Jackpine Rob
New member
If it was a mink or a weasel, the one that was "eaten" would have been ripped open and the most delectable of innards would have been eaten (heart, liver, gizzard), leaving the major flesh behind - sometimes for later consumption. I've had mink come right into the duck blind to steal a duck, watched them grab ducks out of the canoe, and can attest that they are sneaky little devils. Thank goodness my labs have been quick and brutal in dealing with such infractions!
A weasel got into the neighbor's rabbit hutch a couple of years back and killed a bunch, partially eating just one of them. He wound up getting snapped by a rat trap wired to the hutch and baited with the head of a baby bunny victim.
I'll be curious to hear what you eventually discover, but my money is on the mink/weasel theory.
If it turns out to be a mink, the skinned carcass will attract in other minks - the little fiends are cannibals.
A weasel got into the neighbor's rabbit hutch a couple of years back and killed a bunch, partially eating just one of them. He wound up getting snapped by a rat trap wired to the hutch and baited with the head of a baby bunny victim.
I'll be curious to hear what you eventually discover, but my money is on the mink/weasel theory.
If it turns out to be a mink, the skinned carcass will attract in other minks - the little fiends are cannibals.