HARE PIPE TRAP (MASCALLS OTHER TRAPS)
How to make the hare pipe as seen in Mascalls Booke of engines and traps. a lot of people know about the mascall mouse trap ,but mascall also made other animal traps.
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Пікірлер: 221
1:28 another tip , that we use up in N.canada..is we heat up the wire , by a camp fire...and burn the hole through. If you get a few wires heating at the same time...you can get that hole , burnt out in no time. cheers
@JJRSURVIVAL
6 жыл бұрын
great idea mate , nice one
@OldNavajoTricks
4 жыл бұрын
You can also fireharden the prongs, sharper and stronger, less prone to snapping off in your meal.
Very good. Today we'd use a wire snare to prevent chew out, but in primitive situations where only natural cordage is available, the pipe prevents chew out.
@JJRSURVIVAL
5 жыл бұрын
cheers mate
You could probably tie a bunch of sticks together in a round, so they form the tube for the string to go through, if you are struggling to find a wood that isn’t pithy in the centre or easy to core out, Very clever stuff and easy to carry and place where needed than fiddling around with triggers and stuff
My guess would be the stick was to stop the animal from chewing the cordage of course that is my guess . thank you for sharing this .i enjoyed watching it .👍
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Cheers tim
Not seen this one before mate! Different and interesting! Thanks for sharing brother 👍🏽👍🏽Best wishes
@JJRSURVIVAL
6 жыл бұрын
cheers mad dog
Just a quick observation... it seems like the rear vertical stick could be used to secure the open end of the string. It also seems like waxing the string would make it glide smoother, making it more "instant". Thanks for sharing this unique snare.
Sounds lovely, interesting and very clever Great job on this demo ,thanks mate
@JJRSURVIVAL
6 жыл бұрын
thanks a lot mate
Brilliant little trap mate, the skill is in identifying a Hare run. Cheers
New trap to me bro. Thanks. Keep up the great videos. Excellent old English country field stuff. Love it.
Genial muchas gracias por compartir tus conocimientos, fuerte abrazo!
Elder, thank you. I have been racking my head trying to remember that wood, because of how easy it is to pull out the pith. We made whistles out of them in the scouts.
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Cheers mate
@charlesstewart9246
3 жыл бұрын
Also known as Elderberry Bush. Fruits were used for vitamin c in days of old. Still found in woodland/hedges and gardens.
@forcesightknight
3 жыл бұрын
It grew crazy in Minnesota, now I'm in southern Colorado and the vegetation is not the same, to say it simply.
@charlesstewart9246
3 жыл бұрын
@@forcesightknight yeah,its a wetland shrub,to dry there abouts for it to grow,still,its at least warmer.you won't need as much vitamin c,not as many cold and snot bugs around there.silver linings and all that. 🏴👍😁🏴
@kennethgibson1092
3 жыл бұрын
Ash has pith too
🌲🌲🦅thank you for sharing your video the wooden tube guard snare set you have is very close to the bird bone tube guard snare set used by ancient peoples in Alaska and BC and probably elsewhere (the bone tube was a snare guard ) your video was great 🌲🌲🌲
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Cheers Brian
Everyone in the comments wanting to over complicate a perfectly good simple trap. Nice video 👍
You did a great job. Thanks.
@JJRSURVIVAL
5 жыл бұрын
Cheers David
I think you're right it was used to prevent chew out and hold the animal still. I've seen the inuit use a similar bone pipe snare for ground squirrels.
@JJRSURVIVAL
6 жыл бұрын
i,ve not seen the bone version i,ll have to look for it, cheers
Pure skills the lad👍
@JJRSURVIVAL
6 жыл бұрын
cheers mate
Great video malc keep them coming
@JJRSURVIVAL
6 жыл бұрын
cheers william
Great trap! Thanks man.
Great job Malc! I was looking for that book years ago, and forgot all about it. I'm interested.to see what else comes of it. Finally, someone with some fresh traps! 😁
@JJRSURVIVAL
6 жыл бұрын
cheers sam , hopefully i can do a quite few from that book , some have no real explanation though , so i,ll have to work from the pics but most make sense at least ,cheers mate
That's a very interesting trap it looks the snare that animal protection agency use to catch stray animals.
@JJRSURVIVAL
6 жыл бұрын
yes it does mate , cheers
Very cool, thanks for sharing.
Interesting trap. I'm guessing that the more the points dug into the animal the more it would pull - catch 22 - and the faster the animal would pass out.
Taking notes from Greene county North Carolina , useful information.
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Cheers mate
Woow. ..Thanks for video. ..
Question what keeps it from losening off if the animal quits fighting it and paws or just chews the stick and loosens it?
Gracias por compartir!!
Fun video. Thanks for sharing.
Dinosaur Colorado USA saying hello and thank you for sharing
Several times a day I work on getting the pith out, Mate!
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Hahahaha
Great video keep them coming
Never seen that one before very interesting Malc 👍👏🇬🇧
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Cheers Tony
very good. I think I might make a couple in wood and a couple with pvc and see how they work out.
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
I reckon that would work good
Thread some cordage through the elder (after the pith is removed) then add some fine sand to one end and work the cordage back and forth dragging the sand through the middle (works like sandpaper) to polish the inside of the elder.
@lifesagamesobeawinner
2 жыл бұрын
Just heat the iron rod in the fire and burn the whole to required size.
Brilliant design, really...probably more effective, than just a string, at dispatching the Prey.
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Cheers ed
nice and simple... what kind of animals you can trap with that? i mean what kind of foot will trap on the rope and it will not just slide in and out.
When you were carving the spikes I thought, that looks a bit like a bird whistle. I think whistles were made from reed, but I suppose elder would work too.
Interesting. A type of snare, I suppose. Thanks for showing.
@JJRSURVIVAL
6 жыл бұрын
yes , cheers mate
Badass brother. I like seeing people reference old literature and show stuff like this. I subbed and will be watching for your vids. Keep going man!
@JJRSURVIVAL
5 жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot mate , much appreciated .
Will be interesting to see if it makes the animal not struggle as much when first caught,twine has a habit of snapping if frayed etc,the points cause pain,stops struggling until you arrive and quickly dispatch. Unless its like a fox snare type of non-release snare and forces unconsciousness. Would like to get that book,thanks for showing it to us. 🏴👍😁🏴
i think this one was used to keep the rabits alive they would stop chewing the cordage or attempting to so they could take them with them to dispatch later while traveling and i also think this was used to keep them alive so they could keep live stock of rabits much easier then hunting al the time you know what rabits do if there is a couple 😉 nice to see some old trap keep up the good work 💪👍👍
Interesting my man.
Hare pipe looks like variation of the 1600s British Wick (or vice versa). Small copper tube diameter, and then insert jute/cotton waxed wick. Pull out wick and light for a small lighted candle. Pull wick back in for snuffing out. I make these with dreadlock of a cotton swabbie mop, perfect size for 3/8" pipe. Would suggest that you make a two-strand stake lines. Stake line with the loop and tag end knot (in one direction). Then have another stake and tag end knot through the tubing (in other direction). No matter where the hare pulls AWAY from original stake, loop tightens up. Hare tries to pull TOWARD original stake, other strand makes pipe tighten up. Using small copper tubing, then use metal file and rasp out the tubing gigging points. The loop chokes out the hare, choking off the carotid blood (and air) supply and the rabbit goes to sleep and dies from anoxia to the brain. Otherwise, the metal (or wood) gig tips would dig into the hare's throat (and carotid artery) all the time that it struggles in the trap ... literally stabbing and bleeding them out.
@JJRSURVIVAL
6 жыл бұрын
nice one john ,cheers mate
@OldNavajoTricks
4 жыл бұрын
Bit like a sailors ropelighter...
Nice to be able to have a willow tree around. In the California desert , we aren't so lucky .
@Wildwestwrangler
2 жыл бұрын
I haven't spent time in the California desert, but in the high desert of Arizona you can find willow growing around some of the washes
what tool do you use to drill the wood??
Круто👍
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Cheers
Nice one brother
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
cheers thomas
I love you knife, where did you get it ? Or did you make it?
nice, and they cant chew the rope either, i like it
@JJRSURVIVAL
5 жыл бұрын
cheers mate
Looks like it will work 😎
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks
How common is trapping where you live? On the east coast of the southern U.S it has become a lost art. Further north it may be more common.
@JJRSURVIVAL
6 жыл бұрын
trapping in England is more for pest control, so its quite common to do it here , more in the countryside i would say though
@TheRoadhammer379
3 жыл бұрын
Trapping in the northeast United States is alive and well, we just keep a low profile considering how violent and easily triggered everyone has become.
Looks a good trap. I used he bender snare which works well. If you had a drop weight that fell it would yank the cord tighter.
@Wildwestwrangler
2 жыл бұрын
If a spring pole were used with a snare set he would have to worry about chew out when the rabbit is suspended in air
Growing up on a farm and working and living with animals also being a active seasoned trapper I believe the spikes actually were to possibly keep the animals for choaking themselves out because the spikes would induce pain making it relax tension. However it would keep tension trying to escape but not strangle itself to death or exhaust itself
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Nice one mate, cheers
@freakouuut
3 жыл бұрын
I think it would be the opposite. I was taught with wire snares to leave the end of the wire sticking into the loop because when it tightens and pokes them in the back of the neck they freak out and strangle themselves faster.
@neveraballfe8253
3 жыл бұрын
@@freakouuut true I guess in the end it works so that's good
@kennethgibson1092
3 жыл бұрын
Old weasel trap is drill a hole in a tree and drive 3 16 penny nails to a point and spray blood in the hole ... They go in for the blood but when they try to back out fast it impales them
New sub right here cracking video
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks mate
Nice Buddy
how do you get your scent from it. Must smoke it.
Would this trap work on squirrels?
looks great,its a interesting point
@JJRSURVIVAL
6 жыл бұрын
thank you mate
Make two. If the snare fails, you have a pea shooter.
That trap would be a lot easier made if you used bamboo
@fishmut
3 жыл бұрын
Use what you got in your area, survival snares etc you can’t go shopping for a piece of bamboo dude.
do its legal to set snares in U.K. or is a season to set them I know itrs in winter but do you need a license ?
@JJRSURVIVAL
5 жыл бұрын
In England it's legal to set non locking snares without a license . But in Scotland you need a license to set snares
@got2kittys
3 жыл бұрын
@@JJRSURVIVAL Thats crazy. In the US you can hunt with knives, spears, bow and arrows, firearms. You can trap with cages, legholds, body grips,(conibear). Nearly every state, No Snares! A few allow it.
We use a small of bamboo here in the states
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Nice one mate
Great
Thanks!
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks mate
Where did you find that book I cant find it anywhere??
@JJRSURVIVAL
4 жыл бұрын
if i can find the link i,ll send it you mate
@thomasbingham2797
3 жыл бұрын
Did you find the link?
Steady friend
At first I thought it was the hare pipe you make to call hares,,but going to watch anyways as all aspects of hunting trapping etc are my thing. 👍 Would you be better using elder .?
@leecoomber3877
3 жыл бұрын
Be better to see some of these traps in action.👍
@michaeldean5787
3 жыл бұрын
I wonder if elder would be a bit fragile for the job?
"Just by pushing the pith out of it."
Similar to a snake rope holding or bad animal holding trap! By the way, nice tattoo's!
Хрена себе, брат, ты синий, прям как я. Молодец!
Confirm the hare will trapped please tell
I believe the reason for the stick was to keep the animal from crewing through the cord , allowing you to use smaller cord or string .
(RUS) какое дерево используете для трубки? я сначала подумал, что вы высверлили-прокололи отверстие в ней, но по переведённым комментариям понял, что просто выдавили сердцевину... Так можно сделать не со всякой древесиной. Есть русский вариант такой ловушки - там используют трубчатую птичью кость вместо дерева - мне кажется, что она дольше продержится против заячьих зубов ;-) но её ещё надо добыть :-)
Tape 2 sharp nails to the end of the stick.to make sharp points.put your wire in a drill to drill out pith.
@JJRSURVIVAL
5 жыл бұрын
cheers mate
Well pith on it !!!
I could see using it for rabbits maybe coyotes, hang it vertically, head high over a trail they run, I'd use some sort of cable or wire.i could see in a survival situation with heavy enough wire and a good anchor a guy could share a deer.
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Cheers mate
@ahanuabedanu6798
2 жыл бұрын
On cayotes? Thats animal abuse. Because they not death they only stuck in this loop. Not good at all
What type of wood do you use? Alder or Elder?
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Elder
Never seen this before here in North Borneo..
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
I got a couple of other traps apparently from borneo on my channel. Cheers for watching mate
@KomburaCoreRoot
3 жыл бұрын
@@JJRSURVIVAL i would like to watch & learn. Thanks for sharing
If you heat the wire to red-hot in colour, not white-hot, it will burn it out the pith much easier with smooth tunnel sides. Cheers.
I've trapped a few squirrels with just a simple snare and a piece of bait. This looks like a nice design though.
I Wonder what the knuckles on the left hand used to say
6:20 yep! 😁
We used to make when we were bairns likr,, we used copper pipe, if u hit the sharpend copper with a hammer a couple of times it stiffens up enough to do the damage and we used pike traces for ligature. Never killed em but jammed em right up. Was rabbits we were after though. Worked every single time. Dont think we missed one. We dangled ours though as opposed to crossways
First video I’ve seen from him not the face I expected with the voice
What's your knife?
Kannur in Kerala😍😍😍💯👍
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Cheers
Смотрю на его руки в наколках как он апредиляет грязные руки или чистые ?
Dangerous as hell cutting toward your hand like that.
👍👍
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
cheers mate
I wouldn't whittle the spiked end down all far, you want the spiked to also be strong to a degree, he better to shave it like flat edging a pencil by only shaving 2 sides to form a wedge tapering to the middle then shave the sides down to get the desired finer point
The main idea behind this trap is to not only strangle the prey but also tines create a wound that will not close as the animal struggles.
😁👍🏾
ок
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Cheers
хорошее глюкало
Es más interesante la alfombra
Для чего это?
استاد خیلی خوب بود،فقط اون آخر کلیب که گذاشتن تله بود، زود تمام میشه، بازهم تشکر داره.
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks
Heat the wire and it burns right through along the grain.
@JJRSURVIVAL
3 жыл бұрын
Nice one cheers
(RUS)Сразу видно опытного сидельца - все руки в наколках :-) "Восемь ходок - семь побегов: погоняло "мотороллер" ;-D Потому и в ловушках разбирается - кабана,видимо, не всегда удавалось с собой прихватить ;-D (шутка, но в каждой шутке всегда есть доля шутки).
I think if the points were barbed like straightened out fishing hooks then it'd be fool proof
So the secret to it is extracting the pith