Baker carries a muskrat and trapping equipment while workinga marsh. (Photo by Eric Lee, The Washington Post) |
Beyond the fur industry, trappers play an essential role in wildlife knowledge. "Trappers are some of the most devout and most detail-oriented … outdoorsmen out there," Joshua Tabora, a furbearer biologist with Maryland's Department of Natural Resources, told Kunkle, "When you talk to some of these guys who've been doing it since the '70s and the '80s—they're walking repositories of ecological knowledge." Kunkle adds, "Trappers, who provide data to the DNR for research on animal populations and tracking zoonotic and other diseases, tend to be keenly observant and knowledgeable about animal behavior and the signs their quarry leave behind, Tabora said."
Kunkle joined Dan Baker, a life-longer trapper from Maryland, to discover how he makes a living. "The Maryland State Highway Administration pays him to trap beavers, whose dams can flood and wreak havoc with country roads, and ordinary folks pay him to remove pesky home invaders." He told Kunkle, "It got to the point where somebody had a groundhog in their garden so they'd call me . . . . And then somebody would say, 'I got a snake in the house. Can you come down?' And it just got bigger and bigger."
Baker also sells meat most groceries don't carry. "One of his regular customers is Howard Brooks, who took 300 muskrat meats off Baker last year," Kunkle reports. "Brooks said he kept a few dozen for himself and distributed the rest, at cost, to other folks who prize the muskrat's dark, savory flesh." Brooks told Kunkle, "You can bake 'em, grill 'em. I can fry them and make gravy with some onions. They don't taste like chicken. I can tell you that."
Baker spends time teaching new hunters, but the trade is declining, Kunkle reports. "During the fur trade peak between the 1970s and 1980s, prime red fox pelt would fetch an average of $46 — about $185 in today's dollars — and old-timers guarded their turf as closely as their trade secrets. . . . Nowadays, though, fox pelts go for around $3, Baker said. The [trade] has plummeted because of the animal rights movement and advances in fabric technology that led to a switch from natural furs."
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