the Bait.
I am located in Iowa just now, but I got my knowledge and ex-
perience in Lynx trapping in Washington, British Columbia and
the Northwest, where Lynx abound most."
S. A. Davis.
Winning Method
In the days when a good-sized, prime Lynx was worth, say, from
$1.25 to $1.75, verylittle attention was paid to this particular member
of the cat tribe, and little or no interest taken in his capture, unless,
perchance, he had been unusually active and aggressive in raiding
some settler's chicken-coop, in which case it behooved said settler to
take prompt and effective measures in his immediate capture or
destruction, else his flock of poultry was but a dream of the past.
More than this, the family cat was apt to suddenly and mysteriously
disappear.
Now, mean to say that the trapping fraternity
while I do not
ever ignored theLynx as a fur-bearer, the size of the animal, as com-
pared with a Marten or Mink, gave the trapper the impression that
he was handling a very large pelt for a very little money. All this
has been changed, however, within the last few years, this article of
fur having come into prominence as one of Dame Fashion's favorites,
and has now taken its place in the list of fine, long-haired furs. In
like proportion has the trapper's interest increased, and, as a matter
of fact, when he strings out his line of traps wants everything of fur-
bearing value there is.
Lynx, as well as other kinds of fur, having captured over four hundred
of the big cats alone.
Right here a few words in regard to the habits and characteristics
of this animal will be in order. He is a great traveler, and covers a
lot of territory, but he usually goes over the same route a number of
times. Along late in December or January, when the snow falls thick
and fast, very little of him will be seen, for, like all other of the cat
family, he has little liking for deep, soft snow. It is then he betakes
himself to some sheltered clump of timber where rabbits abound.
However, a little after midwinter, when the snow begins to pack and
harden, he is on the move again. Should there be any beaver dams
or marshes anywhere in the vicinity of his circuit, there his tracks
will be much in evidence. Although the lynx will eat most any
kind of meat when hungry, beaver is his chief piece de resistance.
Knowing, then, this particular weakness of the lynx, the trapper will
provide himself with some beaver castors when starting on a trapping
campaign; also have a lot of fish (trout are the best) chopped up fine-
Have enough to make a gallon. Don't be afraid you will have too
much. Hang up in large bottles, say, along in July and August;
cork bottles loosely, put something over top to keep rain out. Be
sure and hang in a place where sun will shine on them, and by the
time you are ready for it you will have a mixture of fish oil which
will make a bait for lynx second to nothing but beaver castors.
As a rule, the lynx is not a difficult animal to trap. When he
is hungry he will eat most anything in the meat line. He is not in
the least afraid of a steel trap, no matter whether covered or exposed,
and will step squarely on the pan of trap, with as much indifference as
if he were merely stepping upon a log to view his surroundings. Now,
should happen to miss the pan of the trap in entering it will not be
likely to miss it in backing out.
Once caught, the lynx is easily held. I have frequently caught
them in a No. trap by one toe, but I recommend a No. 3, as the
lynx foot is very large, and a trap needs to have considerable spread
of jaws to make sure of him.
Now the trapper will note that there is nothing at all difficult in
trap, letting top ends of grass hang down over the trap; then spread
the grass out thinly over the trap, and tie one or two blades of the
grass to each jaw of the trap, so that they will stay in place; now part
it a little in the center, and let the ball of grass on pan of trap pro-
ject out alittle the farthest. Now I rub some of Funsten's Trail
Scent on my moccasins and smooth out all of my tracks with my foot,
at the same time backing away. A lynx will smell this bait of
Funsten's as far as sixty yards, if everything is favorable, but the
against it and shove the noose in. I prefer dead sticks as rabbits
sometimes get to eating the bark of green ones, and in this way de-
stroy the pen. My object in cutting the top ends of sticks square, is
so there will not be any bright, slanting cuts to attract attention,
and the lower end, being slanting, it holds better in the snow. Now
I cut a stick about seventeen inches long, sharpen one end and split
the other about four inches. Roll up fine-blade (dead) grass into a
ball about the size of a hen's egg and place it in the split. Now stand
the stick, sharp end down, in the snow four inches south of the center
of the pen or circle, then lean the top end about two inches towards
the noose or loop. When it is placed right, the ball of grass will be
eighteen inches from noose. It will be closer (by a few inches) to
the noose than it will be to any other part of the pen, and will be
on a level with the center of noose, which will be about seventeen
inches from ground. Now put about twenty drops of Funsten's
Lynx Bait on the ball of grass. Rub Trail Scent on moccasins and
smooth out all tracks, at the same time backing away. The lynx
smells the bait and goes to it. He finds no entrance to it except
through the noose. In here he puts his head and starts to force a
way in. This breaks the blades of grass holding noose in place.
The noose then tightens, the lynx backs away, upsetting the two
forked sticks. This leaves him with the large pole tied close on to
the back of his neck. He goes but a few feet, lies down and dies.
Sometimes he does not put his head into the loop, but tries to reach,
the bait with his paw. In this case I find him alive and fast by a foot
instead of dead and fast by his neck. They will not chew the cord
off, as one would suppose.
The main objection to this way is that all that get caught by
neck are dead and frozen when I get them, and then the wolves
sometimes find them before I do. I have had seven large ones
eaten and spoiled by wolves this winter. The lynx loves the smell
but does not care to eat Funsten's Animal Bait. He likes to play
around it and tries to get it to rub against it. He will seldom touch
a frozen-meat bait.
When there is no snow, I use the same methods of trapping Lynx
except that I place my sticks in the ground. And then I can't track
them, so, of course, choose places where they are most likely to come,
but without Funsten's Bait and Trail Scent this method would be
no good at all.
I have caught, since November 1st, fifty-three lynx. It is
UVM«*r«N RiSLl,
BADGER
is useless for furriers' purposes. It is only when the fur is very thick
and long that it is valuable for trimming. The coarse long hair
skins are not wanted by fur manufacturers, but usually find their
way to the brush who cut the hair off and
manufacturers,
make it into shaving brushes, etc. The full grown badger will
weigh from thirty to forty pounds. The amateur fur buyer often-
times loses heavily buying badger skins. The fine heavy-fur-
red silky skins that can be used for furriers' purposes are valu-
able and are worth from two to three dollars each and sometimes
more. Another badger pelt taken in the same section and at the
same time, but with coarse wiry hair will probably not be worth
more than twenty five to fifty cents, although it would be fully as
large as the more valuable skin. The reason for this is that one
skin is what is known in the fur trade as hair, and the other is fur.
198 FUR FACTS
A man not well posted on badger skins might buy a fine skin at a
small price, ship it into the fur house and get two to three dollars
for and at another time, a badger skin equally as large, and find
it,
that it was only worth from twenty five to thirty cents. Therefore
it is advisable to be cautious in buying badger skins for these reasons.
The badger is not at all difficult to trap and traps may be set
mens come from Alaska. They are also very plentiful in the western
states, especially in Oregon, Washington, California, Idaho, Mon-
tana, Wyoming, Nevada, Utah, and Colorado, in the states along
the Canadian border, and are found as far south as the Adiron-
dack Mountains in New York. Like the mink, which it very closely
resembles in size and color, it avoids human habitation.
Some trappers believe that the marten migrates in large numbers
for the reason that one season in a district the catch will be very
large, and the next year there will not be a marten to be found, and
none will be seen until the tenth year, when they will come again in
large quantities. They seem to migrate in cycles of ten years.
This seems to be especially true in certain parts of Canada and
Alaska and no one seems to know where they go to during the nine
year period when they are not plentiful.
Some of the most beautiful Hudson Bay sable come from Labra-
dor. They are as fine in quality and almost as silky as the Russian
sable. In fact they are better than the Amur class of Russian sable*
Very fine colored skins, as well as fine in quality are found in the
Stewart River section of Yukon Territory, and also in Alberta and
Manitoba, and a great many very fine specimens of marten are
trapped in British Columbia.
The marten found in our western states are known as the pine
marten. They differ somewhat from the Alaskan or Canadian
marten. The underside along the neck and breast is quite an
orange yellow color. The rest of the body is similar to the Canadian
or Alaskan marten, except that the fur is not as deep, the color is
not as lustrous, and the quality not so good.
The marten usually lives in trees and is not fond of open country.
u**stes unnu&scm
MARTEN
curely nailed to the side of the tree, the bait being placed above the
trap or on the hook provided for it on the trap The tree trap kills
instantly and for this reason is very much
favored by most trappers.
One of the difficulties that the marten trapper has to conte nd with is
the wolverine and the fisher to follow the m arten trapper,
who seem
and whenever a marten caught are quick to destroy it.
is The
wolverine especially seems to take great delight in following a line
of traps for the express purpose of destroying marten after they are
FUR FACTS 201
captured. Where the tree trap is not used, most trappers re-
string every time you go around to your traps. When the scent
wears off, put on a few drops more. I never had a marten cross my
trail but what he stopped and followed it one way or the other to a
trap. I have had them follow the trail after six or eight inches of
snow. It beats anything that I ever tried. most always use a
I
piece of duck or bird for bait. Use plenty of Funsten Bait in cold,
freezing weather. To kill a marten, I always hit him a tap on the
head with my hatchet handle, to stun him, and then get hold of him
just back of the forelegs and smother him to death, for a marten is
hard to kill by striking him on the head. I have cut holes in the
hide by striking them too hard. Always skin them as soon as caught
and they skin much easier. Be sure and flesh the hide well, and
don't stretch too tight. Leave them on the board about four days
and then take off."
John P. Frame.
204 FUR FACTS
Raising Marten
The Hudson Bay Sable or marten has been successfully domesti-
cated and raised and the same general instructions apply to marten
as those given for the raising of mink. The marten is a very valuable
fur, the finer skins selling up to fifty dollars, and there is also a demand
for them for zoological gardens. They are rather prolific, the female
bearing from three to five in a litter. The young are usually born in
April, and it is a very hardy animal. Marten raising is carried on
in Canada on a rather large scale and has been proven to be a success-
ful and profitable enterprise. It is said that marten, except during
the time of mating, are very quarrelsome. The mating season is
from January to March. It is said that one of the principal things
in raising marten, is to know when the female is in season, for the
reason that if the two are put together when the female is not in
humor and probably injure one
to receive the male, they will fight
another. The mother will take fairly good care of the young until
they are about two months old. They usually wean when they are
about four months old.
Marten raising should prove very profitable for the Canadian aDd
Northern rancher. It is one of the most valuable American furs
that we have, is always in demand, and the fine dark skins bring very
high prices; and even average colored skins are in demand at prices
that will well pay for the trouble of raising them. As stated before
this industry has already been established in different parts of Canada
and it is to be hoped thatmore people will become interested in it.
CHAPTER XXV
CIVET CAT
The civet cat is sometimes called the "Pole Cat". In color the
fur is black with white spots of irregular shape. from the It differs
skunk in that the stripes of the skunk are regular and run from the
back of the head down to the tip of the tail, while in the civet cat
there are no stripes but spots of white fur from one half to an inch
<&Mjft*frB*V#ittf»» gvu.
CIVET CAT
fur is about one half inch in depth and of an even length over the
entire body. The tail is about one half the length of the body, and
is rather round in shape being about three quarters of an inch in
diameter, and is not large and brushy like the tail of the skunk.
The civet cat is found in nearly every state in the Union, and is one
of the big articles of the fur trade. It is very popular in Europe,
especially in Russia, or rather it was popular in Russia before the
Great War and was largely used for coat lining. It is a very beauti-
ful and striking fur when made into a garment, the black being a
rich beautiful glossy black and the white a snow white. This con-
trast in color makes a beautiful fur garment, and it is difficult to
206 FUR FACTS
understand why is not more popular in this country than
civet cat
it is. due to the fact that for many years it was re-
It is probably
ferred to as the "Pole Cat" which people usually connected with a
strong odor. But that is all nonsense. The modern method of
dressing and cleaning absolutely removes every trace of odor.
The when taken off cased and stretched is about
civet cat skin
14 inches in lengthand 4 inches in width. The finest civet cat pelts
come from Minnesota and the Dakotas and the Northern part of
Iowa. However, as stated before they are found pretty generally
throughout the United States, but seem to go no farther North than
the Canadian line, and few are found in Minnesota.
On account of the comparative low price of the skins very little
ifany attempt has been made to domesticate and raise the civet cat
for market, however, there is no reason why they could not be suc-
cessfully raised. As the civet cat very closely resembles the skunk
in its habits, the same general methods given for trapping skunk will
apply to civet cat.
MOUNTAIN LION
The mountain lion is variously called the puma, the panther,
and the cougar. It is found in the Western states, Arizona, New
Mexico, Texas, and some are still found in Florida and the swampy
sections of the gulf states. It varies in size, the larger specimens
coming from Arizona and New Mexico. It has little or no value for
furriers' purposes, and only the larger specimens are used for mount-
ing life size for museums, etc., and for rugs. The color is a yellowish
brown with a darker shade down the back and to the tip of the tail.
The color varies in different sections.
for fur purposes is hardly worth the trouble to trap as their pelts are
usually damaged, and it is only the finer specimens that are valuable
for rug purposes.
CHAPTER XXVI
MOLES
The mole is found throughout the United States. The larger
species come from the Northwest and are found in large quantities
in the states of Oregon and Washington. The Northwestern mole
is almost twice as large as the mole from the Central and Eastern
states. The mole lives chiefly on earth warms and insects and in-
habits the ground. To the extent that they destroy insects they are
but they often work in gardens, lawns, and
beneficial to the farmer,
young orchards, and do considerable damage by ploughing up the
soil and undermining tender plants.
^>
MOLE
pulled down by the roots into the upper surface of the burrows and
then carried to the nesting chambers. When located near trees the
nests sometimes consist of leaves mixed with grass.
Certain galleries or passages leading out from the deeper central
system trend upward here and there to join the shallow subsurface
runs that range over the mole's hunting grounds. These hunting
paths produce the ridges with which we are familiar in our lawns,
gardens, and fields. Beneath these ridges the little animal hurries
along at irregular intervals in search of food, and when occasion
demands, it extends the limits of its operations by pushing out into
untouched soil. As it extends the subsurface runways its movement
is almost literally one of swimming. With powerful action of the
heavy shoulder muscles the hands are brought forward, palms out-
ward, until they almost or quite touch in front of the snout. They
are then thrust outward and backward to push the soil aside, while
the body follows in the passageway thus created.
It is commonly believed that the mole works only at regular
periods each day, but direct observations taken in late summer, and
in the fall fail to show that there is any one time of day when it is
more active than at others.
If a slight opening is made into a mole's runway the little animal
will invariably repair the breach when it next comes that way.
210 FUR FACTS
As to seasonal activity, it may be said that moles are probably
never dormant, that they never hibernate. They may be trapped at
any time of the year when the ground is not frozen too hard to permit
the working of the trap. It must be understood however, that ex-
tension of surface runways occurs mainly at times when soil con-
ditions are favorable — after rains in the summer or during periods of
thawing in the winter. At other times the mole may secure his food
by retraversing by working at depths unaffected by
his old runs or
frost or drought. Movements of soil-inhabiting worms, insects, and
larvae tend to bring ever fresh supplies of food into the moles' pas-
sageways.
By reason of its secluded life the mole is little subject to attacks
by many foes of other small mammals.
burrow is so small that
Its
no formidable enemies except the weasels or snakes can follow in the
passageways, and as it seldom leaves these there is little chance of
its being seen by predatory animals. However, the movement of
the soil when a mole is working near the surface may readily be de-
tected by a watchful foe, and it is probable that hungry foxes and
coyotes secure a tidbit now and then by springing suddenly upon a
disturbed spot of earth and hurriedly digging out the furry little
miner. On the other hand, there is evidence that moles are distaste-
ful tosome animals, for they are seldom eaten by domestic cats and
dogs which have learned to catch them. A peculiarly disagreeable
odor attaching to the mole may account for its not being relished by
the carnivora. It is quite likely, also, that the dense soft fur is
How to Trap
A number on the market and most of them
of excellent traps are
will give good results if However, the mechanism of a
properly set.
cracking of the soil where the sagging roof of the ridge has been
raised again, a few particles of fresh earth thrust out to close a tiny
opening or crevice, the wilting of grass or foliage along the course
these are indications of an occupied run way. When in doubt the
question may always be settled by making a small breach in the
ridge, and if that particular part of the burrow is in use the mole will
invariably repair the break when he comes that way on his rounds.
By following this plan all the centers of mole activity on one's pre-
mises may In placing the trap one of the
be definitely located.
stretches of the run that seems to be leading in some definite
direction should be selected, rather than one of the turns of a
labyrinth that may not be traversed every time the mole comes in
the vicinity.
Before setting the trap it is well to ascertain the course of the
burrow by thrusting down a lead pencil or stick of about the same size.
The trap selected should then be lined up with the course as nearly
as possible; the jaws of the scissor-jaw type should straddle it, the
loops of the choker type should encircle it, and the spikes of the har-
poon type should be directly above it. In the case of the harpoon
type it is best to force the impaling spikes into the ground once or
twice to facilitate their penetrating into the burrow when the trap
is later sprung; this type of trap injures the pelts of moles impaled,
and is not recommended for use when it is desired to preserve the fur.
It is desirable in setting any of the traps to depress only that part of
the mole ridge that is immediately beneath the trigger pan, using the
hand instead of the foot for this purpose. A little earth may be
built up snugly under the pan if necessary. Avoid treading upon
other parts of the runways. It will pay to visit the traps at least
twice a day.
The persistence of the mole in repairing breaks in his runways is
equaled only by that of the spider mending its torn web. One can
take advantage of this known trait not only in selecting locations for
trapping, but in planning the capture of the animal alive. Though
requiring more time and attention than trapping, the method of
catching moles by surprising them at work is fairly practicable. In
following this plan one should open up 5 or 6 feet of ridge in each of
the several distinct runway systems and make the rounds of sub-
sequent inspection every few minutes. When a mole is found repair-
ing a break he can be tossed out with a shovel and dispatched.
Mole skins should be stretched square and not round. The
American mole is usually stretched round and is neglected somewhat
212 FUR FACTS
cto this account. The European trappers who trap moles stretch
the skins square or oblong, but never round.
Moleskins are in good
demand, but those improperly stretched and poorly handled have
little or no value.
RINGTAIL CAT
raising the body about four inches from the ground. The most
distinguishing feature is the tail, which is about the same length
as the body and marked in alternate rings of black and white, and
of a very bushy appearance. The color of the body is a greyish
yellow and always lighter on the under side. The animal is noc-
turnal in its habits and is rarely, if ever, seen in the day time, its
large eyes being especially adapted for use at night. The ringtail
cat does not belong to the cat family, as the name would imply,
but is really a member of the monkey family and has hands re-
sembling those of the common monkey with almost perfect fingers.
Their chief food is frogs, mice, and insects, and sometimes vege-
tables, and the animal prefers thick woods which abound in insects,
to the open land and thin timber, where his natural food would
not be so plentiful.
FUR FACTS 213
as the female. As a rule one bull seal takes care of a family of from
fifteen to twenty females, and in some cases up to fifty or more. The
seals inhabit the Pribilof Islands eight or nine months of the year.
The balance of the time they spend in the water and at times will appear
as far South as Northern California. When they return, the old bulls
reach the Islands much earlier than the rest of the herd and take
FUR FACTS 215
stands on the rookery where they await the arrival of their families.
Each bull selects a prominent place which he holds against all comers,
unless he is driven off by a larger and stronger opponent. The bulls
often fight savagely among themselves on the
for choice positions
rookery and for possession of the cows and often are severely wounded.
The females have a single offspring, each mother knowing her own
pup and will not permit any other pup to nurse. This is said to be
the reason why so many seal pups starve to death on the rookery
when their mothers are killed out at sea hunting food. The seals
have been using these islands for their breeding grounds for many
many years. The Islands are of volcanic origin and there is not a
trace of a tree, a shrub, or a vine on them, and yet this is the favorite
haunt of this tremendous herd of Alaska seals, as well as the home
of many millions of birds, which also use the islands to rear their
young. Every year the seals come back to the same spot and make
their home on land for at least six months of the year, during which
time they bring forth and rear their young, after which they return
to the seaand depart to the depth of the great ocean until it is time
for them again to return.
Early in May the big bulls begin to arrive in large numbers and
select their stations. When they have won their places, they lie
down and sleep oftentimes for several weeks until the breeding cows
are expected. They then sit up and begin to take notice, and send
forth their peculiar cry which supposed to be a cordial invitation
is
August the harems break up and the different sections mingle together
indiscriminately.
When the old bulls first land on the island in May they are as
fat and as round as a barrel and sleek and glossy. But after four
months residence on land defending his harem, when he never takes
food or drink during all that time, he becomes so poor, gaunt and
weak, that it is with the utmost difficulty that he crawls into the sea
when he leaves, which is usually late in August or early in September,
to make his annual trip down through the Behring sea and the
Northern Pacific Ocean. The females do not leave until about the
first of November, and the pups leave about the middle of November,
the yearlings, both male and female, the first half of December. As
stated before the pup seal when born can not swim. If he is dropped
into the water his head, which is heavy, will immediately sink, and
suffocation is only a matter of a few minutes. The pup cannot live
in the water until it is about six weeks old, and then begins to try
FUR FACTS 217
to swim, never going out, however, beyond his depth. After a while
he becomes bolder and then grows more and more expert until he
finally becomes an expert swimmer. The young seal therefore up
to the time he learns to swim is a land animal, and it requires four
months of nursing by its mother on land before it becomes able to
shift for itself and is abandoned by its parent. It is said that the
young seal can swim at the rate of eighteen or twenty miles an hour
for many consecutive hours without pause or rest.
The bull seal when at its greatest weight will weigh up to five
hundred pounds and measure from six to seven feet in length.
will
The female, however, only weighs from seventy five to one hundred
and twenty five pounds, and is about four and one half feet in length.
The young bachelor seals from one to five years old, weigh from fifty
to two hundred pounds, and are from four to five feet in length.
It has long been a mystery as to where the seals go when they leave
the islands. They swim out into the open sea and some authorities
claim that they speed south off the coast of British Columbia as far
down as the northern line of California, but wherever they go, one
thing is certain that they do not touch land until they again return
to their breeding grounds. One of the remarkable facts in connection
with seal life is the long fast of the bull seal on the breeding grounds.
As stated before from the time they establish themselves, which is
from the first to the fifth of May, they do not leave their posts for
a single instant night or day, until some time between the first and
the tenth of August. The bulls, therefore, for a period of three
months or more, absolutely abstain entirely from any kind of food
or drink, and when they do return to the water, they are, to borrow
a slang expression, "all in'*, and have barely enough strength to
crawl into the water and get ready to start in all over again.
The females on the contrary do not fast but feed at frequent inter-
vals and during the end of the season on the island are usually as
sleek and fat as when they first arrived.
It is said that the bull seal is expert in the management of his
harem. Whether he has a harem of five members or fifty, he is
master of the situation. His will is law; not that it is always tamely
accepted as such, but the result is the same. If a female becomes
restless and moves about, a warning growl usually quiets her. If
the movement is persisted in and an attempt to escape evident, the
bull is up at once with a show of fierceness. He may simply strike
the cow down, or he may even seize her in his mouth and deliberately
throw her, or carry her back, to the herd. If the female thinks she
218 FUR FACTS
has a chance to get away, she may try to outrun the bull. If she
miscalculates the distance, he seizes her by the back of the neck and
restores her,sometimes in a torn and bleeding condition, to the family
circle. As arule, however, the cow avoids this seizing by turning
and facing the bull biting hjm on the breast and neck. The bull by
steadily pushing her before him, forces her back into the fold and
does not seem to mind her bites.
There is constant noise going on all the time at the rookery.
The bulls are giving vent at intervals to their savage roars of
defiance. In their more subdued efforts to maintain discipline
in the harem they are constantly whistling, chuckling and scolding
the body, and another may have them reversed. They seem to enjoy
the rocks, and do not care for a smooth even bed. Some go to sleep
FUR FACTS 219
sitting up with the body waving back and forth as if it would fall.
Where parts of the rookery have perpendicular cliffs, the animals are
to be found lying out on little shelves at angles where it is a wonder
they can keep their position at all. The seal also sleeps very soundly
in the water. It lies on its back in a bowed position, nose just peering
above the surface, and it is said always to the leeward, the hind
flippers being held aloft as a wind break to keep the animal in this
definite position. In this attitude the seal can apparently sleep
with the greatest comfort rocked by the gentle swell.
in length, which is dressed and dyed and becomes the seal skin of
commerce, out of which garments are made.
Killing Seals
When it comes time to kill the seals the whole population of the
islands turns out to join in the work. A gang of twenty five to
thirty seals are cut outfrom the main herd at a time and driven up
to the killing grounds, where men stand around with heavy clubs
with the ends bound in sheet iron; and as the seals are driven up,
these men walk up to the seal and with a crushing blow on the skull
stun the seal and one or two more blows usually finishes him. It is
said that it takes a hardened individual to kill a seal. If you have
ever seen a seal in a zoo, you know what wonderfully appealing eyes
320 FUR FACTS
they have. The seal is an intelligent animal and has been trained
to do marvelous tricks of balancing. seems to be an affectionate
It
animal and easily trained, and it is necessary for the person doing the
killing to be a real butcher. A bungler, who is not expert in seal
killing and who would not hit a hard blow, would probably have a
difficult time clubbing a seal to death. After the seals have been
killed they are dragged into line, then stuck and "flippered." In
other words they are stabbed to the heart and allowed to bleed freely.
Then a knife is drawn around the head and flippers, severing the
skin and leaving it ready for the skinners, who split it up in short
order and spread the skin evenly on the grass flesh side down to cool.
After the skin is removed the carcass is stripped of the blubber or
fat. The skins are then salted with a heavy coarse salt, and are
folded and rolled in compact bundles, tied with a rope, and placed
in large wooden casks ready for shipment. The skins are then ready
to be sent to market to be dressed and dyed and made into fur gar-
ments.
The Dressing and Dyeing oj Seals
out leaving the soft underfur, which about one half inch in length
is
due to insects puncturing the surface of the bark or leaf and depositing
its egg in the cavity. The subsequent growth, constituting the gall,
is the effect either of some virus deposited with the egg, or of the
irritation caused by the larva, which lives in the gall until its develop-
ment an insect. The gall of commerce is the product of a gall-
into
fly, which lays its eggs in the soft twigs of an oak tree of western
Asia and southern Europe. The gall used in the manufacture of dye-
for seal skins is largely the Aleppo gall. Aleppo is a district in Tur-
key. Logwood is from the logwood tree which is found in Jamaica,
the wood of this tree containing the crystalline principle hematoxylin
which is used for dye stuffs.)
For many years the ginseng business has gone hand in hand with
the fur business. The man that has a fox farm, or a skunk ranch,
usually raises ginseng, although it does not necessarily follow that all
of the ginseng farmers raise furbearing animals. Ginseng is a root
that found wild in many parts of the country and that in recent
is
years has been cultivated and some very fine roots grown.
The questions are constantly asked what is ginseng and what is
it used for. In answer to the first question, ginseng is a fleshy-rooted
herbaceious plant growing naturally on the slopes of ravines and other
shady but well-drained situations in hardwood forests from Maine to
Georgia, and as far West as Minnesota, throughout most of the cen-
tral Mississippi Valley. In its wild state the plant grows from eight
to twenty inches high, bearing three or more compound leaves, each
consisting of five thin, stalked, ovate leaflets, pointed at the apex
and rounded or narrowed at the base, the three upper leaflets being
larger than the two lower ones. A cluster of from 6 to 20 small
greenish yellow flowers is produced in midsummer, followed later by
as many bright-crimson berries, each containing from one to three
flattish wrinkled seeds the size of small peas.
In answer to the second question, no one seems to know. It
has long been valued by the Chinese for medicinal use, though rarely
credited with curative virtues by the natives of other countries. The
roots have been exported from this country for about one hundred
years, and today there are larger quantities exported to China than
ever before, due to the fact that the supply of ginseng has been mater-
ially increased by the cultivation of the root, and the cultivated crop
isnow larger than the crop of wild roots.
The cultivation of ginseng began about fifteen years ago, and
many growers have been very successful with it. At this time the
price about $12.00 per pound, and those fortunate enough to har-
is
vest a large crop of the root, at the prevailing price are to be con-
gratulated. One grower informed the writer that he recently gathered
4000 pounds of roots from a two-acre patch, for which he realized
$50,000.00 net cash. This crop took eight years to grow.
FUR FACTS 223
both the wild root and the cultivated root, is exported to China. It
is also said that the Chinese will pay big premiums for certain pe-
culiarly shaped pieces of root. For instance a piece of ginseng root
that resembles the human form is said to be particularly desired and
in high favor with the Chinese. As to whether there is any medical
merit to the root or not, has not been decided by medical authorities
in this country. At any rate the medical profession seems to give
little value to it. But that is not the question. Whether it has
merit or not, the Chinese believe that it has, and they are the users,
and we have been exporting ginseng root to the Chinese for over one
hundred years. There is a big demand for it now and probably will
be for many years to come, so that any one who will undertake the
raising of ginseng, and raise it successfully, will be well repaid for
his work.
It requires an infinite amount of patience and quite a little work
to successfully raise ginseng. One must wait for several years before
cashing in any profit, but when you finally reap a crop of roots and
are able to sell it at the prevailing price on today's market of $12.00
per pound, there is no crop that will return the same high rate of
cash dividends.
Ginseng in its wild and natural state grows mostly in thick hard-
wood forests. The seeds ripen early in the fall or late summer, de-
pending a good deal on the locality in which it is found. For many
years the only crop of ginseng was the wild root, which was gathered
by ginseng diggers, many of whom were trappers in the winter time,
and looked for ginseng during the summer months. They became
familiar with the leaf and general appearance of the plant and would
then travel through the woods and when they found a plant that
was the proper size and gave evidence of having a fair sized root,
they would dig it up with their mattock, carry it home, wash and
dry it, and ship it into market. In some districts where ginseng was
plentiful this would be a very profitable summer occupation, but the
diggers would soon strip the district of all the wild ginseng there was
to be had. In some sections large beds of ginseng would be found,
224 FUR FACTS
and the lucky would reap a harvest. Some one conceived the
finder
idea of planting ginseng seed and raising the plant. Just who first
hit on this idea is a mooted question. At any rate the pioneers were
not very successful, and most of those who tried it, gave it up. How-
ever, it has been shown conclusively that ginseng can be successfully
grown, and that a larger root can be produced than is found in the
wild state. When the cultivated ginseng first made its appearance
on the market, the Chinese did not value it very highly and it looked
like cultivated ginseng was due to be a failure, but evidently the
Chinese have overcome their prejudice against the cultivated root,
as there is very little difference between the market value of the
cultivated and the wild root at this time.
It is often asked why the Chinese do not raise their own ginseng.
One answer to this question seems to be that the ginseng requires
virgin soil, and some growers who have experimented claim that it
is impossible to raise a second crop of ginseng on the same land.
At any rate it grows best in new land, which would seem to indicate
that it requires the same natural conditions to cultivate the root as
in the wild state. This is further indicated by the fact that leaves are
used for mulching and every effort is made to create in the cultivated
field the conditions that exist in the wild state, both as to the leaves
that cover the plant and the shade that is furnished by the trees.
Fromm Brothers, who probably have one of the largest ginseng
beds in this country, informed the writer that they got the best
results after the plant was six years old. Their method is to take
the ginseng seed, which has a very hard outer shell, and place it in
sand and leave it there for a year to germinate. This is done by
taking a wooden box, the size depending on the number of seeds that
are to be used, and laying a layer of sand on the bottom of the box
about six inches deep. Over this they spread a layer of ginseng seed,
and then a layer of sand about two inches deep, then another layer
of ginseng seed, etc. This box is kept in a damp, moist place, and
is allowed to remain as it is for one year. The seeds are then taken
out and planted in a bed and are allowed to remain there for two
years. At the end of the two years, the plant is about three or four
inches high. It is then transplanted and allowed to remain three
years and then the root is dug. It takes six years to mature a crop
from the time the seed is first planted; but after the 6th year a crop
may be gathered each year, and it is estimated that the yield of
dry roots from a well managed planting will be about a ton to the
acre. At the present price of $12.00 per pound this would net
FUR FACTS 225
The seed also is a big source of profit to the grower. They are
soldby the thousand and vary in price from two to four dollars per
thousand. It takes about 8000 seeds to weigh a pound. Plants
that are five years old will produce an average of fifty seeds annually.
The Department of Agriculture has this to say about ginseng.
They are usually stratified in moist sand, old sawdust, or woods
earth and stored in a damp cool place until cracked by incipient
germination, which may be considerably delayed and usually does
not occur until the year following their ripening. The subsequent
development of the plant is also relatively slow, as it requires from
five to seven years to grow marketable roots from seeds or young
roots. Under favorable circumstances the plants begin to fruit
about the third year and when over 5 years old may produce as many
as 50 seeds annually.
The older roots possess the most substance and when properly
cured realize the highest prices. It appears almost useless to offer
for sale 3 year or 4 year roots, if well grown and of good size,
even
as buyers for the Chinese market have learned to discriminate against
them.
Starting the Plantation
The beds under shade should be 4 feet wide and preferably should
run east and west, being so placed that the drip will fall to a great
extent in the paths. The sides may be of 12-inch boards set 8 inches
or more in the ground to keep out the moles and held in place with
small stakes. The soil should be fairly light and so well drained
naturally or artificially that water can at no time remain on the beds
FUR FACTS 227
Mulching
In accordance with natural conditions a winter mulch over the
crowns is essential, especially in northern localities. Forest leaves
held in place with poultry netting or light brush are best, but corn-
stalks stripped of the husks, bean vines, cowpea hay, or other coarse
litter not containing weed seeds or material attractive to mice will
ample for the severest climate, and needed in the South. Seed-
less is
ling beds particularly require careful mulching to prevent heaving by
frost.
Free ventilation is very necessary for ginseng. In the forest,
owing to the height of the protective canopy of trees, air currents
are almost constant. This condition should be borne in mind in the
construction of artificial shade, and the shed should contain as few
obstacles as possible to the free circulation of air. Open sides at
the north and east will generally insure free ventilation.
Owing to the comparatively high cost of ginseng plants and roots,
the beds should be well protected by secure fences from the intrusion
of wild or domestic animals and should also be securely guarded
against theft, which is not uncommon with this high-priced product.
Protection is needed with forest plantings which should
especially
always be well inclosed. Moles may be controlled with suitable
traps, of which there are several kinds on the market, or the beds
may be guarded with boards or wire netting of sufficiently close
mesh set 12 to 18 inches in the ground.
Ginseng Varieties
The culture of native ginseng has been too brief to induce varietal
changes, but liberal fertilization and continual selection of seeds
from individual plants having superior commercial characteristics
will doubtless in the end modify the wild type of plants. There are,
FUR FACTS 229
Diseases of Ginseng
The diseases of cultivated ginseng appear to be chiefly incident
to the crowding of the plants, deficient drainage, and lack of ventila-
tion. In their natural state the plants as a rule are thinly scattered
on the forest floor under advantageous conditions of ventilation and
the soil drainage, the normal action of tree roots playing no incon-
and diseases, of which there are
siderable part in the latter condition,
remain quite local in effect, but under the crowd-
several, are likely to
ed conditions of commercial culture they tend to spread and may
cause material injury. Errors in fertilization and soil treatments
are also fruitful sources of injury and by weakening the resistance
of the plants further invite the inroads of disease.
Forest Plantings
The earlier successes with ginseng culture were made with forest
plantings, and this method is still preferred by many growers where
the proper conditions are available. The shade should be fairly
dense, but should be produced by
open-headed trees rather than
tall,
color and the fur would be just fuzz. There are other mink skins
that would range in value somewhere between these two extremes
and, as stated before, their value would depend upon size, quality
and the color of the fur.
The principal thing to keep in mind in valuing and buying raw
furs is the fact that it is the fur on the pelt that makes the skin val-
uable, and the finer and silkier, the better colored the fur, the
more valuable it is. Therefore, when starting out to buy furs,
these facts should be taken into consideration and the buyer should
be well enough posted to know one grade from another at least in
a general way. Furs are bought with the idea of ultimately making
them up into fur garments, and as stated before, it is the quality of
the fur or the quality and beauty of the fur that makes one skin more
valuable than another. The first consideration in buying furs,
therefore, should be given to
/
and color. By quality is
size quality
meant the thickness, softness and silkiness of the fur, the primeness
and condition of the pelt. By color is meant the richness, gloss,
luster and shade of color of the fur. As a general proposition, in
most furs where the color is an element of value, the dark shades of
FUR FACTS 283
color make the fur more valuable. In other words, dark, deep, rich
brown mink is more valuable than the yellowish, lusterless, faded
looking mink. These are two extremes, but serve to emphasize the
point of what is meant by color.
Another important element that enters into the value of pelts
of course is the size. The difference in the value of two furs being
equal in color and quality would be the size. The one having the largest
number of square inches of fur would of course be the more valuable.
Therefore, to repeat, in judging the value of pelts, there are three
important things to bear in mind. First the quality of the fur, the
thickness and silkiness; second the gloss and shade of color; third
the size and condition of the pelt and the color of the flesh side of the
pelt. Funsten Bros. & Co. quote prices on the different grades and
kind of raw furs according to their standard grades, which are #1
extra large,#1 large, #1 medium, #1 small, #2 large, #2, #3 and #4.
Grading and valuing furs is a good deal like valuing and judging
diamonds or pearls. A man, to be an expert, must have years of
experience and not everyone handling or buying furs becomes an
expert. The writer believes, however, that these suggestions will
be of value to the man or boy possessed with what is called "fur
sense." When you stop to consider that it takes a man with "fur
sense'* working in furs every day and handling thousands of pelts,
about five years to become a qualified fur grader; you can readily
understand that it is not possible to become an expert in furs by
merely trapping or handling a few skins each season, but the man who
has this experience and will read carefully and follow the suggestions
in this article will find that his ability to judge the value of raw furs
will be aided materially.
In spite of all that has been written about not trapping out of
season, there is a certain number of inexperienced trappers who take
fur singed. Badly singed otter skins are usually plucked as singed
pelts do not make up attractively.
It pays to trap when furs are at their best. Take mink for in-
stance. A mink skin could be of large size but if the pelt were black,
and the fur just a little fuzzy hair, the skin would grade low and
would be worth a low price. On the other hand, if the same mink
(unless it was a sick or diseased animal) were trapped when the fur
was at its best and the pelt prime, it would be worth big money.
Color
In addition to the primeness and condition of the pelt and the
thickness and quality of the fur and the size of the skin, another
important element that enters into the grading of some furs, such as
mink, marten, otter, fisher, raccoon and even muskrat, is the fur color.
As a general rule the darker skins are the more valuable. Silky dark
mink bring higher prices than coarse brown ones.
Beginners, and sometimes older trappers, make the mistake of
believing they have very dark skins because it is the darkest one they
ever have seen in their vicinity, when as a matter of fact, the skin
would not grade dark in the market because in some sections darker
skins are produced.
A skin to grade dark should be a rich, dark brown chocolate color,
and the tips of the guard hair must not be singed by the sun. Under
an electric light on a dark day such skins look almost black.
You will readily see therefore, that in grading and valuing most
furs there are four distinct things to take into consideration —prime-
ness or unprimeness of the pelt, the size, the thickness and quality,
and the color Also take into consideration that cut skins,
of the fur.
tainted skins or improperly stretched skins are not strictly No. 1 skins.
MINK
Mink is one of the most beautiful and servicable of our American
small furs. It is found in nearly every state in the Union
and Canada and Alaska. Its habits, etc., are
in large quantities in
described in another chapter. The finest mink in color and quality
are found in the Northeastern states and Eastern Canada; Maine
mink probably being the finest in quality. Michigan and Wisconsin
are famous for mink of fine quality and color; Minnesota is the
home of mink of splendid size and color. The largest mink probably
are found in North Dakota. Louisiana is a big mink state, although
quite naturally the quality of the fur is not as fine as those found in
the more northern states. Many mink are found in parts of Texas
236 FUR FACTS
but they are usually of a coarse variety. The Carolinas are famous
for mink. Alabama, Georgia and parts of Mississippi produce mink
of splendid color. Virginia and West Virginia also have mink of good
color. All of the Central and Western States produce mink in large
quantities of varying quality, the mink in one section of a state
often differing considerably from those found in other sections. As
a rule the mink from the Northern part of a state are softer
and more silky in fur than those found in the Southern sections.
Practically all mink, even those of the very finest color and
qualityf are^stretched cased with the fur side in and
the ffleshjj side out. This has many advantages over
the other method and is preferred by all experienced
buyers. Mink that are
shipped to market with
the fur side outand the
pelt side in are bound
to get more ox less
greasy which causes the
fur to look dead and
Mink, Pelt and Pur flat. To
determine the
Side Out
grade and value of a
mink, first examine the pelt carefully
and determine whether it is prime or
not. If the pelt is prime, that is if the
then it will grade as number one. The next thing to determine is the
color and size and whether the skin or the fur has been damaged; next
consider how the skin has been stretched. The proper way to stretch
mink is and they should be shaped like the one shown in
pelt side out
the illustration. In some sections are found a class of mink called cotton
mink. The under fur is almost white or a very light tan. These
mink are- usually poor in quality, do not match with other mink and
are not as valuable, and usually grade No. 3. Remember that a
mink to be classified as dark must be a rich dark brown; dark mink
are not found at all in some sections. The color seems to be determined
by the soil conditions, amount of timber and possibly food. Mink
that live entirely on fish are rarely good in color, in fact they are a
pale light brown. All mink begin to lose their gloss and get lighter
in color in the spring and in some sections the fur is singed when the
weather turns suddenly hot; the mink lays out in the sun and its
fur will quickly shed and turn color.
FUR FACTS 237
SKUNK
In the grading and valuing of skunk the same rules apply, so far
unprime are concerned. But in addition to
as the skins being prime or
the condition of the pelt and the length and thickness of the fur,
skunk of equal quality are valued according to the amount of black
fur that is on the pelt. As a rule the more white on the skunk the less
valuable it is. Therefore, skunk are graded as black skunk, short
stripe skunk, narrow stripe skunk, and then broad or white stripe
skunk.
flesh side is a healthy reddish white color, you can be reasonably sure
that the fur is If the pelt has a slightly bluish cast,
fully developed.
it indicates that the fur good quality, though not fully developed.
is of
But if the pelt side is a flat looking black color, then you must be
careful and look for fur that has only partly developed, and that is
lacking in a full growth of under fur.
OPOSSUM
Opossum one of the leading American furs and one of the
is
w pi
I
SQUARE HANDLED
Properly Stretched
INDIAN HANDLED ROUGH HANDLED
This coon stretched square
would be worth more money
In northern sections coon are stretched in Indian style, but as a
general ruleit is better to stretch all coon square.
Prime pelted coon would be graded number one extra large, num-
ber one large, number one medium and number one small and the
unprime pelts would be graded as number two large, number two,
number three and number four, with the exception, however, that
very pale, faded coon, even if the pelt is prime, are not graded number
one.
240 FUR FACTS
The best colored raccoon are dark over almost the entire surface
of the pelt. Some coon are prime pelted, but they lose their color
from lying out on the limb of a tree in the hot sun and the fur becomes
faded and spotted yellow in color. They may be full in fur, but the
color is so bad that they cannot be classed with the rich dark colored
skins, and therefore must be graded accordingly.
In some sections of the south many raccoon skins are taken off
and nailed up on the side of the barn and are not properly stretched.
These skins may be well furred, but when they are received in the
market, they look like the rough handled skin shown in the illustration.
Such skins are not as valuable as they would be if they were
stretched square as illustrated. All of the small pieces around the
edge must be cut off and this is a total waste, where if the skin is
stretched square the manufacturer can utilize these ends and it is,
therefore, advisable to stretch all raccoon as nearly square as possible.
Some heavy raccoon that are trapped in the north section can be
stretched in Indian style; that is the skins are stretched to the natural
shape of the skin, but even then they try to get them as near square
as the shape of the skin will allow.
In some sections the raccoon are heavier furred than in others.
This is especially true in most of the northern states. Raccoon that
are full grown, fat and heavy, develop an extra heavy coat of fur in
real cold weather and the texture of this fur is usually very fine and
the under fur extremely dense. These extra heavy skins are used
for trimmingson fine coats and are usually dyed. For this reason,
most fur houses quote prices on extra heavy raccoon as well as
average raccoon.
In the late spring of the year, raccoon begin to show signs of
the warm weather and start to shed and rub. This happens some-
times in the midst of winter in some states when the weather
turns suddenly warm. Such skins are classed as springy or shedded
furs. As this shedding and rubbing usually starts back of the head,
it is well to examine raccoon for rubbed or damaged spots.
MUSKRAT
Muskrat are found throughout the United States and Canada,
but they vary considerably in size and quality and, strange as it
may seem, the muskrat from Alaska are not as valuable as those
from the central states like Illinois or Michigan. For instance, a
large Illinois muskrat is much larger than a muskrat that would be
classified or graded as large trapped in the northern part of Canada.
FUR FACTS 241
the pelt is thin and the fur thick. However, the early winter musk-
rats are usually better in color although the pelts are not quite as
thin as the spring muskrat. The fall muskrat is thick and heavy in
pelt and not so thick in fur, the flesh or pelt side is usually blue and
this class of rat is not so desirable for shearing and dyeing and making
into Hudson Seal.
In former times a great many small kit muskrat were taken, but
as these have very little value, trappers have learned the wisdom
of passing them up until they are full grown with the result that the
percentage of kits coming to market is decreasing every year. The
fine dark colored muskrats with reddish pelts are the most valuable
and of the finest quality.
WOLF
Wolf is one of the most difficult pelts for the inexperienced to
grade and value. As a rule when a beginner traps a large wolf he
feels sure that it should bring the very highest price, but a wolf to
be valuable for fur purposes must have soft under fur. A large wolf
skin might be valuable as a local trophy, but to bring the best price
in the fur markets, it must be well furred, and have fur of soft, silky
quality. Wolf should be cased fur side out after all the surplus
fat has been removed from the pelt. As a rule the big coarse mane
that is down the back of most wolf is cut out by the fur manufacturers,
as it will not work with the softer fur on the sides.
Large, soft silky wolf are worth the most, but it must be remem-
bered that not size alone in the wolf that counts, for a wolf is
it is
prime the fur will stand up and have life and gloss if it is of poor ;
quality the fur will lay flat; if the pelt is blue you may be sure the
fur has not fully developed. Size is important but a fox skin that
is large in size but poorly furred and blue pelted will grade a num-
ber two, three or four. Grey foxes trapped at the right season of
the year are usually full furred. The fur is coarse and wiry and is not
likely to have rubbed spots like the red fox which fur is very much
softer and silkier than the grey fox. Case all foxes fur side out and
stretch as shown in illustration.
BEAVER
In quite a few of the States beaver are protected the year around
and must not be trapped. There is no market for skins illegally
or unlawfully taken. However, where there is an open season for
beaver, it is a very profitable article for the trapper and the same
general rules apply to the grading and valu-
ing of beaver as to the other kinds, except
that they are stretched open and round, and
not cased.
In the old days beaver were sold by the
pound, as they were largely used to make
beaver hats, but now they are graded into
the standard grades the same as the other
furs and the thickness and quality of the
fur determines the value, as'welljasjthe size
of the pelt. Color is not important in beaver; the size and thickness
of the under fur is of most importance. Beaver is one of the few furs
that are stretched open as shownjinjthe illustration.
OTTER
The one fur bearing animal that is becoming scarce in all
otter is
sections. Trappers and hunters should realize this fact and not hunt
the otter out of season or shoot them for sport at any season of the
year. Otter is a splendid fur, the finer skins are almost black in
color. Many otters are sing-
as gray ermine.
The first consideration in buying ermine is to see that the skins
are pure snow white, and full furred. Pelts with dark spots on them
usually indicate that the fur is not perfectly white and has brown or
gray hairs scattered through it.
FISHER
Fisher are graded and valued entirely by the color and silkiness
of the skin and not so much the size. The softer and silkier the skins
and the better the color, the more
valuable. As a rule the small female
fisher are of finer quality and of better
color than the large male fisher. The
pelt should be soft and pliable. Heavy, boardy pelted skins are
usually graded as number two's.
MARTEN
Marten are valued according to the color, depth and silkiness of
the fur, although of two skins of equal quality and color the larger
would be the more valuable. The most important thing to consider
in valuing marten is the color. There
are three classifications, dark, brown
and pale. The finer skins are almost
black in color and at times show a
few white hairs. The next color is a rich brown. The pale skins
are a very light brown, and in some sections are almost yellow.
The darker the fur the more valuable the skin. Marten should al-
ways be cased and stretched with the fur out as shown in
illustration.
246 FUR FACTS
CIVET CAT
Civet cat, or pole cat as often called, is at times bought for
it is
RINGTAIL
The ringtail fur is light tan in color and the body is about the same
size as the mink. The tail is about as long as the body and has alternate
rings of black and white fur.
The finer skins come from
Oregon and Washington, they
are also found in Texas and
California. They are classified the same as civet, that is, as ones,
twos and trash. They should be cased and stretched pelt side out.
LYNX
Lynx to be graded number one, must be full furred. The pelts
are nearly always prime, therefore, in buying lynx, attention must
be paid to the length and quality of the fur and the size. As lynx
are nearly always dyed by the manufacturer the color is not import-
ant. The^finest lynx are
thin|peltedjwith a heavy,
dense fur. Prime winter
caught skins have fur one
and a half to two inches in depth that stands straight up. Poor
quality skins have flat looking short fur. Lynx should always be
cased and stretched fur side out as shown in illustration.
WILD CAT
Wild cat are usually poor in fur and their value depends largely
on size. House cats are an important article of fur, the black being
valued higher than the mottled. They are valued according to
size.
Furs that are shipped in a wet, sloppy condition, or furs that are
tainted, or furs that have been badly cut in taking off, or that have
been badly damaged, or that have been improperly dried so as to
be grease-burnt, or that are trapped in off season so as to grade as
trash, cannot be classified in the standard grades, and the rules of
grading do not apply to this class of fur, for the reason that tainted
and badly damaged skins are practically worthless. Before you
start to grade a lot of furs to buy them, be sure that none of the skins
are hair-slipped or tainted.
After one or two shipments to any of the old reliable fur houses,
the fur shipper will become familiar with the standard grades of the
different pelts from his section, and he
then able to arrive at the
is
beaver, and bear. The ideal way to stretch coon after the pelt is
removed from the carcass is to stretch it square. This may be done
by cutting small holes around the entire edge of the skin and splitting
the head about half way down, and then inserting small round sticks
about one half inch in diameter through the holes, and stretching
the skin square.
Coon that are stretched square in this manner will always com-
mand better prices than those that are simply tacked up and dried
in their natural shape, for the reason that in the latter way the head
and go to waste and in the former way, by stretching it
legs all
square, the furrier can work them up and match them up better.
Beaver should be stretched in an oval form and the tail and feet
removed. With badger it does not make so much difference and they
can be stretched open or cased.
Mink, skunk, opossum, muskrat, otter, civet cat, and ringtail,
should be cased pelt side out. Foxes of all kinds, lynx, lynx cat,
248 FUR FACTS
fisher, wolf,marten, white weasel, wolf and wild cat, should be cased
fur side out. To take the skin off cased cut it loose around the hind
feet, rip the skin down the back of the hind legs, and then peel the
skin carefully from the hind legs down to the tail. Then remove the
tail bone. This may
be done by inserting a small stick in between
the top part of the bone and the skin of the tail and keep pulling
tail
down around it and the tail bone. Do not split the tail if it can be
avoided. After the tail bone is removed draw the skin downward
from the body keeping it as clean of meat and fat as possible.
Use a Funsten gambrel if you have one; if not, it is well to suspend
the carcass from the limb of a tree or other projection and make a
strong loop around the hind legs with a cord. The skin can then be
pulled off the carcass very easily. Care should be used when the
head is reached. Cut the skin loose from about the eyes and nose.
The skin will then be in the form of a long pocket with fur in. Stretch
the skin on a Funsten Universal Stretcher to its natural size, either
fur side out or pelt side out, as suggested.
Remove all fat and meat, but do not scrape the pelt too closely,
as that will injure the roots of the fur. After you have placed the
skin on a stretcher tack it up or hang it in a cool place, sheltered from
rain to dry. Never dry a skin by the fire or in the sun. Never use
preparations of any kind for curing skins; simply stretch and dry
them as they are taken from the animals. It is only necessary to
have the skins dry enough to hold their shape in order for you to
ship them.
See that the skins are clear of all burrs, mud, and superfluous
fat, etc. Furs are valuable and should be thoroughly cleaned and
made to look their best before they are packed for shipment.
There was a time when the trapper or store keeper waited for a
traveling buyer to come along and put a price on his pelts, and usual-
ly sold them,- whether he had a few skins or a large quantity, in
preference to what he considered the bother of shipping them.
However, he has learned that he can turn his furs into cash quickly
and get considerably more money for his pelts, whether he has one
or two skins or a large quantity, by shipping them to market than
he can by selling them at home. The most successful city road buy-
er can cover only enough territory to allow him to take up a small
quantity, and he has to apply all of his traveling expenses, his own
salary and time against the cost of the fur, and then he in turn must
FUR FACTS 249
ship them or take them to the fur house —the very same place to which
the original owner could have shipped them himself. Therefore, the
road buyer does not serve any economic purpose. The ideal way
to handle any merchandise, or any product, is to sell it as nearly
direct to the consumer as the nature of the business allows.
Therefore, the time has come when the Store Buyer and the
producer of furs,market their furs by shipping direct to Funs-
ten Bros. & The proper packing and shipping of
Co., in St. Louis.
furs is a very simple matter, and it is just as easy to do it right, as it
is to do it in a slipshod and haphazard manner. Today the parcel
post is a great boon to the small shipper. He can send one or two
skins just as well as he can a hundred and send them safely and
quickly by using the parcel post; or if he has easy access to the ex-
press office he can send larger quantities by express, especially any
wet, heavy skins, which he wants to get to market quickly; and it
is always advisable to ship wet and greasy skins by express. Before
packing see that the skins are free of superfluous meat and fat. Do
not scrape them too closely, but have them in good clean condition.
Remove all mud, burrs, etc., from the fur. Comb it out and clean it
well. When shipping greasy skins, do not put fur side out mink
in between them. If you are shipping furs such as raccoon lay them
pelt side to pelt side and put any mink you may have in between the
—
coon, that is, in between the fur sides of the coon. Never place one
cased skin inside of another. Oftentimes a man will place a mink
inside of a greasy opossum, or will place a small ermine inside of a
muskrat. Never place one skin inside of another. Lay each skin
folded but do not crumple them up. Put the small skins on the
inside and the large skins on the outside. Tie them together securely
—
with a strong string never use wire. When you have the furs
securely tied together wrap them in a piece of burlap or place them
in a burlap sack. If you use a sack see that it is free of holes and
cuts. Sew the sack up tightly so that it cannot be tampered with.
Before finally closing the sack be sure that you have placed your
invoice tag on the inside with the fur. Always write your name and
address on the inside count tag and write the contents of the ship-
ment, so that if by any chance the outside address should be des-
troyed, the inside tag will serve to identify the shipper. This is very
important. An inside address should always be placed on any ship-
ment of fur or anything else that is sent by parcel post or express.
If you ship by parcel post be sure that it is insured parcel post.
After the inside tag has been securely fastened to the furs, sew up
250 FUR FACTS
the sack. If you are shipping by parcel post you can place the pack-
age in a pasteboard box or wrap it in a piece of paper, but never
wrap paper around the furs themselves. After you have securely
tied up the package, attach a regulation Funsten shipping tag to the
bundle, being careful to write out your name and address plainly,
or better still print your name and address and do the same on the
package. (Funsten Bros. & Co., will send you all the shipping tags
—
you want free write to them) Be sure you get a receipt for the
.
shipment from your rural mail carrier, or from the express agent,
and there is nothing further for you to do, as it is not necessary for
you to notify the fur house by mail that you are making a shipment.
The main thing to remember in shipping furs is to see that they
are clean, packed straight, flat, and not rolled and crumpled up, and
that your name and address is on both the inside and the outside tag.
When your shipment is received it is given a number and it is
then sent to the grading room. Here the package is carefully opened
and its contents checked and rechecked against the shipper's invoice
tag. At Funsten Bros. & Co., the furs are then handled so as to
make them look their best, and they are then ready to be passed to
the grader to be assorted into the different grades. Appearances go
a long way in furs. Therefore, you can see how important it is for
your furs to be packed in such a manner that they will look their
very best when they are received in the market. Never dress or tan
raw furs that are intended for shipment to market .
to remain in this drum from two to three hours. They are then
placed in another drum without sawdust in order that they may be
freed of sawdust. After remaining in this drum for an hour or two,
they are cleaned and are now ready for fleshing. In the case of
small skins, the skins are fleshed by being passed over a circular
rapidly revolving knife. This requires considerable skill on the
part of the operator. Just the superfluous meat and skin is shaved
off, leaving the pelt intact that holds the roots of the hair. After they
are properly fleshed, they are sent to the drying room, which in the
case of large plants is usually heated by steam. After they are
thoroughly dried, the skins are taken out and are practically as they
were in the beginning; that is the pelts are hard and dry, but
free from superfluous meat and skin. It is now necessary to
soften the skins again, which is some cases by a bath of
done in
salt water in order to open the pores. After this is done they are
rubbed with oil or tallow and this work is usually done by hand oper-
ation. They are then thoroughly stretched in order that the grease
will soak thoroughly into the pores. The skins are then put into a
kicking machine or leathering machine, where they are knocked about
until they are thoroughly soft. The kicking machine generates a
certain amount of heat which softens the pelt and forms it into leather.
The skins are then put into a sawdustdrum to be again cleaned of
the grease. They are then taken out and put into a caging machine
to clean off the sawdust. After this each skin is individually cleaned
by hand process of combing it out and whipping it with a small
rattan. After they are combed and whipped they are stretched and
turned fur side out and are ready for delivery to the manufacturer.
damp and moist, flesh it, which is done by laying the skin on a keg,
or any round board, placing the nose of the skin over the edge of the
252 FUR FACTS
keg and allowing the body to lay flat, and then scraping off the
meat and skin with the edge of a file, or similar blunt edge tool, that
will not cut into the hide itself, but simply pull off the stringy out-
side skin. In this way the inner layer of skin is removed and the
pelts are nearly white in color. After this is done see that the skins
are thoroughly stretched, rubbed, and twisted until dry. If parts
of the skin are still hard and stiff, soap, dry, and stretch them
again, until the entire skin is soft. Some dressers recommend the
rubbing of fresh butter or other animal fat into the skin and then
working it out again in dry hardwood sawdust; or the grease may be
quickly extracted by a hasty bath in gasoline. The rubbing of butter
or other grease into the skin, then extracting the grease by the
sawdust or gasoline process adds very much to its softness. This
method will apply to the pelts of most of the small furbearers. While
the method described is alright for home use, if you have fine furs
to dress it is advisable to send them to one of the old reliable fur
houses that you are in the habit of shipping your furs to, and ask
them to have them dressed for you by a regular dresser and dyer.
The cost of this work is comparatively little.
It should be remembered in dressing furs that the idea is to retain
the natural color of the fur and render the pelt as supple as possible.
Therefore, the leathering of the fur pelt is entirely different from
that of the leathering process required for cow hides, goat skins, etc.
hour, then lifted out of the liquid and hung up to dry out two thirds.
In cold weather the skin is allowed to remain in the liquid over
night for it will not suffer in substance so quickly as in hot weather.
After the skin is two-thirds dry it is taken down and stretched in
every way.
The stretching is repeated at intervals until the skin is dry.
The stretchingand drying being completed, the skin is folded
into a small compass, wrapped in cloth or in a finished skin to exclude
the air, and allowed to remain two weeks or longer to season, when it
is ready for the smoking process. Smoking the skin colors and retans
it, the retanning bringing it to a state in which it may be washed
the trapper to build them successfully. On the other hand the steel
trap can be purchased at a very small cost. The trapper equipped
with a dozen steel traps can set them out in as many different places
and thereby greatly increase his chances of success, where to build
a dozen deadfalls would require a great amount of work, and fur-
thermore they cannot always be erected at desirable spots. It is
therefore safe to say that practically all modern trapping is done
with the steel trap, and the other accessories that go with the steel
trap, such as Triple Grip Jaws, Holdfast Jaws, Radiolite Tin Fish,
Animal Bait, etc. One of the advantages that the deadfalls do have
is that they usually kill the animal; the two trigger steel trap is also
designed to kill the animal instantly.
One of the most popular deadfalls and one that is easily made is
the top view and be noted that there are two notches in the
it will
end, and the opposite end is tapered. The second notch is made
about four and one half inches from the first and is cut diagonally
across the stick (see illustration). The r^ S550
pointed end is the end that holds the bait Ky.2.
and is really the trigger stick. Figure 2 is
the lever and you will note that it is wider at one end than the
Cut a notch across the wide
)i& 3^ TO
(mmamJr
slope
r !Bfront
WLmmmmm
the opposite end.
— other.
end as shown
This
in the illustration,
piece should be about six
and
and
one half inches long. If the stone used is a heavy one, the
notch should be not more than one inch from the end, other-
wise the constant tension on the notch would be greater than is
desirable and would have a tendency to bind and hold the parts
together too rigidly. Figure 3 is the upright post and is about
seven inches long, slightly forked at the bottom as shown in the
illustration. This is done to make it stand securely and prevent
it from twisting. The upper end is beveled from the front back-
wards at an angle. On the right side cut a long notch one
half the width of the wood, commencing the hollow slope of the
notch one inch from the lower end as illustrated and making a
square shoulder three inches from the bottom of the post. The
Figure Four is now ready for setting. Place the figure 4 upright
with its forked end standing on a piece of wood or a flat stone to
prevent it from sinking into the ground. Arrange the other two
pieces as shown in the illustration and bait the pointed end of the
trigger. Let the stone rest on the top end of the lever and arrange
the position of the stone or log so that the bait end will be near the
lower end of the stone. If properly made and constructed the figure
4 will be held firmly together by the weight of the stone, and yet the
slightest interference will displace the trigger and figure 4 will col-
lapse and cause the support to fall instantly. It is a good plan to
hollow the ground out somewhat under where the stone falls. See
that the bait is something that will flatten easily. The figure 4 as
described may be used as a support for any trap which catches by
falling, such as a large flat stone, a heavy log, a box, a coop, or a wire
net.
For catching animals alive for breeding purposes or for pets, the
box trap is commonly used. One of the simplest, easiest made, as
well as the most efficient of box traps, is made in the following manner.
256 FUR FACTS
Build a rectangular box about two and one half feet long, 12 inches
high, and 9 inches wide. Close up one end and leave the other end
open. In the top board of the box bore two augur holes, one about
the center of the box, and one about six inches from the back, or
closed end. In the center hole set up a crotched stick about 12
inches high. Build a door of just the size to fit the front opening of
the box without closing too tight, and build just inside of the opening
of the box a set of small slats to guide the door in its progress up and
down and to prevent it from pushing in or out when the door is closed.
Build a trigger stick by
cutting a round piece of
wood about 12 inches long
and notch it in such a way
that the notch will fit in the
rear augur hole in the top
of the box with the end ex-
tending down into the box
and almost touching the
bottom floor. Cut the
notch in such a way that
an animal entering the box
will push the trigger stick
backwards past the notch, causing the notch to become disengaged
from the augur hole. Cut a cross piece the same length as the
distance from the door to the end augur hole. Set the cross
piece up in the crotched stick at the center of the box (see illus-
tration.) To one end tie the door with a heavy piece of twine and to
the other end tie the trigger stick. Make the cord of such a length
that when the trigger stick is engaged in the last augur hole, the door
will be entirely open. The weight of the door will bind the parts to-
gether and hold the notch in place. Place a piece of bait in the very
back end of the box. When an animal enters the box to get the bait it
will push the trigger stick backwards in such a way that the notch
will no longer be held in place and the weight of the door will then
cause the door to fall and the animal will not be able to
into place,
push the door either forwards or backwards on account of the slats
which you have built to guide the door. If you can secure a hollow
log of the proper size, you can use it as your box by closing up one
end of it and making your trigger and door as described.
FUR FACTS 257
a thin piece of paper and sprinkling earth over the paper in order to
make the ground appear perfectly natural, and thus covering the
trap entirely. Directly over the trap or close by it, it is best to
sprinkle a few drops of Funsten Animal Bait. The animal will smell
this at a great distanceand be attracted to the spot where the bait
is and around for it is very apt to be caught, if the steel
in sniffing
trap is properly set. Recently there has been a steel trap invented
that not only catches the animal, but also kills it instantly. This is
the Funsten Two Trigger Trap. This trap can be handled in identi-
cally thesame manner as the ordinary steel trap. The ideal place
for the baitis directly over the trap and at a spot that will require
the animal to reach up to it so that it will step on the pan of the trap
with its hind foot and thus spring it. Some trappers depend on
hiding their steel traps in the middle of a beaten track which indicates
the runway of the animals. If this plan is followed it is advisable to
construct a small enclosure or lay a stone, or stick, in such a position
as to narrow down the middle of the runway over which the animal
will pass, in the narrow part of the runway.
and then place the trap
In selecting a place to set a trap in a runway, select a spot between
two trees, or between two stones, or wherever the runway narrows
down. The expert trapper is always on the lookout for natural
advantages which he can turn to good account and thus save the
construction of artificial runways.
Many farmers use steel traps to catch animals that raid their
chicken houses at night, and oftentimes find valuable furbearers in
the traps the next morning, such as mink, weasel, and sometimes
skunk. If the poultry house is being raided, the box trap method is
very successful in getting the killer. This consists of a long oblong
box with one end open and a trap set just inside. Cut an opening
in the top of the box and across some slats or a piece of
this place
wire netting. Construct another box with no bottom and set this
over the wire netting. When the time comes to set the trap place
FUR FACTS 259
a chicken in the top box and set it just outside of the poultry house.
When the mink or weasel comes prowling around it will be attracted
to the box trap by the chicken and in trying to get to it will invariably
spring the steel trap and thus get caught.
Most trappers recommend the use of the small steel trap for coon,
mink, skunk, muskrat, fox, etc., and in order that the animal will
be securely held most trappers equip their traps with an additional
set of jaws, the latest and most successful of which is the Funsten
Triple Grip Jaw. This increases the spread of the small No. 1 trap
to the size of a much larger trap, and really gives, as the name implies,
three grips. The Funsten Two Trigger trap is designed to kill
them and try them out and see that each trap works perfectly. If
you are using old traps see that the swivel is not rusted out and that
the chain is strong and equip them with the Funsten Lightning
Spring so that the trap will hold the animal you expect to trap with
it. After you have cleaned and oiled your traps, in order to remove
any odor from them, it might be well to boil them in ashes and water
and scald them clean with hot water. Some trappers prefer to
leave a little grease or oil on the working parts of their traps and
rubbing them in rabbit blood or chicken blood, but it is probably
best to scald them clean of all odors and coat them with beeswax in
order to take away the taint of the steel. In order to coat the traps
with beeswax, place the traps in a bucket of hot water, then pour
melted beeswax over the top of the water. Lift out the traps and the
beeswax will cover each trap as it comes from the water.
Some trappers find that unscrupulous persons will steal their
traps and to prevent this it is well to mark the traps in such a way
that they can be identified and the person prosecuted if they can be
found. One way is to mark them with a file on the bottom side or
any place that will not injure the spring.
Spitz-Devil
is sharpened. The ring of the trap chain is placed on the pole and
the sharp end pushed firmly into the bed of the creek or pond in deep
water, the trap being set in shallow water. The idea is that when the
trap springs, the ring sliding along the pole will guide the muskrat
to deep water and the weight of the trap and the slant of the pole will
prevent him from getting back to shallow water. The pole of course
should be pushed well into the mud and held in such a manner that
it will resist the efforts of the animal to escape. Another adoption of
thissame principle is to use a stout wire securely fastened to the
bank with a rock on the other end anchored in deep water.
One of the latest inventions for successfully taking the muskrat
is the Two Trigger Trap. This trap is so designed that it not only
catches the animal in the same manner as the smaller steel traps, but
it and is used by the muskrat trappers
also kills the animal instantly,
of Louisiana and the marsh trappers of Maryland very successfully.
Trappers have different ideas of their own about securing their
traps, but the most practical way is to use the Double Hook drag or
to drive the staple into a small bush, or the chain can be fastened
over a forked bush in such a way that it can be pulled away. The
size of the depend entirely upon the animal you are trapping
bush will
so that not be rigid and allow the animal a dead pull so that
it will it
On our way back to the cabin we noticed that there were quite
a few wild ducks on the lake, so Jack and uncle took their guns and
went duck hunting. They killed eight that afternoon and at supper
I almost made myself sick eating wild duck. It was the first I had
—
ever tasted and the last, for I never cared for wild duck after that.
We had a wonderful catch of furs the next morning— about all we
could carry and we made up our minds that this wouldn't be a bad
place to establish our headquarters for the winter.
That morning my uncle gave me my first lesson in setting traps
for fox. Using for bait some small pieces of muskrat which he had
prepared by placing in a glass jar until tainted, he selected a place
near the bank of the creek where the tracks were thickest and dug a
hole about three inches deep, where he set the trap and fastened it
to a peg driven underneath it. This done, he covered the hole up
with dry leaves and sprinkled small bits of his prepared bait around
over it. Three traps were set in this manner, concluding our work
for that morning and we returned to the cabin to get the guns for
another duck hunt.
We were very much surprised, upon reaching the cabin, to find
that the door, which we had taken care to close when we left that
morning, was standing wide open. The reason for this was soon
made apparent, however. Someone had been there, and in their
haste to get away with our provisions and camping equipment, had
forgotten to close the door. They had taken everything in sight,
leaving only uncle's shot gun, which, standing in an obscure corner
near the fire place, had obviously escaped their notice. Uncle was
surely peeved but there was evidently nothing to be done about it.
The idea of living on an exclusive ration of wild duck did not
appeal to us, so it was decided that one of us go up the river and
attempt to obtain some supplies. I was hungering for a trip on the
river alone so I persuaded my uncle to let me go.
I was not an expert at the oars, and it was pretty hard pulling
against the current, but I didn't mind that; propelling a boat up the
Mississippi River alone was no small accomplishment in my eyes,
and as I felt the boat lurch forward with each stroke, my heart swelled
with pride.
I must have traveled about three miles when I sighted what appeared
to be a crude cabin, the upper portion of which was dimly visible
through the trees. I was overjoyed at finding a place so soon, for
my arms were getting pretty tired and my strokes with the oars were
growing shorter. How surprised uncle and Jack would be to see me
—I
laughed, and said I wouldn't be very likely to find one within ten
miles. He also warned me to be very careful in any dealings with
our friends up the river as they were regarded with suspicion by
everyone in that section of the country.
I thanked him for the information and began to make rapid
strides back towards the river, hoping to reach my boat before dark.
I re-crossed the swamp and followed the same trail I had taken that
morning. I reached the river bank just as the shades of night were
falling and the wolves were setting up their song for the night. As
quickly as possible I made to the spot where I had left my boat among
the brushes —but, lo! and behold —not a sign of the boat was to be
found.
Tired, hungry and footsore down the river, still lugging,
I started
my corn meal and molasses which now seemed like a ton in weight.
Thanks to the snow, it did not get very dark and I was able to see
quite a distance around me. For hours, it seemed, I trudged along,
keeping close to the bank of the river. I felt as though I could not
walk another step; my knees where so weak it was necessary for me
to stop and rest frequently, and my eyes threatened to close in spite
of me.
Then heard the wolves howling, nearby, it seemed and I was
I —
at least another mile from the cabin. The howling grew louder and
more frantic, and I was sure now that the pack was headed in my
direction. I was certainly in no position to offer resistance to a pack
of hungry wolves, so I made my way to the nearest tall tree and
started scrambling up its trunk as fast as my weakened limbs would
permit, leaving my meal and molasses in a nearby bush.
I was none too soon, for by the time I had secured my hold on
the first limb the tree was surrounded by a pack of hungry wolves,
howling furiously. I secured myself as well as possible in the branch-
es of the tree and relaxed as much as I could. I sat thus for thirty
minutes or more (it seemed like years) while the wolves continued
their vigil below me.
Down the river I saw a light suddenly appear and vanish. It
—
was gone for a moment then it appeared again and seemed to grow
brighter. Gradually it grew nearer and finally I heard the splashing
of oars and the sound of voices reached my ears. A moment later I
realized that it was uncle and Jack exploring the river in search of
me. I called to them as loudly as I could, but the wolves were still
howling lustily and my voice sounded like a whisper in comparison.
Obviously, I could never reach them in that way, but I reasoned that
270 FUR FACTS
the howling of the wolves would at least cause them to look in my
direction.
Breaking a small branch from the tree, I fished some paper out of
my pocket and tied it to the end of the stick by means of a hand-
kerchief. Fortunately, I had some matches, so I made a temporary
torch which I waved aloft in a manner similar to our present-day
wig-wag systems. The wolves, seeming to apprehend the approach
of someone and probably being frightened by my torch, had calmed
down considerably, so I availed myself of the opportunity to do a little
"screeching" myself.
Evidently, I had succeeded in attracting their attention, for
presently I saw the lantern wave back and forth and the boat started
pulling in my direction. They soon landed, and the wolves, who were
already slinking away, were quickly dispersed by a shot from uncle's
gun.
John volunteered to let uncle and me take the boat, while he fol-
lowed along on the bank of the river, as three people, ten pounds of
corn meal and a bucket of molasses (which, happily, the wolves had
not destroyed) was more than our small craft would carry.
To my great delight, a roasted rabbit was waiting for me on the
griddle when we reached the cabin. I ate everything but the bones,
interspersing my feast with tales of the day's adventures.
The next morning we took up our traps, with eight mink, six
muskrat and two grey fox, and moved down the river, Jack walking
along the bank, and uncle and I taking the boat. While we strongly
suspected the whereabouts of the thief who purloined our supplies,
we thought it better to sacrifice them rather than create any dis-
turbance.
Late that evening we made camp and the next day we pulled
into St. Louis wherewe bought a new stock of provisions and some
material for making a canvas boat.
We next shipped our cargo to Iron Mountain by freight, following
it ourselves that night. When we arrived we found that our freight
would not be in for three days, so we were obliged to look around for
a place to stay in the meantime. We secured lodging at a farm
house and bought our meals in town, which was two miles away.
When our freight came in we hired a man to haul us over the
hills to the river several miles distant; camped at sundown, and the
He found an old log along the river, and we towed it down to a place
where the water was shallow. This was not hard to find, as the river
was little more than a creek. We placed the log so it was covered
with about one or two inches of water, securely fastened it by means
of a stake driven in the middle of the stream and a wire wrapped
around the log and attached to the stake. We then chopped out a
place for the trap, but found it necessary to raise the log a little more
so the trap would not be more than two inches under the water.
My uncle then took some mud and smeared over the fresh cut place
so would have an old appearance. He then set the trap and covered
it
sex and the few I had met were not particularly appealing to me.
But now, as I looked upon the sylph-like loveliness of the girl before
me, I was possessed of a strange feeling of an indescribable "some-
thing" which welled up within me and made me wish that my wounds
were more serious. Then it occurred to me that I could practice a
little deception, so instead of answering her, I merely opened and
soon have supper ready. Now I must see how mother is. She is
very sick and I'm afraid she will have pneumonia."
She disappeared into the adjoining room, while I removed my
coat and deposited my knapsack near the fire-place. As I did so,
my attention was arrestedby the familiar appearance of a gun re-
clining on the mantle-piece. Surely, I had seen that gun before, I
thought. It was an exact duplicate of the fire-arm that Jack Haley
carried when we started on our hunting trip the gun that was —
stolen from the cabin on the morning we were running our trap line.
But Jack's gun, I remembered, had his initials cut on one side of the
stock. Taking the gun in my hands I examined the stock very care-
fully, and while no initials were to be found, I noticed that the spot
"I wonder,** said she, as we took our places at the table, "if you'd
to telling me your name.**
FUR FACTS m
"Not by any means," I assented, "my name's Bounds—Tom
Rounds, and if yon don't mind, I'd like to ask the same of yon.**
"My name is Alice Blake," she confided.
"A very pretty name,*9 1 said, earnestly, sprinkling sugar over my
rack. There were ten guns of various kinds on the rack and I won-
dered if they had all been stolen as I believed the one on the mantle
to have been.
"Oh, yes," she replied, placing the chairs to the table, "father
usually hunts and traps about six months out of the year. He's
very seldom home, except during the summer when he works at the
saw mill and now, wont you sit down and make yourself at home and
have supper?"
"Thank you very much," I answered, "but isn't your mother able
to eat with us?"
"Oh, no, mother hasn't eaten at the table in more than three
weeks. Besides, she's asleep now, and it wouldn't do to wake her."
I had never enjoyed a supper as much as I did that one. Whether
it was the food on the table or the fair face which sat opposite me
that gave such zest to the meal, I could never say, but I never ate
more heartily nor enjoyed a meal as thoroughly.
After the meal was finished my young hostess insisted on showing
me to my room, so I went to bed and slept soundly. The next
morning I awoke to find my eyes staring into the face of a hard-
visaged middle-aged man. There on the wall was a picture of the
very man whom I had encountered on my trip up the river in search
of provisions. Then, surely, her father was the thief and that was
Jack's gun on the mantle-piece.
I heard dishes rattling in the next room and the rich aroma of
coffee told me that breakfast was in preparation. I found a basin
and a bar of soap on the washstand so I made my
of water, a towel
and hastened to make my appearance at the breakfast table.
toilet
didn't feel like troubling her further. Perhaps I would soon find
another house, anyway.
Farm houses, in those days, however, were few and far between
—
and night found me far from any signs of civilization and still with
an empty stomach. My hunger, now, however, had abated some-
what and I piled myself on top of a brush-pile and went to sleep.
The following afternoon I arrived at Clarksville and I knew then
that I was but eighteen miles from home. I walked on until at
9 o'clock that night I came to a neighbor's house, where I was given
a good supper and a warm bed.
The next morning at ten o'clock I was at home toasting my shins
by my father's fire.
CHAPTER II
Near the tracks was a large log, one end of which was projecting
out into the water. Many trappers would have considered that a
trap set at the land end of the log would have been an admirable one.
— —
So it would for mink but the muddy top of the log told me that
here would be a better one for Mr. Coon. His tracks were numerous
on the top of the fallen monarch of the forest, showing that he was
in the habit of playing or devouring his "three squares" there.
Accordingly I began preparations for his capture. In the mud on
the log I hollowed out a depression just large enough to insert a trap
comfortably. Over the trap I spread some wild goose feathers
freshly plucked from the bird. Then I fastened the chain to the log
and departed would prove Mr.
for the night confident that such a set
Coon's undoing. Such a cumbersome and unwary animal as a coon
would never evade capture, I thought.
The next morning my visit to the spot was postponed by necessity.
I first visited some sets up the river and on the shore of a little lakelet
down the stream. When I finally arrived at the place where I
confidently expected to see Mr. Coon struggling frantically to free
himself, night had fallen. But for the full moon, darkness would
have prevented my seeing anything.
From a distance of fifty feet I could see that the trap had been
sprung and was dangling over the edge of the fallen tree. A few
gray hairs in the jaws bore unmistakable evidence of a close call.
FUR FACTS 281
But a miss is as good as a mile and I suppose the animal was some-
where in the vicinity laughing at me and enjoying my disappointment.
He had played about on the log as usual and even had blundered
into the jaws of what should have been death eventually, but had
escaped. The fact that he had escaped was evident beyond doubt,
but I was now more anxious than ever to catch him.
I will not detail the various methods I adopted in an effort to
catch him. Bait sets, water sets, land sets —everything was tried
and found wanting in this case. The old pelt was still as safe from
my clutches as if it had never been. All the sage teachings of my
uncle in regard to trapping were brought to bear upon the situation
without avail. For a time I ceased operation near the fallen log and
devoted my attention to my my traps were not
line in general. All
set,but there were at least a hundred in operation and the catches
from these gave me all the work I was able to attend to.
In a few days I found where the old coon had entered a large
hollow log. I knew he was in there because I had chased him in.
He had seen me approaching and as this retreat appeared to be the
only available one, he had used it as any sensible coon would have
done. Realizing that he would have to come out sometime I decided
not to smoke or drive him out by other means, so I placed two traps
at each end of the log, one about where he would naturally step on
when making his exit and another a little farther away and straight
ahead. Then I left.
This set was his nemesis. The next morning when I arrived at
the spot he was hopelessly caught by his hind foot in one of the traps
set farther away from the mouth of the log. He was a whale of a
fellow and I am sure would have been fully a match for a good dog.
At my approach his strength seemed doubled. He tore at the chain
but it was only for an instant. In a brief time I returned to camp
with the biggest coon I had ever seen. His pelt was rather coarse
but I cared little for that. I had outwitted him after more futile
attempts at capture than I had ever previously made. Some of the
meat was cooked but I found it tough and unpalatable. To be good
a coon must be young else the gravy will be the only tender part of
the creature.
At times mink can be very aggravating. Their almost uncanny
sense of smell will often detect the presence of a man if no evidence
of his handiwork is visible. For this reason it is vitally important
to use care when in mink territory and especially when making sets
for the animal. I always wore gloves dipped in blood if possible.
288 FUR FACTS
Whatever care you exercise you will frequently learn that his power
of observationand his sense of smell have thwarted your earnest
efforts to trap him. He will thoroughly scrutinize the ground sur-
rounding a trap before drawing near. Water sets, for this reason,
offer. So on the morning of the 23rd, Bud and I pushed off down
Salt River, determined to live with the fur-bearers for another season.
Selecting for our temporary headquarters the remotest spot from
civilization that we could find, we pitched our tent as the shades of
evening drew on, and slept unmolested all night.
The next morning, however, we were startled to find the woods
full ofsmoke, which continued to grow denser every minute. Sus-
pecting that it might be a forest fire, we hastily finished our break-
fast and started on our way down the river which was very narrow
at that point. The density of the smoke increased as we progressed
and breathing became extremely difficult. At length we came around
a sharp bend in the stream which brought us in full view of the on-
coming conflagration. Borne on a brisk breeze, the flames were
spreading rapidly bringing death and destruction to everything in
their path. We quickly made a landing, and tying a rope to our
canoe, hoisted it up over the bank. As it would be out of the question
to carry all our equipment, we decided to leave it in the canoe and
drag the canoe along behind us. This we proceeded to do, making
our way as rapidly as our luggage would permit, toward the open
country. The fire was following us with terrific speed; bits of burn-
ing wood and leaves had already started a fire in the underbrush on
our side of the river and the flames licking up the small bushes and
trees.
We saw that we could no longer afford to encumber ourselves
with the canoe, so we took what few articles we could conveniently
carry and started running. Even then, we were forced to maintain
a very moderate pace, as the forest was extremely dense and there
was a likelihood of colliding with the trees. The open section of the
—
country did not appear as soon as we expected in fact, it did not
appear at all, and we began to feel that we were hopelessly lost.
Despite the fact that we were going as fast as we possibly could,
the roaring flames crept nearer and burning sticks fell around us,
igniting the leaves around our feet.
A pack of frightened wolves came rushing by without giving us
so much as a passing glance.
The smoke was becoming suffocatingly dense and the roar of the
flames beat upon our ears with increasing fury. My
breath was
coming shorter and sharp pains pricked my left side. I noticed too,
that Bud, while straining every nerve and muscle to increase his
speed, was slowly dropping behind. His nose was bleeding, also,
and the crimson stream coursing down his chin and spattering his
286 FUR FACTS
clothes made him hideous to behold. Suddenly, his foot caught in
some brush and he went reeling forward, striking his head against
the trunk of a tree as he went down. In a wild frenzy of terror and
despair I shook him and called to him, but he made no attempt to
answer me. Not a moment was to be lost. Discarding the last of
the food supply, I managed to raise his limp form and place it on
my shoulder. The heat from the flames and the asphyxiating smoke
maddened me. With a supreme effort I lurched forward, dashing
madly through the entangling underbrush. Devoid of feeling or
sense of pain, I tore through thickets and briery brambles, not
knowing whether the body I was carrying was that of a live man or
a corpse.
Gradually the distance between the trees began to widen; I could
walk without stumbling and ahead I could see what appeared to be
a broad expanse of water.
I also became aware of a decided clearing in the atmosphere; there
was less smoke in the air and I no longer felt the heat beating upon
my back. Then as I drew out into the clearing I noticed that the
wind had shifted to the west and was blowing the flames to the east.
I now clearly saw that the body of water ahead of me was a large
lake. Never had water been more of a Godsend than at this time.
I was parching with thirst; my tongue clove to the roof of my mouth.
Then, as if the curtains of night had drawn around me, all grew
dark, my head reeled and I sank to the ground, carrying the body
with me.
How long I had lain there I do not know, but I was awakened by
the sound of voices and the splashing of oars in the lake. Raising
my head I saw that Bud was still lying in a stupor, but the labored
heaving of his chest told me that he was still alive.
Two men were pulling toward us in a boat, and as I looked up I
noticed that the man in front bore a strangely familiar appearance.
Fortunately, it proved to be my old trapping partner, Tom Hicks.
He and his pard had been driven from their haunts by the forest fire
and had lost one of their boats, a valuable lot of furs and most of
their food supply, in the scrimmage.
After administering cold water packs to Bud's head for about ten
minutes, we were rewarded by seeing him sit up and talk; but he was
still very pale and weak.
food supply, we took the shortest route for home, arriving in good
time, without any serious difficulties.
At first we felt inclined to abandon the trap line for the balance
of that season, but after a few days of idling around I found myself
hungering for the trap line. I found Bud recovered from his fright,
and he was willing to engage in another voyage, so we bought a
supply of new traps, rigged up another boat and pulled down the
Chariton river. We camped in the old familiar woods where I had
accompanied my uncle on my first hunting trip. Here we remained
about a week, caught one hundred muskrats, 16 coon and 8 mink.
Then it turned severely cold and we decided to move down the river
a little farther and go into winter quarters. We then sold our furs,
and although I have forgotten the amount we received for the coon
and mink, I remember distinctly that the one hundred muskrats
brought $16.00. Today the same kind of muskrats at Funsten's
would bring one hundred and fifty dollars.
While we didn't make an enormous lot of money, we had some
mighty good times attending parties, wood choppings and tobacco
stripping parties —the chief social functions of that day. Here I met
quite a number of young ladies who were charming, in a way, but for
some unaccountable reason, they did not influence me in the least
beyond the point of calling to mind the little girl who saved me from
the vicious dog. In fact, it seemed that the presence of members
of the fair sex, stirred up much the same feeling that I had experienced
when I was the guest at the girl's house and soon I found myself
fighting an intense desire to see her again. This I could not very
well do, as I did not wish to leave Bud, and I didn't care to have
him know about my attachment for the girl, so I determined to put
the matter out of mind.
The winter passed without any more thrilling escapades, and in
March we sold our furs and left for home. Our catch consisted of
365 muskrats, 68 coons, 45 mink, 8 red fox and 5 beaver, the whole
of which was sold for $150.00.
CHAPTER III
Last of all, I took some weeds and made a brush and walked
backwards, brushing out my tracks until I was entirely off the bar.
There was one sly old fox, however, whose antics completely
baffledme. He would come within three or four feet of my trap
and then scamper away in the opposite direction. I saw that I must
devise a different scheme if I would land him, so I made use of a
box trap which a friend of mine recommended to me. There was a
farm house within a mile of where I was camping so I bought a chicken
from him to use in conjunction with the trap, in the following manner.
The trap was of the common box variety, with a wire partition
about four inches from the back end. On the back end of the trap
I put a wire door that could be opened and closed. I then took the
trap to the den to which I had traced the fox in question and I then
put the chicken (still alive) in the back part of the trap. The noise
of the chicken attracted the attention of the fox, and he, being natur-
ally very curious, entered the trap to see what was going on.
caught the sly fellow who had so carefully avoided my
I not only
but I caught three others in the same manner. Then the
steel traps,
chicken died and I went back to my old method.
One morning as I was rowing along the river I saw a man standing
on the bank, waving his hat and going through all sorts of contortions
in an effort to attract my attention. I pulled up to the shore and was
surprised when he, a total stranger, spoke to me and called me by
name. He was tall and raw boned. He said his name was Hen-
derly and that he was just planning on a trip to the Gulf in
search of some desirable land, and having heard of me, he thought I
would be the logical fellow to take along for company.
The opportunity struck me at once as being highly desirable, but
as I had never seen the man before to my knowledge, it occurred
to me that I had better think the matter over. I told him I would
tell him within three days whether or not I could go, to which he
stand. Presently he released his hold on the tiller and fell forward
into the bottom of the boat. The truth now flashed upon me. I
—
rushed to him and raised him up. He was drunk beastly drunk- he —
could no longer stand, speak or see. His eyes were perfectly glazed,
and as I let him go, he rolled like a mere log into the bottom of the
boat which was now covered with water.
It is almost impossible to describe the feeling of absolute terror
that possessed me. I knew that I was altogether incapable of
managing the boat and that a fierce wind and strong ebb tide were
hurrying us to destruction. A storm was evidently gathering behind
us and we had neither compass or provisions, and it was clear that,
if we held our present course, we would be out of sight of land before
to our own course. Several men were on the look-out forward but
did not see our boat until was too near to avoid collision their
it —
shouts of warning upon seeing us were what so terribly alarmed me.
The huge ship, he said, rode immediately over us, as though our boat
had been but a feather.
It was some time before the vessel could be gotten under control,
but there was no delay in lowering the rescue boat, with Wilson in
charge, as he described it. They had just left the lee of the vessel
(the moon still shining brightly) when she made a heavy roll to the
windward and Wilson, at the same moment, starting up in his seat,
bawled out to the crew to back water. The men on board put back
as speedily as possible, but by this time the ship had gone round and
296 FUR FACTS
gotten fully under headway, although all hands on board were making
starboard side of the vessel out of the water nearly as far as her kneel,
when the cause for Wilson's command was obvious enough. The
body of a man was seen to be affixed in some manner to one of the
chains. After a series of unsuccessful attempts, during lurches of
the boat, they finally managed to detach me from my perilous posi-
tion and get me into the rescue boat. It was fully three hours,
following my rescue, before I showed any signs of life, although the
men were working constantly with my arms in an effort to induce
respiration.
After resting a few hours in the cabin of the ship I went ashore
and made my way back to my stopping place in New Orleans.
Leaving New Orleans, I took the train for St. Louis, and a week
later I found myself approaching the Henderley homestead.
Thehouse, gloomy upon my first visit, was even more so now;
all the curtains were drawn, and but for the small column of smoke
that issued from the kitchen chimney, one would assume the house
to be devoid of occupants. This feeling of depression was not a
little relieved when the door opened, however, for instead of looking,
as I expected, into the dusky face of the housekeeper, I was staring
into a pair of wondering blue eyes.
At this time Alice appeared more beautiful than ever before.
As soon as I was in the house I began to relate the harrowing
incidents of the past four weeks. She evinced not the slightest
interest when I told her of her uncle's tragic end; she only sat for a
long time and gazed blankly into space, shivering slightly as I told
her of my narrow escape.
Henderly had secured possession of all of
I found out later that
Alice's property and by some forgery had produced a will which
appointed him her guardian. He had been very cruel to her,
especially when on one of his drunken sprees, and it must have been
a relief to be rid of him; but she rarely ever mentioned his name
afterwards.
In the weeks that followed I came to know Alice better, and,
knowing her, I came to understand her and to love her more than I
—
ever thought it possible to love anyone and always will.
I still keep up my trapping and every winter manage to send a
few good shipments of furs to my old friends, Funsten Bros. & Co.
in St. Louis. There are still plenty of small fur-bearers for the man
or boy who wants to trap. There is still the same thrill and romance
FUR FACTS 297
in the trapping game for me that there was forty years ago. No
boy's education is he has studied the habits and
really complete until
characteristics of the wild fur-bearers, and I hope that every young
trapper who reads this will find it of some interest and that he will
remember that the f urbearing animals are his friends and treat them
accordingly.
NOTE—The following article was published in one of the leading American
Journals.
PART I—JAPAN
The World Salesman is a substantial-looking illustrated journal
published in Yokohama, Japan. The first 66 pages of the issue for
October, are printed in English. Then come five pages in Rus-
two in Esperanto, five in Japanese and four
sian, four in Spanish,
in Chinese. On
page 50 of the October issue is found a "two-deck'
'
A Commercial Ambassador
Mr. Ahern has proven an effective commercial ambassador for
St. Louis in the Far East. "When the commercial confusion caused
by the war had twisted and closed the old-time trade routes of the
world," said Mr. Ahern, as quoted in the Yokohama journal, "the
fur merchants of the Far East hardly knew what to do. The famous
fur marts of Nizhni Novgorod, which served simply as an ante-
chamber to the Leipzig sales, have ceased to serve a purpose and have
died out because the road to Germany is closed. The European
markets outside of Germany were similarly affected because of the
irregular supplies reaching them. Then St. Louis became the logical
channel into which the fur shipments of the world began to be di-
verted. It is in St. Louis that these merchants change their furs for
American dollars."
FUR FACTS 299
his return journey about the first of September. "The traveler from
St. Louis to the Far East," said he to a representative of America
at Work, "is impressed at the outset by the magnificence of the dis-
tances. After more than 2,000 miles travel to reach Vancouver,
you have 4,600 miles journey to Yokohama and 1,100 from Yokohama
to Vladivostok. In short, the ocean gateway of Eastern Siberia is
something like 8,000 miles from St. Louis.
Japanese Energy
"The first impression which Japan makes on an American business
man is that of tireless and ceaseless energy. Once a week the wheels
of American commerce and industry come to rest. But the Japanese
week knows no Sunday or rest day, and the Japanese population toil
long hours, the vision of a possible six-hour day and five-day week
not having entered their heads. A day's work in agricultural Japan
is fourteen hours. You see the laborers going into the rice fields
before sunrise by the light of dawn, and they work steadily on till
sunset.
Much Beside Cherry Blossoms
"The visitor to Japan who imagines Japanese life to be all cherry
blossoms and formal observances over delicate porcelain on lacquered
tables is headed toward a rude awakening. My
hotel commanded a
view of the harbor. Along the curving shore in one direction stood
great industrial structures with a sky-line broken by the cranes,
furnaces and stacks of a vast steel plant. In the other direction was
another factory district. It is 20 miles from Yokohama to Tokyo
and a row of factories extends all the way. The traveler never knows
where Yokohama leaves off and Tokyo begins.
"We all know in a general way that the war tremendously
stimulated Japanese commerce and industry, but here is a fact which
may serve as an index of the extent of that stimulus. The possession
of a telephone is prized by a Japanese house not only as a business
convenience, but also as indicating a certain standing in the com-
mercial world. The demand for telephones is so great that contracts
which promise speedy installation have a high surrender value in the
market. The fortunate firm that possesses one can sell it for some-
thing like $1,000 and there is a sort of 'curb market* where these
telephone contracts are dealt in. The orders for additional tele-
phones are so many in Tokyo that they cannot all be installed in less
than four years.
300 FUR FACTS
"From the point of view of the fur trade, Japan's interest for the
visiting dealer is wholly that of a producer of furs —not a consumer.
The women Japan do not wear furs, nor are there changing styles
of
in woman's outdoor dress. Every Japanese woman when she goes
on the street is dressed like every other Japanese woman. All shoes
worn on the street, for example, are wood. The field for luxury in
the display of individual taste in Japan is confined almost entirely
to the indoor life.
was marked by a sad number of accidents. 'Why did you take that
risk?' was asked of a man who had jumped off a street car under full
headway. 'Why', responded the man, T did it because the Govern-
ment had issued me a card which promised safety no matter what
I did.'
The "Japanese Peril"
"We hear more orless in this country about 'Japanese peril.'
Speaking from my own observation, I wish to record the uniform
kindness and courtesy with which the traveling American is treated
and to say that if the 'Japanese peril' exists, it is simply the risk of
competition with a nation which sets an example to the whole world
by its industry and whose government actually works with its people.
—
Elastic Schedules
"The schedule on Russian railroads is a joke. How fast trains
run, when they stop and when they start again, are all matters which
depend on the whim of the engineer. When I got ready to leave
Harbin I had desired to go west to Omsk, but the reports of Bol-
—
shevik disturbances were so alarming that I finally fortunately
—
enough as it proved gave up the idea and decided to return to
Vladivostok. I learned at the station that there was one train on
the road beyond Harbin. No one knew how far from Harbin it was,
whether 50 miles or 500. As Omsk is two-thirds of the way across
Asia, as close, in fact, to the European boundary as Harbin is to the
sea, it is evident that there was a good deal of room for difference of
opinion as to just when that train would arrive. There was a general
strike on, caused by the depreciation of the Siberian ruble, and in-
formation was hard to get.
"I was very anxious to get out of Harbin. The weather was
terribly hot. There were no rooms to be had. The houses were
filled with refugees from portions of Russia under the domination of
containing four bunks and meant for four people, had twelve crowded
into it. When we reached the coast we had been seven and one-half
days making a journey which in normal times consumes 36 hours.
And never did anything look more welcome than the clean, spacious
steamer, with its shining decks and its atmosphere of discipline and
comfort, upon which I stepped to return to the United States."
UBRMW USE
JUNUJ 917
AUG l4 ^59
REC D IP '
"
AUG1****
6 !an'60WB
REC'Z) LI 3
DEC 12 1953
mjf** 977
-
Mi4 70-ttftW
LD 21A-50m
(A1724sl0)476B
JP 15 1 974 kg- Library
University of California
Berkeley
t*
'*>:?