Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.

Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.

As a contribution to the cause of game-breeding for the market, and the creation of a new industry of value, Mr. L.S.  Crandall and the author wrote for the New York State Conservation Commission a pamphlet on “Breeding Mallard Ducks for Market.”  Copies of it can be procured of our State Conservation Commission at Albany, by enclosing ten cents in stamps.

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BREEDING FUR-BEARING ANIMALS

When hundreds of persons wrote to me asking for literature on the breeding of fur-bearing animals for profit, for ten years I was compelled to tell them that there was no such literature.  During the past three years a few offerings have been made, and I lose not a moment in listing them here.

Life Histories of Northern Animals”, by Ernest T. Seton (Charles Scribner’s Sons, 2 volumes, $18), contains carefully written and valuable chapters on fox farming, skunk farming, marten farming, and mink farming, and other valuable life histories of the fur-bearing animals of North America.

Rod and Gun in Canada, a magazine for sportsmen published by W.J.  Taylor, Woodstock, Ontario, contained in 1912 a series of articles on “The Culture of Black and Silver Foxes,” by R.B. and L.V.  Croft. Country Life in America has published a number of illustrated articles on fox and skunk farming.

With its usual enterprise and forethought, the Biological Survey of the Department of Agriculture has published a valuable pamphlet of 22 pages on “Silver Fox Farming,” by Wilfred H. Osgood, copies of which can be procured by addressing the Secretary of Agriculture.  In consulting that contribution, however, it must be borne in mind that just now, in fox farming, history is being made more rapidly than heretofore.

I do not mean to say that the above are the only sources of information on fur-farming for profit, but they are the ones that have most impressed me.  The files of all the journals and magazines for sportsmen contain numerous articles on this subject, and they should be carefully consulted.

BLACK-FOX FARMING.—­The ridiculous prices now being paid in London for the skins of black or “silver” foxes has created in this country a small furore over the breeding of that color-phase of the red fox.  The prices that actually have been obtained, both for skins and for live animals for breeding purposes, have a strong tendency to make people crazy.  Fancy paying $12,000 in real money for one pair of live black foxes!  That has been done, on Prince Edward Island, and $10,000 per pair is now regarded as a bargain-counter figure.

On Prince Edward Island, in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, black-fox breeding has been going on for ten years, and is now on a successful basis.  One man has made a fortune in the business, and it is rumored that a stock company is considering the purchase of his ten-acre fox ranch at a fabulous figure.  The enormous prices obtainable for live black foxes, male or female, make diamonds and rubies seem cheap and commonplace; and it is no wonder that enterprising men are tempted to enter that industry.

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Project Gutenberg
Our Vanishing Wild Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.