Shorebilly Trapping, LLC

Shorebilly Trapping, LLC Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Shorebilly Trapping, LLC, Pest Control Service, Vienna, MD.

04/06/2025

Shorebilly Trapping is temporarily closed until further notice due to medical concerns.
Thank you for your business 🙏

The ShoreBilly...doin what The ShoreBilly does. Pass me the setters, please.
03/07/2025

The ShoreBilly...
doin what The ShoreBilly does.

Pass me the setters, please.

ShoreBilly doin what The ShoreBilly does.
02/28/2025

ShoreBilly doin what
The ShoreBilly does.

Merry Christmas from Shorebilly Trapping, LLC
12/25/2024

Merry Christmas from Shorebilly Trapping, LLC

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12/20/2024

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/15gxAjoqVX/?mibextid=oFDknk

Did you know trappers play a critical role in conservation?

Regulated trapping reduces the spread of harmful diseases that impact humans, livestock, and pets. It can also help prevent crop and property damage.

Trappers are dedicated sportsmen and women who directly contribute to conservation. They play a vital role in the research and management of furbearer species.

The Pennsylvania Game Commission is seeking conservation-minded citizens to become furbearer cooperators within the state.

What is a furbearer cooperator?

A furbearer cooperator is someone with an interest in furbearer populations or trapping who can provide feedback on their observations and trapping information like number of days afield setting and tending traps, number and species trapped, types of traps used, etc.

Information collected is critical to the agency’s management of current and future furbearer populations.

If you’re interested in becoming a Pennsylvania furbearer cooperator and contributing to furbearer conservation, please email: [email protected].

Remember.  It's against the law to kill any snake in Maryland, Venomous or not.  And if you do, don't take pictures and ...
09/30/2024

Remember. It's against the law to kill any snake in Maryland, Venomous or not. And if you do, don't take pictures and post them on Facebook. You won't like the outcome.

Amazing.
08/06/2024

Amazing.

Monday Memory

How Was Your Muskrat Report?

The News and Farmer contained a report on the front page of the April 4, 1957 edition that the muskrat trapping season which closed on March 15, 1957 was about normal. It is interesting that something so very common place at that time has virtually disappeared today. In those days the furs were used and the meat was also consumed widely. Although not discussed in the article, muskrat meat is a dark meat that is often described as an “acquired” taste. Depending on how it is prepared the “musk” in a muskrat can be strong depending on how well it is cleaned with comparisons sometimes being something more like liver or duck or
rabbit or squirrel that can be very gamey. It definitely does not taste like chicken. It used to be that restaurants often had “rat” or “marsh hare” on their menu and it was also used by not for profits anywhere near water from here to Michigan for their fund raising dinners. In a restaraunt, it is not uncommon for the head to be served on the muskrat to prove which animal it is. People from indiginous people here on the shore through to modern times routinely ate the “marsh rabbit” which is about 2-4 pounds with a long tail as you would expect a rodent to have. In this day where
most people profess to want “organic” food and products, it is could be
considered surprising how demand for muskrats has fallen off.

There are some reasons for this though. Muskrat populations can vary naturally and widely in a cycle of every 6 to 10 years, depending on the source cited. Wikipedia reports, however, that “muskrat populations have declined by at least one-half in 34 states”. Plus, as older human
populations pass on, so can their eating habits.

In the 1957 News and Farmer article it states that “The largest fur man on
the Eastern Shore, Morgan K. Bennett, Preston, this week is packing up
some 80,000 furs for shipment to New York”. Most of those would probably have been destined for the fashion industry to keep people warm. Later, what furs and skins were harvested ended up destined for the Chinese and Russian markets as the domestic market dried up until
those foreign markets could no longer afford the cost of the furs. In addition, how many of you actually know someone who still goes out trapping muskrats today?

The upcoming season is scheduled from
January 1 to March 15 in Caroline County with no bag or possession limit
if you are interested in trying.

If you have a groundhog problem, we can catch emGive us a call 🤙
07/16/2024

If you have a groundhog problem, we can catch em
Give us a call 🤙

World Snake Day  July 16Shorebilly Trapping 443.521.0247Celebrated by snake and wildlife enthusiasts, World Snake Day ra...
07/16/2024

World Snake Day July 16

Shorebilly Trapping
443.521.0247

Celebrated by snake and wildlife enthusiasts, World Snake Day raises awareness about snakes and educates the public about them; it dispels fears and misconceptions about them and enlightens the public on how they should be dealt with. A focus is often put on conservation, which is valuable because snakes face habitat loss on account of development, and there are around 100 species that are listed as endangered by the IUCN Red List. Events, such as snake awareness programs, are held at zoos and museums and organized by NGOs on the day.

There are more than 3,000 snake species, and snakes can be found on every continent except Antarctica. They live in most countries, although they aren't found on a few island countries like Iceland, Ireland, and New Zealand, or on the autonomous island territory of Greenland. Snakes live in almost any environment: in forests, grasslands, deserts, savannas, swamps, and mountain regions. About 70 species of sea snakes even live in water, being found in the Indian and Pacific oceans. The largest snake is the reticulated python, which may reach over 30 feet in length; the smallest is the threadsnake, which is less than four inches long.

Snakes are cold-blooded reptiles, meaning their body temperature changes and is contingent on external sources. Almost all have scales, which makes them smooth and dry, reduces friction when they move, and traps moisture when they are in arid climates. Some species can climb trees by digging their scales into the bark. Snakes shed their skin multiple times a year. Called ecdysis, this process removes parasites and provides the snake with room to grow. Most snakes—about 70%—lay eggs. Some, like pythons, incubate their eggs, but most don't. Only the king cobra builds a nest for its eggs. About 30% of snakes give live birth, sea snakes being one example. Snakes in colder climates tend to give live birth; eggs wouldn't survive the cold.

While some may call snakes pests, others keep them as pets. They are important to the ecosystem, eating rodents and other animals deemed pests. Snakes are carnivores, meaning they only eat meat. They have forked tongues that they smell with by flicking about. This allows them to detect food and danger. They use the Jacobson's organ located on the roof of their mouth to smell, too. They have "pit holes" in front of their eyes. These openings allow them to sense heat from warm-blooded animals that they might consider to be a tasty meal. Speaking of eyes, snakes don't have eyelids, although they do have a thin membrane called a brille that protects them. They also don't have ears but do have bones in their lower jaws that allow them to feel vibrations from animals near them.

There are around 600 venomous snakes, but of these, only about 200 are dangerous to humans. Only cobras, vipers, and some related species hunt prey using venom. Other snakes kill their prey by swallowing it alive or constricting it until it dies and then swallowing it. Since snakes have no teeth, they almost always swallow their prey whole. They are able to eat animals three times the size of the width of their head, by unhinging their lower jaw from their upper jaw. This being the case, large snakes sometimes eat crocodiles and cows.

Snakes have undulated—that's their slithering crawl—into the hearts of many. Today, on World Snake Day, these snake enthusiasts celebrate and raise awareness about them. Fears and misconceptions about snakes are dispelled, and an effort is made to conserve these cold-blooded reptiles, so that others may cherish them, and so that they may continue to fulfill their crucial role in ecosystems around the world.

American Redneck Day !!! ... July 3rd .... There is a reason it falls on the 4th of July Eve.....Rednecks and redneck cu...
07/03/2024

American Redneck Day !!! ... July 3rd ....

There is a reason it falls on the 4th of July Eve.....

Rednecks and redneck culture are celebrated today. "Redneck" is a somewhat complicated term that means different things to different people, and its meaning has continued to shift over time. The word as applied to Americans dates to the late nineteenth century, when it referred to farmers with sunburned necks. Shortly thereafter, some southern Democratic populists wore red neckties or kerchiefs as a symbol of pride and embraced the name. Similarly, in the early twentieth century, coal miners who belonged to unions were also associated with the term and embraced it as well. However, the term has also often since been used as a slur or pejorative.

As the twentieth century progressed, the term became associated with poor, Southern whites, particularly men, who usually lived in rural areas. They were seen as being unsophisticated and uneducated. Another similar term often used to describe them was "hillbilly."

By the 1970s, "redneck" was being applied to those who lived beyond the South, and a wide amount of assumptions and stereotypes were made about people who were labeled with it. Some who were given the moniker embraced it, or embraced it in part, while some rejected it. Some of the attributes ascribed to those characterized as rednecks were that they were in**ed, uneducated, truck-driving, ultra-conservative, uber-patriotic, gun-owning, backward, and against modernity. Some were labeled as racists, and some were seen as being "white trash."

At the same time, the 1970s brought "Redneck chic." This saw it as fashionable to be viewed as a redneck, and the connotations of race or class were not a part of it. Instead, it involved many people pretending to be rednecks, in areas such as their dress—by wearing western clothes—and in the music they listened to—by listening to country music, such as the Outlaw sounds of Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson. In the 1980s, there began to be more "upscale rednecks," mirroring films such as Urban Cowboy, while at the same time there were still actual poor "rednecks."

In the 1990s, the country music boom and the rise of blue collar-comedians such as Jeff Foxworthy brought the redneck aesthetic to an even wider audience, and like the "Redneck chic" of the 1970s and the upscale Urban Cowboys of the 1980s, it to had an underlying level of sophistication to it. For example, many of the country music stars and comedians of the time, and up to the present day, were college-educated and wealthy, while marketing their material to a working-class and non-college-educated audience.

As is apparent, there are many views of what "redneck" means and who is a redneck. Some embrace the term and see it as a symbol of pride, while some reject it. Regardless of your views on rednecks or redneck culture, today is a day to remember the impact it has had on America.

Saving our poultry one trap at a time.  A surprise little critter in our live trap this morning 🦊443.521.0247
06/19/2024

Saving our poultry
one trap at a time.
A surprise little critter
in our live trap
this morning 🦊
443.521.0247

Address

Vienna, MD

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm
Saturday 9am - 5pm
Sunday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+14435210247

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