Thanks for watching bud. I have some nets with 2 pegs on like you describe, we call them poke nets over here and they are bigger than the normal purse nets. I use them if I have 2 holes really close together, and i cover both with one net. You are right though, they never get out! Happy hunting!
Ive been watching your vids over the last week or so mate and im well impressed you obviosly love your ferreting but i was just thinking are your lads still going with you as its good to see the younguns getting into it aswell.Good luck for next season mate from all of us here on Anglesey to you and all other ferret and lurcher men everywhere
great vid yet again have a sandy jill just like yours who comes off of the kill in no time at all.......saves a lot of digging through stone and roots and that sometimes..........
Haha, the ferrets are having fun! But poor fella's, it's like playing a claw prize game where you finally get the prize but your older sibling comes along and snatches the prize from you! ;)
we ferret the exact same way but we would have 2 pegs on purse nets 1 peg in the ground very light in the burrow they never get out like that the pocket becomes inpossible to get out!! love these vids
Had one pet ferret and knew they were hunters of rabbits and rodents and snakes but didn't realize they were still used for hunting by humans today! God bless you in the UK! Ferrets are my favorite pet and it's awesome to see them doing what comes naturally and still be an awesome pet for a human. So useful compared to nearly every other pet besides dogs and cats. Well dogs really. Cats are almost pointless
Hi, its not a stupid question at all. The rabbits have a natural fear of the ferret as they recognise it as a predator. This makes the rabbits bolt from their holes in an attempt to escape, but get caught in the nets.
Great vids m8! i learned to make nets from your vids in an eyewink (+1)... made 3 good ones already, will be hunting with my ferrets end of this year for the first time. greetings from holland
Its simply a case of getting out there, finding plenty of rabbits and approaching the landowner. I always state I will not use guns, I am fully insured, I will leave the ground as I found it etc. Once you get to know the landowner well, shooting is then often gained as well, once they know they can trust you.
@MrConeycatcher You can get rabbits all the year round, in different parts of the country. At any one spot though, they generally arive about the same time, given a week or two either way because of the weather.
Your ferrets look well looked after. Theres been baby rabbits here in kent for ages now unfortunately. The season started late for me as well because of the heatwave in September.
Hi Bud. There is no season for ferreting you can do it all the year around if you want to, but it is harder when the undergrowth is up and the young rabbits are about, but sometimes it has to be done if you are on a complete rabbit clearance job, say for example on a golf course, etc. In the summer if you just want to control the bunny numbers, then selective shooting with a .22rf or HMR is a good option. You can legally ferret anywhere you have permission.
Can't do that in the USA, but it sure explains why mine go nuts for squeeky toy's. I was bit once by one of my own, he didn't realize it was me as I was reaching under a couch, I bled, a lot. Once he saw me, he let go, and I think he felt bad. No use scolding a ferret, they don't realize what they are being scolded for.
@senk8drol No. It is where the rabbit has been backed up in the end of a tunnel, and the ferret has grabbed hold of its eye to drag it out, so it can get round to its neck to kill it.
ferreting is a great sport and a very effective method of rabbit control. I know of old ferreters that regularly caught over 100 a day, and I have no doubt that the occasional ones will still do it today. Prairie dogs are something we dont get over here, but I have seen some good sport with them on youtube!!
@MrConeycatcher I dont know, may be it smells right. Ferrets like going down tubes, tunnels, pipes and ginnels, because they are ferrets and thats what they do!!
thanks for the reply appreciated is there a certain time of year when its illegal to go ferreting. would a barn be the place to start off in terms of getting a feel for it . can you help me also i let my ferret have a sniff around in a hedge row and when he came out he had a real fowl smell on him is that scent marking thanks once again
I would love to hunt like that, I grew up shotgun hunting and still do with dogs for rabbits, over here we have a lot of rabbits but they don't congregate in huge areas like that, we also have Swamp Rabbits they are as big and sometimes bigger than a Jack Russel, that looks like a bunch of fun, would love to try it...
Ferrets aren't minks though. They are related of course. weasels too. Here ferrets are domesticated but minks and weasels aren't. They are quite fierce I know minks will kill ducklings and all sorts of lil critters. They are very intelligent which makes them difficult to deal with. Here people try to kill minks on sight lol. They are cool critters in their own right though lol. apparently you can train minks to help you hunt. They have no fear lol.
I would never kill an animal for food, I would rather get them from the supermarket where they were obviously never killed and bred packaged and flash frozen or breaded.
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For rats, a barn may be good if you know rats are present, but for rabbits hedgerows or open warrens are best. The fowl smell, maybe it was a little scared being put into an unusual environment and it has excreted some scent to warn off potential predators. Mine sometimes do it if a dog comes near, and the smell is vile.
Hi pal. Yes I use a panasonic HD, and GoPro hero for the close up ground level shots in most of my videos. The GoPro is excellent for close but wide angle shots. It would probably help in the making of your vids, as the two or three different camera angles add interest without changing the content.
Hi Jamie, yes their is a possibility they may, because its dry, but you should be able to tell a little bit, from the general direction of the holes. This isn't 100% though. I have a set that goes under a road, and I hate doing it, because I know it will be a long wait if it stays under. Luckily all my jills tend to leave anything they kill, but they will stay with a rabbit at the stop end. Make sure you stick a tracker on your ferret, and try it sometime, that will give you the answer. atb.
Will you be making any more net construction videos? Like ones for "newbies" who don't know nuttin'. Like me! LOL! Can you use anything besides the cards I see in your net making vids? Are they metal? Why do you choose the colors you do to make your nets with? What would happen if the holes in the net were smaller or you used a smaller diameter twine? I have so many questions! LOL! Love your vids! The outdoor vids of the "hunts and huntsmen" are so scenic and listening to them talk is cool!:)
The ferret is killing a rabbit that it has cornered in the wall. Once it has started it is kinder to let it finish the job, than leave an injured rabbit.
As a vegetarian you are free to speak your mind. When you grow up know what you are talking about, then you will look back and realise that hunting is an essential part of this planet. "Vegetarian" is just another way of saying that "my ancestors were sh~t at hunting" and probably leached of the hunters of their time.
@69Jackmix69 The hole was a lot smaller than it looks, and the ferret only just fit in. There are hens the other side of that wall, and it could have been a rat the ferret was killing. It wasnt a case of stood there watching, I am not putting my hand into a hole, in the same wall I know rats live in.
Yes no problem, but it may take a few goes to get good. They need to get used to the smell of the rabbits if they have never come across one before, but the hunting is instinctive.
BOP. I will make another video for you, but it may not be for a few months, as I will be away for some time. But I will do it!! Hopefully that will answer some questions.!
At 1.24 i thought the fert must be right behind the rabbit as it stopped seen the net and decided that was a better option,they dont like the smell of the ferrets!
Nice job , i normally hunt with a .22 Lr and cant always get head shots ( especially if on the run ) This method looks good for meat hunting as no damage is done - One question , what do you do if your little helper decides to have a sleep for a bit down a rabbit warren ?
What defines the ferreting "season", if I may ask? Is it some government-issued time frame, or simply based on the breeding cycles of the rabbits? Also, do you always go to the same hunting ground?
@crackshot323 I enjoy using my hmr as well, but in all honesty, there is no long distance shooting at this spot, and ferreting is far more fun, than just outright slaughter. I like them to be more testing.
Ok thanks mate, I am fed up of carrying a game bag full of nets so I have ordered one off of Amazon. I was looking at combat vests but the pockets are to small on them.
Hi do they offer one day trips for rabbit hunting in England ? If yes do u need to take some kind of preparation class? Thank u for sharing ur videos with the public. Hope u will continue to do so.
+Sapna Dhand Thank you. I think there are places that offer rabbit shooting by the day, but I am not sure how you would go about it. Thanks for your comment.
Hold the ferrets around the chest, keeping their front legs between your index and middle fnger and they will not be able to scratch you. Hope this is of some use.
I guess any rabbit that lives down a hole can be ferreted. I have never been bitten by one of my own ferrets, although I have been bitten by somebody elses!! The teeth dont stop until they hit bone!!!