Just make sure to oil up before heading out ;)

What sort of traps do you use? The types that look like sharks teeth??

It is funny how it sounds like you are going for a drive to the supermarket:
"I have
already stopped and checked a few Gray and Red Fox as well as a few Coyotes
that were not fat enough on the highway".

I didn't have any knife with me but wanted to skin a wombat I saw yesterday
on my fishing trip. When they get hit by cars, nothing happens to the skin.
They are solid muscle. You would have been the only one in the US, if not
the world, to have wombat tying material. Not even I have any....yet.

Take it easy,

R

______________________________________________
Reuven Segal

B. Engineering (Aerospace)- Final Year
B. Engineering (Manufacturing Systems and Management)
RMIT University

5/11 Rockbrook Road,
East St. Kilda, 3183
Melbourne, Victoria
Australia

[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Mobile: 0422 266798



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Desert Eagle
Sent: Monday, 27 November 2006 4:19 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [VFB] Cleaning fur, Reuven and Hides


Outstanding. Theresa just got a big bottle of Woolite for a sweater Amanda
has. I don't think they will miss a little.

    Looks like we are going to actually have a winter here this year. So as
long as I can work around my "hardware on my legs" I very well may be able
to run a trap line this year. If it comes to pass will have some Prime
Coyote as well as a few other "Interesting" furs to send you. I have
already stopped and checked a few Gray and Red Fox as well as a few Coyotes
that were not fat enough on the highway. If what I saw in their furs is any
indication this is going to be a super "Prime" year for hides here. Fur
price projections for here are Coyote up to $130, Red Fox up to 65, Gray
Fox up to $75, Bobcat up to $400 and, get this, Prime Badger up to $100,
prices are finely getting to where we can make $$ instead of losing it.
Last year worth all the VA appointments and all the work they were doing
from the belt loops down I could not even think about trapping. I have over
200 traps and everything else ready to go after the first hard freeze,
(looks like next week). All I will have to do is find ways around all this
"hardware" on my legs to do my job right on the trap line. First time in a
long time that it looks like trapping may be profitable here in the SW.

Have a good one my friend
Jimi


I would use anything for the wash. The bubblier the better. You could use a
wool rinse. It is a fantastic material. You'll like it.
Reuven Segal


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