C2B—Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, February 9,1980 Trapper education HARRISBURG - An educational program designed to produce knowledgeable, ethical and humane trappers in Penn sylvania will be inaugurated m the Keystone Statge this year by the Game Com mission. Approval for establish ment of the course was given by the commission at its January meeting. Since 1958 the Game Commission has ad ministered a hunter education program, and the trapper training program will parallel the hunting course which has trained 800,000 youngsters in ethics and safety. The thrust of the new trapper training program will be to take those with an interest in trapping and to instill in them proper at titudes on trapping methods and ethics, and to instruct them on the nature of animals which are being sought and principles of overall traphne management. Emphasis will be placed on selective setting of traps to eliminate non-target species from being caught. Trappers will be taught how to avoid catching pets, raptors and other birds, and how to safely release non target animals and birds from traps. The new program will not be designed to recruit new trappers, nor will it be in tended to teach would-be trappers how to be suc cessful at taking fur bearers. Beware of phoney phone pitches ANNAPOLIS, Md. - David Shnver, Chief of the Maryland Department of Agriculture’s Pesticide Applicator Law Section, say" farmers should be leery of salesmen who offer pesticide deals over the telephone. “Every year at this time we seem to have a few high pressure salesmen who get on the telephone offering special deals and bargm basement prices on pesticides. “These salesmen, working from out-of-state offices, Please send me information on "J Fickes Silos Z Please send me color catalog on the Cherokee horse stock trailers and GN flatbeds Z Please send me literature on Silo-Matic Feeding Systems ! PHi •NE The course is being developed by the Game Commission m cooperation with the Pennsylvania Trappers Association. Many of the instructors for the course are likely to come from the ranks of the trappers’ organization. District game protectors this spring will be going through a training course conducted by Jack Weaver, Game Commission trapper training coordinator. The course will be administered by the Game Commission’s Division of Law En forcement, in cooperation with the Division of In formation and Education. The district game protectors will be respon sible for the recruitment, training and certification of instructors, and the trapper training courses will be given throughout the state starting this fall. Trapper training will be parallel to, but separate from, hunter education. Trappers, like hunters, have a code of ethics, which will be a key feature of the trapping course. Courtesy and sportsmanship are as important for trappers as they are for hunters, and will receive heavy emphasis in the new course. High fur prices have produced an all-time peak m trapping interest in Penn sylvania. It is believed that the number of trappers in the Keystone State is at a minimum of 135,000, and at times reaches more than 200,000. make many promises, and those unfortunate enough to buy the materials often find the products to be highly diluted and therefore not too much of a bargain,” Shnver says. Farmers are urged to beware of calls from strangers offering such deals. “It is far better for a farmer making such an outlay for pesticide materials to purchase them through a local supplier who is known in the community,” Shriver added. FICKES SILO COMPANY, INC. P.O. Box 7 Nevwille, PA 17241 Phone: 717-776-3129 Trailers Well Worth Their Cost. program Real furs come from fur bearing animals, which are a renewable natural resource. Fake furs come from petroleum, which is finite in availability. Demand for furs is ex pected to remain high in the future, despite a shift in fashion from long-haired to short-haired pelts. The large number of trappers afield has naturally led to conflicts between trappers, hound smen, pet owners and lan downers. Many of these conflicts involve young, inex perienced trappers, who have not been properly trained in acceptable trapping methods. While the Pennsylvania Trappers Association has been conducting trapper training courses on a limited basis, the need for statewide standards and program objectives necessitates involvement of the state agency. Educational aids for the course are now being developed. The Game Commission, from experience in dealing successfully with hunter education, is in position to assume the leadership role in trapper training in the state and, indeed, the nation. The trapper training program will be on a voluntary basis, as the hunter education program was initially. Hunter education is now mandatory for all first-time hunters under the aee of 16. Subjects to be covered in the trapper training course will include, but not be limited to, landowner relations, humane trapping, courtesy and sportsmanship, ethical code, matching traps to animals, care and storage of equipment, proper and acceptable methods of trapping on land and in the water, trap thett prevention basic fur handling and law and regulations governing trapping. In a further move to raise the standards of trapping in Pennsylvania, the Game Commission has directed its staff to seek changes in the Game Law on several trapping provisions. An amendment will be sought which would prohibit the use of body-gripping traps on dry land. Body- STATE ZIP. approved, changes proposed gnppmg traps function in a different way than leg-hold traps. Whereas a leg-hold trap merely restrams a captured live animal, a body-gripping trap produces sudden, intense pressure with kills the animal. Many persons in the anti trapping movement ad vocate the use of body gripping traps, rather than leg-hold traps. However, a body-gnpping trap is very unforgiving if a non-target lntrod uC^’ NEW EASY TO CONSTRUCT ROUND BARN- Base comes in 12 curved sidewall sec tions One section includes a dutch walk door The other 11 sections can be or dered with or without a 24" x 48” ven tilation door, thus allowing you to set up a natural ventilation condition or a total environmentally controlled unit or a combination of the two The unique circular design of the structure combined with vent doors that swing out (hinged on the side instead of at the top) provides a natural air scoop on one side and a natural air foil on the other circular coned floor .sd.v.ded.n hail twßadl .i Arm ciean Side, thus causing air to cross ventilate mg unit and gate on which feeders are mounted On command ' regardless Of Wind direction Roof cap on motor drives gate around pivot moving manure to gutter Material the bin roof can also be manipulated to fu,,er pushed b r draper paddle into pipe and out of provide additional natural air movement U ' ' ng The 12 sections can be assembled in about one hour Each section is complete with white painted strong panel steel on the exterior and fiberglass insulation in the wall A fiberglass pig barrier is provided for interior covering and comes in a roll for installation after sidewall sections are assembled thus providing for a seamless interior wall The assembled sidewall sections are covered by a conventional gram bin roof which is insulated with white polystyrene 3VS inches thick The polystyrene comes in panels and is 100% moisture resistant The panels are installed using fasteners, and will not come down or sag with age It also enhances the appearance of the interior of the barn SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY PRICE $ 8 f 995005 00 f.o.b. Contact Your Eastern Distributor THOMAS BACHMAN & SONS 2501 Fallston Road Fallston, MD 21047 301-557-7529 or 301-836-6877 species, such as a pet dog or cat, is caught. Because of the danger that is associated with body-gripping traps, the Game Commission hopes to prohibit their use on dry land. The Game Commission will also ask the Legislature to require that traps be checked at least once every 26 hours, instead of the present 36-hour requirement. And an in crease m the penalty for Radial Arm circular finishing Automated Hog Confinement failure to check traps within the required tune period will be sought; the present fine is $lO, and the Game Com mission will ask that the penalty be increased to $25 for each trap not checked. Finally, the Game Com mission will ask the Legislature to prohibit the use of snares and deadfalls, ancient capturing and killing devices which have no place in modern wildlife management. 0. self cioim HOG BARN 102 Head Capacity