Bait stolen yesterday and the day before. Set the trap this evening at dusk and by 9 p.m. the bait was gone. I came in and watched your video, reset the trap and had caught the Coon by 11:30 what an awesome tip you've saved my chickens
OMG thank you so much for this. I don't know how I didn't think about doing this. For a WEEK we have our traps getting the bait stolen... tried this trick, caught BOTH the raccoons that have been getting at my chickens.
All I can say is thank you for this tip. Had two coons that were stealing the bait from my traps for over a week. Put a piece of rebar like you suggested, and caught both the very next night. It reallllly works... thanks again!!
*HERES ANOTHER TIP FROM ME* One thing I have experienced with raccoons, was that they were always putting there hands through the gate, and pulling the food out. I ziptied sheet metal across the back so then it can't reach in. It has helped a ton!
That what my raccoon is doing. But then he just started tipping the cage over and spilling the bait everywhere. I think I’m gonna repurpose this rebar trick and just stab it into the ground so he can’t tip it
Dude! You are awesome!! I tried to catch this thief for a month. Nothing just missing bait. I followed your idea and next day got me a racoon. Thank you so much!
OMG, thank you so much! I just got a trap, first night coon took my bait and left. I watched your video and had a metal pole that fit and I followed your instructions. This morning, a young coon was in the trap, but it dug up my grass underneath trying to escape. I'm after a big tailless one. My neighbor took this little one and set him free in a field nearby. I'm 68 and I can't thank you enough for helping me out! Oh, I used a quarter cut of an apple and a teaspoon of cheap cat food, a stinky fish flavor. Easy peasy.
@@Frontlineanimalremoval Another great suggestion! My last trapped coon walked the trap around like a magician. I added two gallon water bottles and bricks on top and it knock the whole thing down. Every time I thought I had the solution then it defeated me again. Finally after too many fails, I tied up the trap to a fig tree over the night and got it released far away in the hill. With the attached plywood, it cannot reach the ground to walk the cage away.
GOT HIM. Also he was well fed out of my traps. He weighted 25.6 lbs. He was lucky to fit in the traps. Bated the trap at 9 pm. He was caught at 9:45 pm. Thanks for the posting of this tip. Its an excellent idea on your part.
This WORKS!...thanks a million just caught the uncatchable after a month of him stealing bait every night your trick got him ;-) he is in the happy hunting ground as i type he had killed my chickens every night for over a month climg the trees and get them roosting at night and ruined all their nest and eggs, i just found a stick that would go through like a dowel rod,as soon as he tried to go over it and step down trap popped and i jumped for joy as i was watching on cams, my chickens and i thank you ...
That little raccoon sounded like he wanted to tear your arm off when you pulled the bar out of his trap! Thank you for this tip, and for posting these videos. I just discovered them trying to find a way to rid my attic of some raccoons that have moved in.
Great tip! I had one of the little stinkers steal bait two nights in a row, then saw this video and gave it a try. This morning - a 19--pounder in the trap.
Worked perfectly! Had a real Indiana Jones of a coon stealing marshmallows all week, no matter how I adjusted. Tried this with a brass rod I had lying around, and Dr. Jones was caught the first night. Thank you!!
Okay - bust on the bar. We had it all set up and was watching the trap when she showed up. The day before, we had seen her reach into the cage and flip the food container so the food came out then she just ate what was outside the trap. So, I set two traps, side by side, punched two holes in each dish and zip tied the dishes to the bottoms of the traps. They were placed inside to inside, so when the traps were side by side, they were out of reach, thereby forcing her into the cage. Then I ran a metal bar through both cages. Well, she showed up and immediately separated the two cages, then, when she realized she couldn't move the dishes, just grabbed handfuls of food and pulled it through the wires. She was tired of this and actually got in one trap as far as the bar, backed out and eventually left. Well, I went out and zip tied the traps together, leaving just enough space so the trigger lever wasn't impeded, and removed the bar. It was way dark by then, and having gotten this girl on camera, we knew she would most likely be back. Woke up next day to a huge, very pizzed off female in the trap. She was the 5th one we dealt with in about the last 6 weeks, along with an opossum. This particular coon had been so elusive, she even knocked over an automatic feeder we had strapped to a 6x6 pole under the tiki bar. It's been a couple days now, and food is safe LOL
Excellent, EXCELLENT tip! My marshmallow bait was ideal for....a squirrel! I noticed the trap was tripped at night and decided to go out the next morning to see what I caught. After a cold rainy night the little runt dropped dead. As far as my raccoon problem goes. I sealed off the hole in my roof (!) and sprayed Coyote urine around the perimeter. So far, so good. But your cage trap worked like a gem!
This trick is simple and and yet very amazing. Thanks for the video. It helped me out catch 2 raccoons I could not catch they would eat all my Bait and never get them. I got one raccoon and then I could not get the others just like you said it's like they're Informing each other on how the trap works.
Thanks! I could not figure out how the raccoon could clean the bait from the trap without setting it off! I’ll be trying your technique in the next few days.
Great tip! Here's another tip: raccoons were stealing the bait out of our traps every night without getting caught, so I threw a handful of cat kibble into the trap, most of it towards the back of the trap, and viola! Caught 9 raccoons and still counting, starting that very night. Raccoons love the kibble, but to eat it they have to get all the way into the trap and get it off the ground, which inevitably trips the trap.
Thanks for the tip, I am sure to use it. Another tip is to put the bait under the cage, make them work a little to get it and they will get careless : )
Why not hang the bait up at the ceiling? This is better than below the cage as it's busy reaching up the bait and forget about the trigger blade on the floor.
thanks for the video and great tip to catch these crafty creatures. Another suggestion I have is to use a small wooden plank resting against the trigger plate but NOT heavy enough to trigger the door. Forces them to walk on the board to get to the bait and they can't reach to grab the goodies any longer without door shutting on them! they have incredible reach and grip it's amazing how they do it.
What a great idea! As I was watching this video in my yard there was a bit of rebar looking at me. Feels like I’ve just been feeding them treats, hopefully after trying this it will be there final meal
Amazing ingenuity!!!! Thanks for the tip. I had one knock my trap on its side, spin it 180 degrees, set the trap off the trigger and eat the food. How?!?!?
I used that technique with the bar, and the raccoon still got the bait. Next, we followed someone else's suggestion of putting boards up on all 3 sides of the back area. The raccoon, moved the trap, turned it upside down and got the bait. Ah ha, next we wedged the trap so it couldn't move it anywhere. So with the bar, sides up in the back, and wedged the trap, we finally got that smart one. She tried really desperately to get out, that she bent the door and trigger plate, but wasn't able to get out. Glad we finally had a victory.
VERY good suggestion. Will try tonight, and let you know how things go. (It's kind of crazy how many modifications you have to make to these traps to make them remotely effective.)
Another way to address these issues is to use a trap with an entirely different trigger system, i.e. Comstock traps with wire triggers and fast closing powered doors incorporated into the most rugged virtually escape proof traps made. Additionally, these traps will work right side up, upside down, sideways and vertically. Definitely worth looking at.
Was catching raccoons around my garden left and right for several months until I came across one very sneaky, intelligent one that stole the bait for about a week. Got tired of playing cat and mouse with this critter so I tried this with a 3/4" square piece of stock wood and wa la one captured raccoon the very first night I tried it. Boy was he pissed the morning I released him in the woods, by far the most aggressive biting one I've ever encountered. Kids and pets are safer now with this aggressive coon gone. Thanks for this very useful tip!
My last coon chew up the cat food tin can like a chewing gum -- become a small nugget that it fell out the trap and I spent many hours wondering why the cat food can disappeared.
Thank you for the tip and trade secret my man. It took a few times of trial and error, mainly the stick placement (height and location of stick), but I eventually got him. :)
Awesome! I've trapped 9 raccoons in the last 3 weeks, but there is ONE that is too smart! He/she will either steal without setting off trap, or set off trap leaving no bait and no raccoon! I am going to try this!
Great idea, THANKS! I always put my trap on a solid surface also and fasten it in place so it can`t move because if you don`t they will pull grass an dirt in and just make a mess.
Fought with a raccoon that had been getting into my trash bins. He evaded my capture attempts for five nights in a row. I would come out and find my trap triggered, the door shut, the bait gone, but no raccoon. Your tip gave me an idea. He kept escaping the trap somehow somehow.... I'm not sure exactly how, but I think he must have been able to push out the bottom of the "door" and get it to budge enough so that he could squeeze out. (Poor trap design?) So, I put some metal rods across the bottom where the door is, such that the door would slam down "behind" them. He could easily step over the rods to enter the trap, but that should make it impossible for him to force his way out. As soon as I did that, he got wise enough to avoid stepping on the treadle to trip the trap. I'm not sure if he realized the problem that the rods would cause or had just figured out the treadle. So, I put a rod in like you had in the middle too. (I just used a wooden stick for that one, that I found out in the yard.) Also, not wanting to deal with this any longer, I tied a string to the latch that keeps the door open and looped it right past the bait, so if he messed with the string, it would also trigger the trap and shut the door. Set out the rigged trap at 8:45 PM. Found the raccoon stuck in there one hour later.
How far up the trap do you place the bar? ALso, I had one get trapped, but it escaped- I think it had an accomplice. I've added velcro to the setup to maybe make it less easy to push the trap ope from teh outside? Also, I use a metal tin, they take it out. Can I wire that to the base so that its contains the bait?
About 1/2 way up. Raccoons are strong and not all traps are created equally. If more escape, it's probably the trap's strength. Definitely you can wire the tin in. We often created a wire cage with bait in it and just hang it from top. Just be creative as you have been. Trial and error.
Thank you SO MUCH. I have a coon that CONSTANTLY keeps getting into my jeep when I leave the top off and it makes a total mess inside and scratches everything up. I’ll be making a coon skin cap soon enough!
Have a coon that too smart /too experience not going side the trap to steal the fish/meat bait. I even hang the empty peanut butter bottle with fish/meat inside (with the wind chime to signal me) and it also ignored it and dug up the vegetable for worms instead. How do I get it to go inside the trap? Using a better bait? Thanks.
This one may be trap smart. You could try a non-wire trap. Google “dura poly raccoon trap” Catch ‘em coming and going at a hole with a pass through trap they have to walk through
The one Ryan is putting the bar through is a Duke #1112. The one with the raccoon in it is a Safeguard 53130. We use different brands. Heavy duty construction and smaller openings in the wire are good. Not in this video, but we use a lot of Comstock traps as well. See Wildlife Control Supplies (WCS) or Animal Traps and Supplies (ATS) for a variety of good products.
A good new modification or addition to the trap. I have the same problem with my trap, but it is not like your trap for catching a harmful cat. It enters the trap and places its legs outside, and because its body is long, it reaches the meat easily. But she can't eat it and the trap won't catch it! I modified the trap door and put the iron rod in the middle of the trap like what you did and I will see the result... Greetings from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Yes, I made the modification to the trap door and put the iron rod that you suggested, and the result was wonderful. Two cats were caught in a very short time and were thrown away from my house. Thank you, my regards.@@Frontlineanimalremoval
@@Frontlineanimalremoval it didn't work so well. He's still got the bait and it didn't set off the trap. I'm going to add another rod in there tonight. 😊
Going to try this tonight. Two nights in a row the raccoon has got the bait, but nothing in the cage. I wasn't sure if the raccoon was reaching in from the sides, and getting the bait or just reaching over the trigger pad.
It worked! Thanks so much. I've caught four of them this past week. I do have a question though. Since you have far more experience with traps. I'm trying to catch the adults, but so far it's been the younger raccoons(around a year old). Are the adults too smart for the trap or are the younger ones just beating them to the bait? I am using peanut butter and marshmallows. I would use some type of fish, but there are cats around, and I don't want to catch them. Also I am trying to catch two raccoons at a time. How far should I space the live traps?
Great solution. You’re a genius. I’m curious about the handy dandy Camera you used to record the raccoon. Could you please share Brand? Model # Thank you.
@@Frontlineanimalremoval Great, thanks. I've been baffled by results over the past couple of weekends. I've caught over 30 of the little buggers by putting out a trail of mini marshmallows leading up to and into the trap, with full size marshmallows in the rear, either underneath the trap in a shallow hole or more recently suspended from the top of the trap. Just recently, we seem to have a smart one who was eating all the minis but leaving the ones in the rear and not tripping the treadle. Last night, I got a trail camera video showing a RAT eating all the mini marshmallows! He was probably too light to trip the door and too small to be able to reach the suspended ones.
I have been trying to set it on a hair trigger but that didn’t help. Going on a few nights of trying to catch this guy now. I moved my Arlo security camera by the trap and he is doing the same thing. I will definitely try this trick thanks.
The reason he knows how the trap works is because captured and release racoons are effectively trained. Got one and he cleaned out my trap. Relocation is not a solution for these types because you put the burden of cost on someone else. Was thinking so hard on how to rectify the situation and all you did was put a stick in the trap. lol
Dude!!! If this works for me, You are awesome!!! Removed over 15 raccoons from my parents new house. It’s been a nightmare… the beautiful, peaceful, serene backyard view of the creek and the soothing sound of the water was a big check mark in the “pros” column when deciding to buy the property. It quickly became the biggest X mark in the “cons” column when we tore out the rotten deck and had it replaced. Apparently an entire community of raccoons were living there. Removing their home forced them to move… RIGHT INTO THE ATTIC. You know, because that was the closest place to their former home. Replacing the damaged areas in soffits forced them to destroy new areas in the soffits. After we were pretty sure we got them ALL out of the attic, using infrared or thermal goggles or whatever that guy had, which were pretty cool looking… navy seal looking things, and yes, this has been like WAR… we added sheet metal to the soffits. But yes, these raccoons are insanely smart. Apparently she found a piece of Sheetrock up in the attic that was used by some idiot contractor to act as a lid to a 15 foot square shaft that went from attic to foundation. the base of the shaft must be up against a wall where she can crawl through and somehow get access outside. It’s a slab foundation which should prevent access from under house… but she’s so damn smart, she gets that food from all 4 traps that I’ve modified to get her. We have relocated over 15 of them. I think she’s the last. But I’m sick of this and willing to spend money on fence to help prevent this. I’m going to install razor wire on top of fence to ensure they don’t just climb it. I can’t believe how smart they are. We have spent over $2000 with pest company, plus all the BS we bought to help repel them. Plus whatever this fence will cost, plus soffit and roof repairs. I can’t imagine anyone having a worse situation. ZERO evidence of raccoon issue on inspection report. Oh yea, not to mention the rats that also relocated to attic after deck removal. They entered whirly bird vents, tore through the screen mesh roofers used when they replaced the roof and vents and stuff up there. Replaced screen with thicker metal mesh stuff and I think that solved THAT issue. Sigh… I can’t wait to finally win this war… it’s been brutal and very frustrating for my parents who thought they bought their dream home… but thank you so much for sharing your solution!!! I’m sure this will help me finally get that last one. Oh yea… why do I keep calling it a her? Because her babies are at the bottom of that shaft. Pest guy will have to somehow get a bucket down there for them to crawl into so he can pull them up… sigh… so frustrated.
What an ordeal! Mother raccoons with young are the wariest of all. They'll pass by delicious tempting treats and will stay in their dens for days when you think they should come out. Good luck. In cases where babies are too hard to reach we sometimes catch the mother, then release her(!) and she'll remove the babies and herself. Check out these two videos which demonstrate. Good luck. th-cam.com/video/f0jJG_7-gJc/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/DissevJSqnA/w-d-xo.html
It’s been unbelievable. These last two keep getting the food from outside the cage. I just built walls around 2 of my traps and I’m hoping this works. Some of these are crazy smart. I’m shocked how smart they are. If they get trapped, they will roll the cage over until they can get out. Had to put braces on bottom. So cute, but so frustrating!!!
I have a houndini! My raccoon gets the bait and the trap door closes and hes out? Wth? Cant figure out how hes doing it, any thoughts? Thank you young man!
Perhaps your trap is wanting. Not all live traps are made equal. Some are flexible enough that raccoons can get out. There are videos out there which show this. Or, someone could be letting it out. This also happens.
@@Frontlineanimalremoval Thanks for the reply. So I just went out and got a piece of wood like your rebar plus a bottom and I cut up a big dog bag to cover all three sides if he's reaching in. I'm praying tonight's the night! I have caught many in this trap but this one is very difficult. 🙏 praying!
@@Frontlineanimalremoval I just caught it! Its a beast! I did what you said plus covered the sides. I hope he doesn't get out before morning. I'd buy you lunch if I could. Thank you sir
It didn't for me. I put peanut butter on it, and it was gone in the morning with nothing in the trap. Either the raccoon licked it off or got very lucky.
@@Frontlineanimalremoval we'd been trying to trap that sneaky bandit for WEEKS and with your help, we finally did! Our birdfeeders are safe again (for now, anyway)!
Unfortunately this won't keep a string animal like a raccoon from squeezing out under the door. And for what it's worth, I've had great luck using honey wheat bread for bait.
Very nice, in my case they pushed the trap to the side then they won't step on the trigger. I suspect someone had caught it before and let it out that's how they learn.
When your ready to release- turn the trap on its side..that way you take away the gravity off the door..you can just use your foot to get it on its side- then the door is much easier to keep open..Ive done this probably 50 times. Also when you have the bait ready- put a 2/4 or piece os small wood- that makes them try to step over the wood onto the trigger plate, like an obstacle course.
Thats exactly whats going on with me, i have a camera to watch also, and that coon will not step on the release. I will give your method a try tomorrow.
Bait stolen yesterday and the day before. Set the trap this evening at dusk and by 9 p.m. the bait was gone. I came in and watched your video, reset the trap and had caught the Coon by 11:30 what an awesome tip you've saved my chickens
Awesome!
OMG thank you so much for this. I don't know how I didn't think about doing this. For a WEEK we have our traps getting the bait stolen... tried this trick, caught BOTH the raccoons that have been getting at my chickens.
Well done! Thanks for feedback.
You are a genius! After 3 failed attempt, I decided to try it your way. Finally caught the racoon. Thanks so much!
Thanks. Just passing along a tip.
All I can say is thank you for this tip. Had two coons that were stealing the bait from my traps for over a week. Put a piece of rebar like you suggested, and caught both the very next night. It reallllly works... thanks again!!
*HERES ANOTHER TIP FROM ME*
One thing I have experienced with raccoons, was that they were always putting there hands through the gate, and pulling the food out. I ziptied sheet metal across the back so then it can't reach in. It has helped a ton!
That what my raccoon is doing. But then he just started tipping the cage over and spilling the bait everywhere. I think I’m gonna repurpose this rebar trick and just stab it into the ground so he can’t tip it
This is one of the best TH-cam tips out there yet. Worked perfect and the racoon had no chance. Thank you and BRILLANT TIP!!!
Awesome.
Dude! You are awesome!! I tried to catch this thief for a month. Nothing just missing bait. I followed your idea and next day got me a racoon. Thank you so much!
Good job!
Just stumbled upon your video. Tried this last night and caught the guy who was stealing bait for a week. Thanks for the post!
Glad it helped!
OMG, thank you so much! I just got a trap, first night coon took my bait and left. I watched your video and had a metal pole that fit and I followed your instructions. This morning, a young coon was in the trap, but it dug up my grass underneath trying to escape. I'm after a big tailless one. My neighbor took this little one and set him free in a field nearby. I'm 68 and I can't thank you enough for helping me out! Oh, I used a quarter cut of an apple and a teaspoon of cheap cat food, a stinky fish flavor. Easy peasy.
We almost always mount our traps on pieces of plywood to stop the digging.
Good job.
@@Frontlineanimalremoval Well, I have a large patio, but for some reason, the trap works better in the grass than on the patio. I don't know why.
@@Frontlineanimalremoval
Another great suggestion! My last trapped coon walked the trap around like a magician. I added two gallon water bottles and bricks on top and it knock the whole thing down. Every time I thought I had the solution then it defeated me again. Finally after too many fails, I tied up the trap to a fig tree over the night and got it released far away in the hill. With the attached plywood, it cannot reach the ground to walk the cage away.
i thought i was the only one who figured that trick out. lol. works like a charm. good vid.
GOT HIM. Also he was well fed out of my traps. He weighted 25.6 lbs. He was lucky to fit in the traps. Bated the trap at 9 pm. He was caught at 9:45 pm. Thanks for the posting of this tip. Its an excellent idea on your part.
Good job! No problem.
This WORKS!...thanks a million just caught the uncatchable after a month of him stealing bait every night your trick got him ;-) he is in the happy hunting ground as i type he had killed my chickens every night for over a month climg the trees and get them roosting at night and ruined all their nest and eggs, i just found a stick that would go through like a dowel rod,as soon as he tried to go over it and step down trap popped and i jumped for joy as i was watching on cams, my chickens and i thank you ...
Way to go!
Good stuff ,a little tin can wired to back of the trap works to.
I do that as well and is working out great.
that's so simple but so helpful! thanks a lot and greetings from a german hunter!
Danke!
Thanks! Lost my bait for a week. Set the bar and woke up to a possum in the trap. Simple but effective
That little raccoon sounded like he wanted to tear your arm off when you pulled the bar out of his trap!
Thank you for this tip, and for posting these videos. I just discovered them trying to find a way to rid my attic of some raccoons that have moved in.
Our pleasure!
Great tip! I had one of the little stinkers steal bait two nights in a row, then saw this video and gave it a try. This morning - a 19--pounder in the trap.
Good job. Simple, yet effective.
Thanks caught the raccoon that was tearing up my kids toys and pool hoses. He thought he could steal the bait but not with your trick! Thank you!
Well done!
i had the same issue,, placed 2 rebar rods to make a fence theyhad to crawl over and actualy caught 2 of them the same night. Great tip!
Thank you for sharing 😊 what a fantastic idea 💡 we have a tricky raccoon 🦝 also I will share this with my hubby. Thanks again
Hope it works for you.
Worked perfectly! Had a real Indiana Jones of a coon stealing marshmallows all week, no matter how I adjusted. Tried this with a brass rod I had lying around, and Dr. Jones was caught the first night. Thank you!!
Awesome
Thank you !! Been trying to catch one for weeks. We will try this tonight!!
Okay - bust on the bar. We had it all set up and was watching the trap when she showed up. The day before, we had seen her reach into the cage and flip the food container so the food came out then she just ate what was outside the trap. So, I set two traps, side by side, punched two holes in each dish and zip tied the dishes to the bottoms of the traps. They were placed inside to inside, so when the traps were side by side, they were out of reach, thereby forcing her into the cage. Then I ran a metal bar through both cages. Well, she showed up and immediately separated the two cages, then, when she realized she couldn't move the dishes, just grabbed handfuls of food and pulled it through the wires. She was tired of this and actually got in one trap as far as the bar, backed out and eventually left. Well, I went out and zip tied the traps together, leaving just enough space so the trigger lever wasn't impeded, and removed the bar. It was way dark by then, and having gotten this girl on camera, we knew she would most likely be back. Woke up next day to a huge, very pizzed off female in the trap. She was the 5th one we dealt with in about the last 6 weeks, along with an opossum. This particular coon had been so elusive, she even knocked over an automatic feeder we had strapped to a 6x6 pole under the tiki bar. It's been a couple days now, and food is safe LOL
Way to adapt and overcome.
Great tip, I would have never thought of that. He got the bait the first night, not the second
Excellent, EXCELLENT tip! My marshmallow bait was ideal for....a squirrel! I noticed the trap was tripped at night and decided to go out the next morning to see what I caught. After a cold rainy night the little runt dropped dead. As far as my raccoon problem goes. I sealed off the hole in my roof (!) and sprayed Coyote urine around the perimeter. So far, so good. But your cage trap worked like a gem!
Thanks.
This trick is simple and and yet very amazing. Thanks for the video. It helped me out catch 2 raccoons I could not catch they would eat all my Bait and never get them. I got one raccoon and then I could not get the others just like you said it's like they're Informing each other on how the trap works.
Glad it helped!
Thanks! I could not figure out how the raccoon could clean the bait from the trap without setting it off! I’ll be trying your technique in the next few days.
Hope it works for you
Nice going to try this tonight got some pretty big raccoons taking over my porch and they are starting to get braver, thanks
Great tip! Here's another tip: raccoons were stealing the bait out of our traps every night without getting caught, so I threw a handful of cat kibble into the trap, most of it towards the back of the trap, and viola! Caught 9 raccoons and still counting, starting that very night. Raccoons love the kibble, but to eat it they have to get all the way into the trap and get it off the ground, which inevitably trips the trap.
Great tip!
I utilized your idea in 2 traps last night. Woke up to 2 coons trapped. Thank you.
Nice work! Honored to give Daniel Boone a trapping tip.
I used your idea with the rod and finally got the bait stealing coon that’s been robbing my trap every night thank you so much
awesome
Thanks for the tip, I am sure to use it. Another tip is to put the bait under the cage, make them work a little to get it and they will get careless : )
Why not hang the bait up at the ceiling? This is better than below the cage as it's busy reaching up the bait and forget about the trigger blade on the floor.
thanks for the video and great tip to catch these crafty creatures. Another suggestion I have is to use a small wooden plank resting against the trigger plate but NOT heavy enough to trigger the door. Forces them to walk on the board to get to the bait and they can't reach to grab the goodies any longer without door shutting on them! they have incredible reach and grip it's amazing how they do it.
Great suggestion.
But the wooden plank could trigger too soon when the coon is not deep inside yet, and the closing door might be jacked up by its back and wiggle out?
What a great idea! As I was watching this video in my yard there was a bit of rebar looking at me. Feels like I’ve just been feeding them treats, hopefully after trying this it will be there final meal
Go for it!
You deserve million likes . Thank you about to try it
This worked perfect for me last night.. Caught the sucker, was tired of it keep stealing the bait.... Thank you so much
Awesome.
That is genius, I’ll try this tonight! I have at least 4 individuals to relocate.
Amazing ingenuity!!!! Thanks for the tip. I had one knock my trap on its side, spin it 180 degrees, set the trap off the trigger and eat the food. How?!?!?
I used that technique with the bar, and the raccoon still got the bait. Next, we followed someone else's suggestion of putting boards up on all 3 sides of the back area. The raccoon, moved the trap, turned it upside down and got the bait. Ah ha, next we wedged the trap so it couldn't move it anywhere. So with the bar, sides up in the back, and wedged the trap, we finally got that smart one. She tried really desperately to get out, that she bent the door and trigger plate, but wasn't able to get out. Glad we finally had a victory.
Well done
Genius. I have a racoon who's eaten more of my bacon than I have.
Same here...lol
VERY good suggestion. Will try tonight, and let you know how things go.
(It's kind of crazy how many modifications you have to make to these traps to make them remotely effective.)
Good luck!
I have seen another video where they force the trap open from the bottom so I squeezed the blocker of the trap on top.
Another way to address these issues is to use a trap with an entirely different trigger system, i.e. Comstock traps with wire triggers and fast closing powered doors incorporated into the most rugged virtually escape proof traps made. Additionally, these traps will work right side up, upside down, sideways and vertically. Definitely worth looking at.
Agreed
A stepping stick is a WHOLE lot cheaper...
Was catching raccoons around my garden left and right for several months until I came across one very sneaky, intelligent one that stole the bait for about a week. Got tired of playing cat and mouse with this critter so I tried this with a 3/4" square piece of stock wood and wa la one captured raccoon the very first night I tried it. Boy was he pissed the morning I released him in the woods, by far the most aggressive biting one I've ever encountered. Kids and pets are safer now with this aggressive coon gone. Thanks for this very useful tip!
My last coon chew up the cat food tin can like a chewing gum -- become a small nugget that it fell out the trap and I spent many hours wondering why the cat food can disappeared.
Awesome
Thank you for the tip and trade secret my man. It took a few times of trial and error, mainly the stick placement (height and location of stick), but I eventually got him. :)
glad you got 'em
Yes this works! I had a bait stealer, but not any more! 🎉 Thank you for sharing.😊
That is slick . I also use a left over piece of wood flooring to set over the pan .
I made a trap with a giant spike. Coon came in at a winter hour and got its brain splattered everywhere. Thanks for your inspiration.
Great tip. Another way is to spread peanut butter directly on trap trigger plate.
Awesome! I've trapped 9 raccoons in the last 3 weeks, but there is ONE that is too smart! He/she will either steal without setting off trap, or set off trap leaving no bait and no raccoon! I am going to try this!
Did it work?
Thanks so much. I tried this last night and it worked.
Well done
Great idea, THANKS!
I always put my trap on a solid surface also and fasten it in place so it can`t move because if you don`t they will pull grass an dirt in and just make a mess.
Right on. The one in this video is mounted on plywood.
Thank you! Testing it out tonight
Fought with a raccoon that had been getting into my trash bins. He evaded my capture attempts for five nights in a row. I would come out and find my trap triggered, the door shut, the bait gone, but no raccoon.
Your tip gave me an idea. He kept escaping the trap somehow somehow.... I'm not sure exactly how, but I think he must have been able to push out the bottom of the "door" and get it to budge enough so that he could squeeze out. (Poor trap design?) So, I put some metal rods across the bottom where the door is, such that the door would slam down "behind" them. He could easily step over the rods to enter the trap, but that should make it impossible for him to force his way out.
As soon as I did that, he got wise enough to avoid stepping on the treadle to trip the trap. I'm not sure if he realized the problem that the rods would cause or had just figured out the treadle. So, I put a rod in like you had in the middle too. (I just used a wooden stick for that one, that I found out in the yard.) Also, not wanting to deal with this any longer, I tied a string to the latch that keeps the door open and looped it right past the bait, so if he messed with the string, it would also trigger the trap and shut the door.
Set out the rigged trap at 8:45 PM. Found the raccoon stuck in there one hour later.
Well done
I've been wasting bacon and pieces of cantaloupe for months....lol Thank you for this tip. Raccoons have been destroying my lawn digging everywhere.
You are so welcome!
Thank you my brother. That is a GREAT tip. 😊
No problem 👍
How far up the trap do you place the bar? ALso, I had one get trapped, but it escaped- I think it had an accomplice. I've added velcro to the setup to maybe make it less easy to push the trap ope from teh outside? Also, I use a metal tin, they take it out. Can I wire that to the base so that its contains the bait?
About 1/2 way up. Raccoons are strong and not all traps are created equally. If more escape, it's probably the trap's strength. Definitely you can wire the tin in. We often created a wire cage with bait in it and just hang it from top. Just be creative as you have been. Trial and error.
I’ll give this a go. Thanks for the video!
Thank you SO MUCH. I have a coon that CONSTANTLY keeps getting into my jeep when I leave the top off and it makes a total mess inside and scratches everything up. I’ll be making a coon skin cap soon enough!
Good luck
I've already got one trapped I'm trying to find a safe way to let him go.
Show or tell us how high off the ground you inserted the bar, please. Thanks.
Halfway up the side of the trap will work.
Hey, Thank you guy. I did this trick and caught the thieving little bastard the first night. Again, thanks
Awesome.
Have a coon that too smart /too experience not going side the trap to steal the fish/meat bait. I even hang the empty peanut butter bottle with fish/meat inside (with the wind chime to signal me) and it also ignored it and dug up the vegetable for worms instead. How do I get it to go inside the trap? Using a better bait? Thanks.
This one may be trap smart. You could try a non-wire trap. Google “dura poly raccoon trap”
Catch ‘em coming and going at a hole with a pass through trap they have to walk through
Thanks! Awesome tip. Got him first night with rebar thru trap.
Nice work!
@@Frontlineanimalremoval
And now I’ve gotten 3 in days. I’m so happy!
Great video sir! Just wondering as to what kind of traps are these?
The one Ryan is putting the bar through is a Duke #1112. The one with the raccoon in it is a Safeguard 53130. We use different brands. Heavy duty construction and smaller openings in the wire are good.
Not in this video, but we use a lot of Comstock traps as well.
See Wildlife Control Supplies (WCS) or Animal Traps and Supplies (ATS) for a variety of good products.
A good new modification or addition to the trap. I have the same problem with my trap, but it is not like your trap for catching a harmful cat. It enters the trap and places its legs outside, and because its body is long, it reaches the meat easily. But she can't eat it and the trap won't catch it! I modified the trap door and put the iron rod in the middle of the trap like what you did and I will see the result... Greetings from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
A longer trap for bigger animals is useful.
Yes, I made the modification to the trap door and put the iron rod that you suggested, and the result was wonderful. Two cats were caught in a very short time and were thrown away from my house. Thank you, my regards.@@Frontlineanimalremoval
what's good bait to use? they come for my fruit trees. Thanks, good video
Some of the fruit they are coming for with the trap in the travel path
You're smarter than a raccoon and now so am I !! I will also now be smarter than squirrels and chipmunks. :)
I always put a board in the trap resting on the tredle so that as soon as he enters it pushes down on the tredle.
Good idea
We caught 4 raccoons this way!!!! Thank you
Good job!
thank you for this tip. where can i get a bar like this ?
They sell short pieces of rebar at hardware stores
I've caught 40 raccoons in a year and a half. Except the big one. He knows not to step on the trip but we''ll see after I try your method!
Good luck
@@Frontlineanimalremoval it didn't work so well. He's still got the bait and it didn't set off the trap. I'm going to add another rod in there tonight. 😊
Man I needed this video I have a smart coon I’m trying to get under my house!
I appreciate that tip homie ☮️
No problem 👍
Thanks for the video, I am having the same problem. What camera did you use?
We use a Covert Brand game cameras currently.
Thanks!! Simple and ingenious
You're welcome!
Going to try this tonight. Two nights in a row the raccoon has got the bait, but nothing in the cage. I wasn't sure if the raccoon was reaching in from the sides, and getting the bait or just reaching over the trigger pad.
Good luck
It worked! Thanks so much. I've caught four of them this past week. I do have a question though. Since you have far more experience with traps. I'm trying to catch the adults, but so far it's been the younger raccoons(around a year old). Are the adults too smart for the trap or are the younger ones just beating them to the bait? I am using peanut butter and marshmallows. I would use some type of fish, but there are cats around, and I don't want to catch them. Also I am trying to catch two raccoons at a time. How far should I space the live traps?
Great solution. You’re a genius. I’m curious about the handy dandy Camera you used to record the raccoon. Could you please share Brand? Model #
Thank you.
Just an older GoPro
What exactly is the bait cage made of? Can't see it clearly in the video.
It's just some light wire. Its starts as a rectangle. The bait is placed on it, then the wire is folded over and the edges pinched a bit.
@@Frontlineanimalremoval Great, thanks.
I've been baffled by results over the past couple of weekends. I've caught over 30 of the little buggers by putting out a trail of mini marshmallows leading up to and into the trap, with full size marshmallows in the rear, either underneath the trap in a shallow hole or more recently suspended from the top of the trap. Just recently, we seem to have a smart one who was eating all the minis but leaving the ones in the rear and not tripping the treadle. Last night, I got a trail camera video showing a RAT eating all the mini marshmallows! He was probably too light to trip the door and too small to be able to reach the suspended ones.
I have been trying to set it on a hair trigger but that didn’t help. Going on a few nights of trying to catch this guy now. I moved my Arlo security camera by the trap and he is doing the same thing. I will definitely try this trick thanks.
Let us know if it works for you.
The reason he knows how the trap works is because captured and release racoons are effectively trained. Got one and he cleaned out my trap. Relocation is not a solution for these types because you put the burden of cost on someone else. Was thinking so hard on how to rectify the situation and all you did was put a stick in the trap. lol
Dude!!! If this works for me, You are awesome!!! Removed over 15 raccoons from my parents new house. It’s been a nightmare… the beautiful, peaceful, serene backyard view of the creek and the soothing sound of the water was a big check mark in the “pros” column when deciding to buy the property. It quickly became the biggest X mark in the “cons” column when we tore out the rotten deck and had it replaced. Apparently an entire community of raccoons were living there. Removing their home forced them to move… RIGHT INTO THE ATTIC. You know, because that was the closest place to their former home. Replacing the damaged areas in soffits forced them to destroy new areas in the soffits. After we were pretty sure we got them ALL out of the attic, using infrared or thermal goggles or whatever that guy had, which were pretty cool looking… navy seal looking things, and yes, this has been like WAR… we added sheet metal to the soffits. But yes, these raccoons are insanely smart. Apparently she found a piece of Sheetrock up in the attic that was used by some idiot contractor to act as a lid to a 15 foot square shaft that went from attic to foundation. the base of the shaft must be up against a wall where she can crawl through and somehow get access outside. It’s a slab foundation which should prevent access from under house… but she’s so damn smart, she gets that food from all 4 traps that I’ve modified to get her. We have relocated over 15 of them. I think she’s the last. But I’m sick of this and willing to spend money on fence to help prevent this. I’m going to install razor wire on top of fence to ensure they don’t just climb it. I can’t believe how smart they are. We have spent over $2000 with pest company, plus all the BS we bought to help repel them. Plus whatever this fence will cost, plus soffit and roof repairs. I can’t imagine anyone having a worse situation. ZERO evidence of raccoon issue on inspection report. Oh yea, not to mention the rats that also relocated to attic after deck removal. They entered whirly bird vents, tore through the screen mesh roofers used when they replaced the roof and vents and stuff up there. Replaced screen with thicker metal mesh stuff and I think that solved THAT issue. Sigh… I can’t wait to finally win this war… it’s been brutal and very frustrating for my parents who thought they bought their dream home… but thank you so much for sharing your solution!!! I’m sure this will help me finally get that last one. Oh yea… why do I keep calling it a her? Because her babies are at the bottom of that shaft. Pest guy will have to somehow get a bucket down there for them to crawl into so he can pull them up… sigh… so frustrated.
What an ordeal!
Mother raccoons with young are the wariest of all. They'll pass by delicious tempting treats and will stay in their dens for days when you think they should come out. Good luck.
In cases where babies are too hard to reach we sometimes catch the mother, then release her(!) and she'll remove the babies and herself. Check out these two videos which demonstrate.
Good luck.
th-cam.com/video/f0jJG_7-gJc/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/DissevJSqnA/w-d-xo.html
It’s been unbelievable. These last two keep getting the food from outside the cage. I just built walls around 2 of my traps and I’m hoping this works. Some of these are crazy smart. I’m shocked how smart they are. If they get trapped, they will roll the cage over until they can get out. Had to put braces on bottom. So cute, but so frustrating!!!
You’ll get em
@@Frontlineanimalremoval wish I could post a pic of my “battle trap” lol. Fortified to the max. Lol
Going to try this
Ya talk about your K.I.S.S. method. Thanks for thinking outside of the box and sharing.
I have a houndini! My raccoon gets the bait and the trap door closes and hes out? Wth? Cant figure out how hes doing it, any thoughts? Thank you young man!
Perhaps your trap is wanting. Not all live traps are made equal. Some are flexible enough that raccoons can get out. There are videos out there which show this.
Or, someone could be letting it out. This also happens.
th-cam.com/video/91lwMQmC3Ds/w-d-xo.html
@@Frontlineanimalremoval Thanks for the reply. So I just went out and got a piece of wood like your rebar plus a bottom and I cut up a big dog bag to cover all three sides if he's reaching in. I'm praying tonight's the night! I have caught many in this trap but this one is very difficult. 🙏 praying!
@@Frontlineanimalremoval I just caught it! Its a beast! I did what you said plus covered the sides. I hope he doesn't get out before morning. I'd buy you lunch if I could. Thank you sir
good job!
Thank You Thank You Thank You
This man deserves a noble price
I did this last night and the raccoon was trapped, best trick to catch raccoons.
Well done
Smart idea! I'll get that a try.
Update: It worked, caught the little varmint! Thanks!
Good job
If you put some bait on the Trettle would that work??
Yes
It didn't for me. I put peanut butter on it, and it was gone in the morning with nothing in the trap. Either the raccoon licked it off or got very lucky.
Works Like a CHARM !
🙂
Thank You x 1000 !
Well done!
Thanks - going to try this.
Having the same issues thanks for this
Excellent idea Thank you
Perfect…love it..I have squirrels and chipmunks that pulls the same stunt….
Thanks so much...1st try one down!
THIS WORKED!!! Thank you.
Way to go!
@@Frontlineanimalremoval we'd been trying to trap that sneaky bandit for WEEKS and with your help, we finally did! Our birdfeeders are safe again (for now, anyway)!
Awesome.
Unfortunately this won't keep a string animal like a raccoon from squeezing out under the door. And for what it's worth, I've had great luck using honey wheat bread for bait.
Worked for me. Thank you!
You're welcome!
Very nice, in my case they pushed the trap to the side then they won't step on the trigger. I suspect someone had caught it before and let it out that's how they learn.
They get smarter
When your ready to release- turn the trap on its side..that way you take away the gravity off the door..you can just use your foot to get it on its side- then the door is much easier to keep open..Ive done this probably 50 times. Also when you have the bait ready- put a 2/4 or piece os small wood- that makes them try to step over the wood onto the trigger plate, like an obstacle course.
Thats exactly whats going on with me, i have a camera to watch also, and that coon will not step on the release. I will give your method a try tomorrow.