Buy a live trap, so people won't start screaming in your face, "You're killing bunnies!"
Can you use a humane trap, and then just shoot it (with even a beebee gun?) if it's a rabbit? If it's a skunk or someone's pet you would just be able to open the door and run away. No problems.
You've never had a skunk in a cage before have you?![]()
Hi McCall St. Brewer: I've hunted rabbits/hares for years, but I don't hunt them in late spring or summer for 2 reasons: 1 being that springtime females are usualy pregnant & that's not something I like to deal with when gutting/skinning them. The 2nd is Tularemia, AKA "rabbit fever". It can be transmitted to humans through a cut or scrape on your skin, and I've heard through eating the meat raw or undercooked. Late spring & summer is when this disease is most prevalent out here in the western 1/2 of the US, but I'm not sure about your area. Do a google search on Tularemia for more detailed info. Hope you find this info useful. Regards, GF.My neighborhood is experiencing a rabbit population explosion this year. Rabbits are literally everywhere, chomping away at everyone's grass, gardens and shrubbery.
I got to thinking about this today while looking at a particularly plump looking little bunny. When I was younger my friends and I used to trap and eat them. We lived in an area that at the time was on the edge of our town, so it was semi-rural. I live in a built-up neighborhood in a town now, but I'm wondering, what's the difference? Is there any reason why I couldn't be trapping and eating a few of those rabbits here? I do seem to recall that we did most of our trapping in colder weather. Was there a reason for that?
Grew up hunting and eating rabbits as well.....Rabbits are carrying what we called Warbles during the spring and summer, Warbles are a parasite just under the rabbits skin and they are nasty looking.
The Warbles die off just after the first good frost.....