I have made a list of all the trapper’s associations in the United States. You can connect with other trappers in your area and see what is happening with trapping in your state.
If you want to see what you can trap in your state you can check out our United States Trapping page to see more info about your state trapping regulations.
Table Of Contents
Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky
Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina
North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming
What can you trap in Alabama? Visit our article to see a complete list of species and regulations for trapping them.
What Can you trap in Alaska? Read our Alaska Trapping guide and see what you can trap.
What can you trap in Arizona? Check out our Arizona trappers guide.
What can your trap in Arkansas? Check out our guide about trapping in Arkansas.
What can your trap in California? Nothing! Trapping has been outlawed in California unless you are doing pest control and then you extreamly limited on the equipment you can use.
What can your trap in Colorado? Check out our guide about trapping in Colorado.
What can your trap in Connecticut? Check out our guide about trapping in Connecticut.
What can your trap in Delaware? Check out our guide about trapping in Delaware.
What can your trap in Florida? Check out our guide about trapping in Florida.
What can your trap in Georgia? Check out our guide about trapping in Georgia.
What can your trap in Hawaii? Check out our guide about trapping in Hawaii.
Hawaii does not currently have a trappers association. If you live in Hawaii it would be better to join the National Trappers Association.
What can your trap in Idaho? Check out our guide about trapping in Idaho.
What can your trap in Illinois? Check out our guide about trapping in Illinois.
What can your trap in Indiana? Check out our guide about trapping in Indiana.
What can your trap in Iowa? Check out our guide about trapping in Iowa.
What can your trap in Kansas? Check out our guide about trapping in Kansas.
What can your trap in Kentucky? Check out our guide about trapping in Kentucky.
What can your trap in Louisiana? Check out our guide about trapping in Louisiana.
What can your trap in Maine? Check out our guide about trapping in Maine.
What can your trap in Maryland? Check out our guide about trapping in Maryland.
What can your trap in Massachusetts? Check out our guide about trapping in Massachusetts.
What can your trap in Michigan? Check out our guide about trapping in Michigan.
What can your trap in Minnesota? Check out our guide about trapping in Minnesota.
What can your trap in Mississippi? Check out our guide about trapping in Mississippi.
What can your trap in Missouri? Check out our guide about trapping in Missouri.
What can your trap in Montana? Check out our guide about trapping in Montana.
What can your trap in Nebraska? Check out our guide about trapping in Nebraska.
What can your trap in Nevada? Check out our guide about trapping in Nevada.
What can your trap in New Hampshire? Check out our guide about trapping in New Hampshire.
What can your trap in New Jersey? Check out our guide about trapping in New Jersey.
What can your trap in New Mexico? Check out our guide about trapping in New Mexico.
What can your trap in New York? Check out our guide about trapping in New York.
What can your trap in North Carolina? Check out our guide about trapping in North Carolina.
What can your trap in North Dakota? Check out our guide about trapping in North Dakota.
What can your trap in Ohio? Check out our guide about trapping in Ohio.
What can your trap in Oklahoma? Check out our guide about trapping in Oklahoma.
What can your trap in Oregon? Check out our guide about trapping in Oregon.
What can your trap in Pennsylvania? Check out our guide about trapping in Pennsylvania.
What can your trap in Rhode Island? Check out our guide about trapping in Rhode Island.
What can your trap in South Carolina? Check out our guide about trapping in South Carolina.
What can your trap in South Dakota? Check out our guide about trapping in South Dakota.
What can your trap in Tennessee? Check out our guide about trapping in Tennessee.
What can your trap in Texas? Check out our guide about trapping in Texas.
What can your trap in Utah? Check out our guide about trapping in Utah.
What can your trap in Vermont? Check out our guide about trapping in Vermont.
What can your trap in Virginia? Check out our guide about trapping in Virginia.
What can your trap in Washington? Check out our guide about trapping in Washington.
What can your trap in West Virginia? Check out our guide about trapping in West Virginia.
What can your trap in Wisconsin? Check out our guide about trapping in Wisconsin.
What can your trap in Wyoming? Check out our guide about trapping in Wyoming.
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This video will show you how to make wax dirt form home without fancy equipment. Hopefully this wax dirt will keep your coyote traps working longer in freezing conditions.
Raccoon are often hunted and trapped for their fur. Learn how to tube skin a raccoon and get it ready for the taxidermist or fur buyer.
The best and most popular coyote trap is the MB 550. It is big enough to hold coyotes and is one of the strongest foothold traps on the market.
Welcome to the THF Outdoor photo contest. We will be sharing trapping photos here on the site and on our social accounts. Thanks for following along.
A fur shed is a good space to skin, flesh, and put up fur. A trapping shed that is comfortable and functional are available for sale for those DIY trappers.
The MB 450 trap is a very good trap for coyote and fox trapping. It is one of the most popular traps to use among fox trappers because it also holds coyotes.
Are you having a hard time trapping fox? Here are some common fox trapping mistakes that you can learn from, so you don’t make the same mistakes.
This set has always had my interest. It plays on the natural instinct of a fox to mark its territory or investigate where another fox has marked its territory.
Find several coyote trapping DVDs to learn more about trapping coyotes. Beginners guide DVDs and learning on the trapline.
The idea is to get the fox to think that another animal has buried food down in a hole that he can steal. A concealed or buried trap will be placed in front of the dirt hole so when a fox comes to investigate it steps on the trap and gets caught.