I agree about not using bait. Folks hike around on trails and coyotes will use these same trails at night, so human scent to some extent isn't a major concern. Using scent or bait will only set the coyote on high alert. It's just my opinion but the better snare set up is what could be termed a "blind set" A place where a human steps over a fallen tree a coyote may go under. Grass and brush- if the coyote is pushing through that type flora and there is a snare- the snare won't tip it off as a trap. The animals will think it is just underbrush and keep on moving forward.
You need to think about whether a snare should be staked or attached to a drag. The drag (large tree limb) will let the coyote move off the trail- that keeps your good location protected. If you stake and the coyote is trapped, it will tear up the ground and there will be a lot of evidence something is wrong and if you shoot it at the site- you can pretty much forget ever getting a yote there any time soon. With the drag you have to go looking for the critter but they usually don't get too far and sometimes if you deliberately make a sound and listen- you can hear it rustling around trying to get away.
Trapping is part of our heritage. There is a little written by the mountain men but not so much in the Great Lakes area and elsewhere even through furs were big business. I think John Jacob Astor began by moving up the Hudson and then the Mohawk to Schenectady, NY where he met fur trappers that had previously been going all the way down to NYC.
You need to think about whether a snare should be staked or attached to a drag. The drag (large tree limb) will let the coyote move off the trail- that keeps your good location protected. If you stake and the coyote is trapped, it will tear up the ground and there will be a lot of evidence something is wrong and if you shoot it at the site- you can pretty much forget ever getting a yote there any time soon. With the drag you have to go looking for the critter but they usually don't get too far and sometimes if you deliberately make a sound and listen- you can hear it rustling around trying to get away.
Trapping is part of our heritage. There is a little written by the mountain men but not so much in the Great Lakes area and elsewhere even through furs were big business. I think John Jacob Astor began by moving up the Hudson and then the Mohawk to Schenectady, NY where he met fur trappers that had previously been going all the way down to NYC.