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Post by ztbowtech on Nov 8, 2010 18:22:24 GMT -5
who uses this. i am going to order 4 ounces of it. any pics of sets using this and 280 coins would help. (3) 280s are the biggest conis i have.
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Post by Itrapny on Nov 8, 2010 19:25:15 GMT -5
Backbreaker is a good lure and you can make artificial castor mounds and set a 280 in front with a couple sticks as guides
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Post by trapperbill69 on Oct 21, 2012 22:48:36 GMT -5
Works great later in the yr, but i'd use Dobbins Beaver Plus for the first part of the season....Big Sky Beaver lure is another i use mid-late in season?
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Post by markboardman on Oct 22, 2012 3:51:17 GMT -5
Good Stuf!!
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Trapper Jack
life member nysta,alaska trappers assn,nta, foothill trappers
Posts: 523
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Post by Trapper Jack on Oct 24, 2012 6:14:53 GMT -5
Definitely earned its name!!! .. Good lure..
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Post by trapperbill69 on Feb 9, 2014 17:11:38 GMT -5
Anyone have thoughts on ingredients for big sky beaver lure and dobbins beaver plus? ??
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Post by walleyed on Mar 5, 2014 13:14:21 GMT -5
I can tell you that "Back-Breaker" seems to be nothing more than Tinctured Ground Castor absorbed into Silica Gel Pellets which Makes Up about 75% OR MORE of what "Back-Breaker" Consists of by Volume. "Back-Breaker", OR Almost ANY Castor Based Lure Works Fine for Attracting and Luring Beaver but the Actual Amount of PURE Castor by Volume Contained in Back-Breaker is Actually Very Minute. I'd venture to Say That Night Owl's "ONTARIO" contains FAR more Castor by Volume than The Jar full of Silica Gel Pellets That Back-Breaker Actually Is. In Defense of Back Breaker, What a Savvy and Ingenious way of Stretching the Castor's "Active Ingredient" than by Tincturing it and soaking it up in a Jar of Silica Gel Pellets making Fewer Pounds of Castor Go a LONG, LONG, LONG, LONG way. IMHO, Of Course. w
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Post by brandonh on Mar 5, 2014 14:17:38 GMT -5
i never had much luck with backbreaker.. i hear trappers rant and rave about it- and to be honest i dont see it really being that effective. i guess a lot of the hype is over on trapperman so im sure paul appreciates that. i have had good luck using his woodchipper lure which is food based.. normally make my own using castor cut with glycerin and just a dash of tonquin. I have had good luck with Timber, Sweetwater Flattail and Ontario when it comes to commercially made beaver lure
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Post by walshy0913 on Mar 16, 2014 20:47:03 GMT -5
i got 6 plump castors froze up and 6 oil sacks..i was thinking of making up a few small samples to try next year but not till later in the spring..would a castor and food based lure combined be effective??ive been starting to learn a little more about lure in the last couple years and it always seems to be food or castor based never really both for beaver of course..or maybe not that im aware of..and for a food base what would you use..like a poplar or birch oil..it dont seem like they eat a whole lot so what food base would appeal to them other than the ones i listed..thats all they really seem to knaw on around here but of course other types just not nearly as much..so lets hear some other ingredients is more or less what im getting at haha shawn
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Post by silentnight on Mar 21, 2014 14:44:21 GMT -5
i tried it for the first time this year and had success with it immediatly. caught one higher 40s one low 50s at caster mound set with a drowning rig. but that was the only time i used it except for the canine line.
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Post by greggwny on Oct 25, 2014 3:45:15 GMT -5
Makes a great K9 lure too.
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