Mark, I can only speak for myself here, and I'm pretty sure you meant it in a jokingly manner, but I'm not retired, nor quite wealthy or come from serious money! I can dream though! Lol...Wow! Y’all guys must have retired quite wealthy or come from serious money. I’ve gotten to really know my landowners and have made friends for life, but I have to work a regular 8-5 and do this on the side. There’s no way I could do this without getting paid. Keeping multiple properties as predator free 365 days a year as possible is work, lol. Time is a valuable commodity. I commend you guys that keep y’all’s access areas as free as possible all year long, and do it for FREE. Heck I’d go broke in a few months time. Traps and all associated equipment cost money, gas cost money, thermals and rifles definitely cost money, lol. Working before and after a day job means a lot of lost sleep for me.
Y’all would be a landowners dream down here, lol!!
Thats cheap and a good side hustle. I won’t ever get rich from it, but’s it something I enjoy and can make a little money while doing it. Plus I’ve made some great friends.here in PA the game commission has a course you can take to be a nuisance wildlife trapper. when you pass the course you get a license to remove problem animals 24 / 7 365 days a year even when the problem animal is out of season. the landowners pay for your service. i have no idea what they charge.
the cheaper way for the landowner is to allow folks like limbhanger10 and myself access to remove these critters for free, in season of course.
if i did that as a job, i would have to charge to cover my expenses such as gas and time. i have no idea what that would be but would balance it to be affordable for the landowner as well.
some properties we could make a killing removing raccoons and fox for like 10 bucks each.
if hunters skin the coyotes for life size mounts, prime hides are worth money on taxidermy dot net. just have to watch out for scammers like other places too.