How about a Ferret?
I live at the Beach and have only seen Woodchucks in the movies or in Books.
I have no expierience with Ferrets but I understand they will travel through the burrow and drive the Woody out…Possibly into a cage for transport to a Wooded area?
As Bosda says, woodchucks and ferrets are not remotely similar in size nor temperament, and I fear the woody will eat the ferret alive. Ferrets can be clever and sneaky, but I don’t think they’ll be great in a fight with a creature 20 pounds or more heavier than them.
If you are not willing to keep a large dog then your best bet is a live trap. A slice of apple is good bait and will attract a woodchuck/groundhog even after is dries out. Once in the trap the problem is disposal. I just shoot them, but I live in a rural area where there are no “citified” restrictions on discharge of firearms. You maybe assured that groundhogs are tough animals. Generally it takes two in the ear to make sure the creature is truly eliminated. I suppose you could take it out in the country and dump it but you need to worry about, first, how the guy you are dumping the animal on is likely to accept an unsolicited addition to his wildlife inventory, and, second, just how you are going to safely extract a frightened 20 or 30 pound, frightened rodent with very big teeth and an instinct for self preservation from a live trap. My vote is to live trap the destructive vermin, take in out into a rural area and shoot it in the trap then dump the carcass for the benefit of all the local carrion eaters.
Liquid and smoke poisons are just too dangerous to use in a populated area or where there are household pets who are as likely to take poisoned bait as the animal you are after.
A .22 caliber piston is ideal for administering the coupes d’ gras.
So what? There are other chucks out there all set to lick somebody’s tires. I’m an old Boy Scout and Being Prepared with the vast panoply of solutions to a woodchuck problem, final or not, is in my interest, and I assume that of others.
People, do not forget that just because he was alive when you caught him doesn’t mean you have to keep him alive. A live trap can also serve as a fine mechanism for keeping Chuck still if your aim is unsteady because of stong drink. A head shot will leave a fine pelt.
Groundhogs are destructive and prolific animals. Wait until a colony commences undermining your buildings or until you walk out some fine morning and find a brown, furry bowling ball actually reclining on the lettice while eating the Brussel sprouts. Wait until you find a litter of groundhog babies frolicking among the nasturtiums. Their burrows cause expensive damage to harvesting equipment and are traps for livestock. To paraphrase Uncle Billy Sherman, the only good groundhog is a dead groundhog.
Don’t get me started on squirrels – rats with furry tails and hell on song birds – or feral cats.
Are we talking woodchuck or groundhog? I thought groundhogs were just a bit bigger than chipmunks (see photos of both at http://www.dougrhess.com/newmexico2005.htm the chimpmunks have the pointed snout).
My parents love feeding them at my uncle’s cabin, but want to shoot them in their own yard in WI. Are the groundhogs in WI as “trainable” as the ones in NM? I know they have different stripe/spot patterns, and are smaller.
Personally, the way to get rid of them is liquid amonia (used cat liter?) down the hole and then clog it up (after the vacuation). Maybe you can use a pipe to stick one end in the hole and pour the amonia down in it and/or later stones/gravel/dirt? : )
[yes, i know the critter was caught, whatever it was.]