The Most Dangerous
The Most Dangerous
The Most Dangerous
TECHNIQUES
ADVANCED MANTRAPP/NG
TECHNIQUES
PALADIN PRESS
BOULDER, COLORADO
Other books by Ragnar Benson:
Action Careers
Bull' s Eye: Crossbows by Ragnar Benson
Eating Cheap (out of print)
Gunrunning For Fun and Profit
Hard-Core Poaching
Live Off the Land in the City and Country
Mantrapping
The Most Dangerous Game:
Advanced Mantrapping Techniques
CONTENTS
Ragnar' s Guide to Home and Recreational
Use of High Explosives
Ragnar' s Tall Tales (out of print) Introduction 1
Ragnar's Ten Best Traps ... And a
Few Others That Are Damn Good, Too PART I : MANTRAPS
Survival Poaching
1. J am aican Shark Net 7
The Survival Retreat
Switchblade: The Ace of Blades 2. Rock Trap s 13
3. Czechoslovakian Tank Breaker 19
4. Snake Trap s 27
5. Oregon Helicopter Trap 33
The Most Deadly Gam e
Advanced Mantrapping T echniqu es 6. Afghan Tank Fall 37
by Ragnar Benson
Copyright © 1986 by Ragnar Bens on
7. Heavy-Duty Trigger 43
8. Costa Rican Bridge Trap 47
IS BN 0-87364-356-9
Printed in the United States of America 9. German Head Chopper 55
Published by Paladin Press, a division of
10. Montagnard Cro ssb ow 59
Paladin Enterprises, Inc., P.O. Box 1307, 11. Trail Wire 63
Boulder, Colorado 80306, USA.
(303) 443·7250 12. South African Wire Whip Trap 69
Direct inquiries and/or orders to the above address.
13. Mantrapper's Checklist 73
v
INTRODUCTION
Several comp elling reasons exist for writing a second
book on the subject of mantrapping.
J udging by the number of letters I have received from
readers, people are out there putting the information I
presented in Mantrapping to good use. There is no
doubt that survival-oriented paramilitarists are making
day-to-day use of the principles and tactics of mantrap-
ping. Good sales of my previous book on the subject
in certain countries in the world (Canada and Australia
are two examp les) are especially surprising since these
nations prohibit the sale or advertising of this type of
book. It should come as a shock that most supposedly
macho paramilitary magazines and papers in the United
States won't carry an ad for Mantrapping, and none of
the "blood-and-guts" books are advertised even in the
supp osedly macho blood-and-guts magazines.
Another reason for writing a second volume on man-
trapp ing is that in the intervening years since my first
bo ok on the subject, I have again taken quite a few
international assignments, mostly in rural, difficult-
to-reach places. In many cases, a war was going on in
t h e place I was working. In that context I saw, or in a
few cases even used, some new kinds of mantraps that
I knew would be of interest to paramilitarists.
Gu ns are increasingly difficult for the adventurer to
carry fr om country to country. As a matter of fact, in
2 THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME INTRODUCTION 3
most places in the world, it's impossible to take along or the greatest strain. We'll need to cover that a bit more in
otherwise acquire any kind of firearm. Therefore, the detail in this volume.
only protection a person has who lives out of the As with all of my books, I believe the information
economy is to rig some traps. This in a nutshell is will be helpful and interesting to those of us around the
why I seem to run into so many different mantraps. I world who have chosen to lead interesting lives.
don't like it but, in many cases, it's the only damn
protection we have.
Lastly, people have written to ask why I didn't
include this mantrap or that mantrap in my first book.
They very validly pointed out that the traps they sug-
gested were fairly common. Sometimes the suggestions
were good, and I should have included some of these
traps in my first book. In other cases, the concepts were
more akin to booby traps; the Hungarian Joker is one of
these that I have, in fact, included in this book. It is also
important, in my opinion, to cover in this volume more
urban traps and traps that will get helicopters or other
motorized vehicles.
And there were criticisms. A writer from Connecti-
cut, among others, pointed out that I didn't say enough
about being sure the set looked natural after the trap
was in. Include a checklist, he said, which I am doing in
this volume.
Another writer from Arizona believes I didn't stress
camouflage enough. "You didn't tell us how careful
one had to be to hide the trap," he wrote. Perhaps not.
In this volume, I am going to remind everyone over and
over again that the trapper has to hide the damn trap or
it won't work.
A few people have written to remind me that I don't
know the laws of physics. They are right, of course. My
formal training in physics came in high school so many
years ago that I can't remember what the teacher or the
classroom looked like, much less any "laws" I might
have learned. I have, however, actually played around
with this stuff a bit. I am sorry the anchor stakes pulled
in some cases, or the lines weren't heavy enough and the
trap collapsed. One must develop a "feel" for what will
work and which parts of the trap will have to withstand
PART I:
MANTRAPS
1. JAMAICAN
SHARK NET
App arently this trap, or maybe it should be called a
deterrenc e, is fairly comm on in the Caribb ean. Quite a
few people I have talked to know abou t it. How often
such traps are actu ally used is, h owever, another ques-
tion.
I first heard abou t the J amaican shark net fro m one
of my sons. At the t ime he was a mem ber of a team that
specializ ed in r escuing down ed aircraft. His group was
called in to bring out a Navy Sik orsky HH-3 F h elicopter
that m ade an em ergenc y d own on Mona Island west of
the main islan d of Puerto Rico . T he engines on the
chopp er were b oth gunny-bagged, accord ing to my son.
His team t ook in tents, tools, and equipment plu s two
new engines, setting up shop right on the little dirt
em ergency strip on Mona itself.
The lack of anything except int ermittent rainwater
keep s the p opulation on Mona down close to the zero
mark . It's a nice enough place but withou t fr esh water
and regular service to the main island, Mona is too small
and jungly t o attract m any permanent residents.
Mona Island sits right smack in the middle of Mona
Passage , one of the princip al routes used by the drug
runners ou t of Colombia, and points south. It's fast er
to come throu gh the Windward Passage between Haiti
and Cub a. For several years, though- until the Drug
En forcement Administration and the U.S. Coast Guard
7
8 T HE MOST DANGERO US G AME TAMAICAN SHARK NET 9
rock to slide, much less ro ll. A second point to consider can be set up so that a fairly hefty stone will skid fifty
when building a rock chute trap is that t he stone need meters or more down an access path, grinding up any
no t be terribly large. Most of the time, position is much hapless souls who are in the way.
more important than size. I find that having even a In this case, the simplest trigger is very often the best.
twenty-kilo gram stone dropped from as little as six I used this trap in Ethiopia in 1968. We attached the
meters is terribly disc ouraging. pull line on o ne end to a stake h o lding the rock and tied
You can set up a dy namite trigger system by tying a the other end to a rock. The line was covered and hid-
two-meter piece of line to the trip b ar of a figu re four den a bit off to t he side of the trail. T hese traps served
and hanging the vine down the path. If the trappee more as warning mechanisms than anything, so at t imes
doesn't ac tually pull on th e vine to help h imself up the the installation was not all th at well do ne. One m orning,
hill, he will at least bump it, triggering the trap. Of three of us put in seven traps. Obviously they were not
course if you have a longer piece of line or wire, the trap works of art.
Perch the rock to which the trip line is tied in the
m iddle of t h e path where it will be certain to be dis-
lodged by any.o ne coming up the trail. Leave enough
slack in the line so that the falling stone gathers suffi-
cient mom entum to pull the prop on the trap stone. The
little stone traps can be set up virtually anywhere a
mountain trail takes a sharp turn uphill. It isn't much
work to carry a stone over to the proper place and whit-
tle out a figure-four trigger. Using larger stones requ ires
more coordination b etween Mo ther Nature and yourself.
If a native rock is in the correct place and can be dug
out and balanced at the top of a channeled trail, then it
will work. If not, there isn't muc h you can do to
improve the situation.
The one time I used this trap , I was really surprised
to discover that the people on whom the rocks were
falling did not realize until the t h ird or fourth time what
was going on. I guess they thought it was just bad luck
that boulders kept rattling dow n around their ears! We
were using smaller rock traps triggered with the vine
system previously mentioned. The entire grou p even-
tually climbed up to the vicinity of our camp, but
not before several got bashed pretty good.
load of logs fell on him, ending any association I ever of also finding someone with a car who had the coupons
had with crazy Hungarians. needed to buy petrol are virtually nonexistent.)
On several occasions we had an opportunity to talk
Truth is stranger than fiction and, in this case, readers about what happened over a bottle of brandy. I believe
are going to have to take my word for it that the follow- what Renton told me is true. At any rate, he never lied
ing story is exactly as told to me by Vadliskii. that I know of except to bankers whom he was trying to
It seems Mr. Vadliskii wore out his welcome in the get to invest in his shake machine and, of course, women.
place of his birth when the Soviets arrived in Budapest Mr. Vadliskii said that he and his friends knew that
in 1956. From Hungary he moved to Levice in Czecho- several tanks were assigned to one area on a regular basis
slovakia. Apparently it was in Levice, or perhaps some as a kind of patrol. Everyone was pretty scared, so they
city nearby, that the following incident occurred. (I didn't even throw rocks at the tanks. As a result, the
can't remember exactly where it was, but when the tank crews grew bolder and bolder. (The account would
Soviets occupied Czechoslovakia in the spring of 1968, make more sense if Renton had been talking about
good old Renton was trained and ready. I can't imagine armored personnel carriers instead of tanks. He might
how Mr. Vadliskii lived in Czechoslovakia from 1956 have been referring to APCs without knowing it, but
through 1968 without getting into a bad fight and "tank" was the word he used.)
getting killed, but apparently he did!) Renton and about fifty of his buddies scrounged a
The Soviet pattern of action when fighting poorly thirty-em steel !-beam out of one of the wrecked build-
armed city guerrillas is to launch huge, punitive expedi- ings. It was, he said, at least eight meters long, so it
tions against the positions held by the freedom fighters. probably really did take thirty people to carry the thing
They often used three or four T34 or T54 tanks as a off, like he said.
team to blast down whole buildings on top of the free- The partisans positioned a short span of trolley track,
dom fighters. In that capacity, the Soviets sent their which they tore out of the main line, across a narrow
armor right up through the narrow streets and alleys to side alley along the route the tanks usually traveled.
blast and crunch their way into positions held by parti- I know firsthand that most Czech cities have dozens of
sans. (Until I traveled there in 1978, I never realized tiny side streets or alleys bordered on both sides by
how many buildings had been shot up in Czechoslo- four-story row houses, so the plan sounded reasonable.
vakia, but apparently shot-up buildings were quite com- Apparently, they put the steel track across roof to roof
mon.) as a support for the !-beam. Using a piece of wire rope,
Usually doing so was reasonably safe and probably they hoisted the !-beam enough so that it would swing
pretty much fun for the Soviet crews. They covered with a good deal of enthusiasm out into the main drag,
each other fairly well. Anybody who stuck his nose where the tanks ran.
out was risking an instant trashing. Besides that, there Renton Vadliskii drew a picture of the trigger for me.
really isn't much that one can use to fight back. (Amer- Like all good, effective devices, it was the model of sim-
icans don't seem to realize that common household plicity. The !-beam was rigged so that it was held back
chemicals, agricultural fertilizer, battery acid, or even by a wooden beam that was jammed into a notch which
gasoline that can be used to make explosives and bombs had been chopped out of the alley floor. A kind of
are virtually impossible to acquire in communist coun- teeter-totter board extended out into the road. When
tries. Even if one found an open gas station, the chances the tank drove across the trigger board, it dropped away
22 T HE MOST DANG EROUS GAME CZECHOSLOVAKIAN TAN K BREAKER 23
..
37
38 T H E MOST DANGEROUS GAME AFGHAN T AN K FAL L 39
43
44 THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME HEAVY- DUTY T RIGG ER 4S
p ost on one side of the creek. A big, old sycamore was Since bridges w ere comm onplace and heavily used,
our anchor on the other side. We strung the supp ort there was no need to hide t he traps. T he fact that they
lines and the drop lines a few centimeters ab ove the were so com mon h id them. It was p roof of the old saw
w ater at flo od stage. The entire project involved a huge that the best place to hide a tree is in t he fo rest.
amount of work, but we got the bridge together and We tinkered with the bridge, but t he changes w ere so
subtle th at even those who have used these kinds of
working within a couple of week s.
We used the bridge a couple of times without inci- bridges for years and years can't tell they are walking
dent. What we failed to realize is that we had set the into a trap. Users w ill inspect t he anchor lines to be sure
main supp ort lines t oo low and too close together, and they are sound, but don't seem to notice any changes in
the bridge's basic design.
the whole structure was a potential death trap.
One day I came down to the bridge and found my We built the bridge trap in an attemp t to keep a com-
brother tangled in t he lin es hanging in the creek. He munist guerrilla group that was operating in t h e area out
had unbalanced the structure while crossing, caught a of our cam p. We lived in a sm all rural village while work-
foot in the supp ort when the bottom tipp ed up, and ing on a scheme to teach the far m ers how to grow corn.
literally hung h imself in the water. If the current had Growin g corn in th e tropics isn't easy, especially wh en
not been fairly swift under the bridge, my brother local ru mor has it that some b ad guys are lurking in t he
would have sunk like a stone and drowned. We got him bu sh waiting for a chance to get at the gringos.
out in good shape, but the incident shook us up qu ite We set a series of trap s around our camp in t he hope
that they would discourage casu al enemy patrolling.
a bit.
The trick to getting this trap to work is to carefu lly Curiosity about basic bridge design kept my interest
adj u st the height and width of the main support lines. If up: I played around with t he Costa R ican bridges until
the lines are low and close together, th e bridge will be I figured out why our bridge on the farm d idn't w ork.
very unstable and a casual user could easily drown. Everything wen t along fine for awhile until an o ld
Properly set, the trap will catch the victim's foot rather peasant woman got caught in one of our traps. This is,
than just dump him over the edge, and his natural of course, an occupational hazard of this business. The
response w ould be to try to stay on the bridge, thereb y local people didn't buy that explanation and wanted to
creating an even more hopeless tangle. He won't fall know w ho fi d dled with the bridges and why .
over; instead he will hang over the edge of the water. Paramilitarists using mantraps had best give careful
The trap mu st be strung ou t so that it is so close to thought to the problems this sort of ev ent precipitates,
the water that when a user crosses the bridge, it will and be prepared to handle them.
actually sag so much that your victim w ill wet his feet. There are things the mantrapper can do. Leaking
The design will not work to simply dump th e victim ou t information through the local grapevine will h elp . But,
of course, the enemy-if they are guerrillas-will get
into a deep chasm.
1 fiddled around with this d esign qu ite a lot when I wind of it alo ng with the villagers. This isn't all bad if
was working in t h e city of Platanila in the Golfo Dulc e t h e exact type of trap remains a secret. Guerrilla night
region of Costa R ica. A bridge trap was a natural there patrols will be cut dramatically, which is, after all, one
because of the thousands of similar bridges throu ghout of the desired resu lts of the traps.
the region which th e peasants used to get over the small In some cases , it may not even be necessary to build
traps if one can do a convincing job of getting out the
streams and swamps.
T HE MOST DANG ERO US G AM E COSTA RICAN BRIDG E T RAP 51
50
END VIE W
w - Drop lines
SIDE VIEW
The heavy main support lines are intentionally set too low and
too close together. Once a victim falls off the side of the unstable
bridge, he will be trapped an d held by the t wo main support lines.
9. GERMAN
HEAD
CHOPPER
My cousin, w ho was a Luftwaffe pilot in the great
patriotic war, claimed he and his friend s developed
this little gizmo to while away their spare tim e and, in
the process, k ill some Russians .
H e said t he Russians w ere so dumb they would often
w alk right into the thing. However, I don 't k now how
he ever found out if his traps worked. Once the Ger-
m an s started t o re tr eat, they seldom retook any of the
cou nt ry they lost. I also doubt if any Ru ssian POW s ever
volunteered the information that any sergeant lost his
h ead looking into a h ouse in East Germany near the
Polish border.
The trap was a piec e of fairly heavy-gauge sheet steel
on a line set to swing acro ss the entrance w hen a d oor is
opened. Cousin said his trap w orked best in a room with
high ceilings because t he sheet of steel or tin could then
get up enough momentum to d o a good cu tting j o b.
Other than the fac t that the tin would be tough t o hide,
there is no reason the trap w ouldn 't work out in the
w ilds. The trigger is a b it Mickey Mou se but, given a bit
of t ime to make adjustments, probably would work OK.
As a practical matter, it would seem to me t h at
p eople entering buildings w ould be especially alert,
m aking them very hard to trap . But that m ay not always
b e t he case.
55
56 T H E MOST DANGEROUS GAME GE RMAN H EAD CHOPPER 57
'
r>' '
This trap works best w he n the spring pole is very stiff and tight.
63
62 T HE MOST DANG ER OUS G AME
63
64 T HE MOST DANGEROUS G AM E T RAIL WIRE 65
of his neck. People w ho saw him in the hospital later some guys are c oming toward you riding on top of a
said it w as a miracle the wire didn't sever the fellow 's truc k, it is possible for you to run out and get a wire
nec k or an artery. If the wire would have held instead of stru ng across a road on a minute 's notic e (including
breaking, it would probably have done the second stealing the wire from the phone compan y).
fell ow in. In the case of troops rid ing on top of a truc k, the
The wire-across-th e-trail gambit is an old, old man- effect can be devastating assuming, of course, the r oad
trapping concept. It has m ore recently been used by the n arrow s between two buildings or other obstacles where
Hu ngarians against the Ru ssians in Budapest, by the the w ire can be strung. The driver w ill never see it. After
p artisans again st the Germans o n motorcycles in Yugo- being hit a tim e or two , the guys ri ding shot gun w ill get
slavia, and I am told by th e Sp anish during their civil very sloppy about watc hing what 's going on. They w ill
war. instead tend to hunker down in the truc k and ignore the
To work successfu lly, several elements must fall into side of the road.
place. A wire that is thin enough to be invisible, yet T he Moro Natio nal Liberation Front and New
strong enough to cut the victim when he hits it, works People 's Army (NPA) use the trail wire to nail regular
well; ropes and vines don 't. The wire has to be set in army troops in the Philippin es. T he crazy thing abou t
such a way that it and its ancho rs give as little as pos- the se guys operating down on the island of Mindanao
sible. A slack wire pulls; a taut w ire cuts. One last is that they keep using the same trap over and over and
element that people intu itively know b u t don't articu- the Filip ino soldiers k eep getting hit time after time.
late is that the quarry has to be moving into the wire at
a pretty good clip. A walking horse isn't fast enough,
but one gallop ing down a trail might be O K.
If parts of the vic t im's body are exposed-he's travel-
ing in an APC with his head and shoulders expo sed, for
examp le-and going fast enough, it doesn't even matter
a whole lot where the wire hits him. The impact will
probably be fatal.
I have heard about, but not seen, wire trap s that are
sprung as the victim approaches. In other words, a trig-
ger device pulls the line tight as t he motorcycle or what-
ever approac hes. This is d o ne so that the wire cannot
be seen un til it is to o late. In most cases, I do not feel
the added work required to install trip set-up devices is
worth the problems involved. These wires are not
easily seen under even ideal circumstances. If the trap-
per starts fid dling around with t rip set-up mechanisms,
he will gain very little and the element of surp rise may
be lost.
On e of t h e greatest advantages to the wire trap is that
it is cheap, easy, and quic k to put in. If you know that
12. SOUTH
AFRICAN
WIRE WHIP
TRAP
This trap is one of the most effec tive mantraps I
know, having the unique ability to chop up an entire
company given the correct circumstances. It is easy to
set and requires few hard-to-get materials. On the down
side, it can't be made from vines and logs, either. The
trap requires altitu d e to work, so is best imp lemented in
the mountains. It requ ires lots of wire and a heavy
r ound rock, as well as a fairl y unique terrain.
A lengthy column of troops can be taken out if the
roc k can be set up to roll toward the rear, dragging the
wire line down the path up which the troop s are mov-
ing. T o really work well, the trigger should spring the
trap from afar, so that the wire has some time to gain
momentum before it hits the first man. Traveling at
fairly high speed, wire will cut through virtually any-
thing, especially people .
Th e wire must be placed at about belt level alo ng the
trail so that, as it pulls tight, the victim has little chance
or ability to dodge out of the way. What we are trying
to do is pull the wire , which is in a "U" shape, down the
trail at great speed. T his trap won 't work without a long
piece of approximately 16-gauge wire. Heavier wire
would be better, but it doesn't cut as well as it should.
Sixteen-gauge wire breaks too easily, but it cuts nicely ;
use it as a compromise. Barbed w ire will tear up a col-
umn, but it is very difficult to get it to whip down a
69
70 T HE MOST DANGEROUS GAME
SOUTH AFRICAN WIRE WHIP T RAP 71
In the wire whip trap, the e nemy will cause a trip rock, which is
balanced on two sticks, to roll dow n the mountainside. This rock
is attached to a larger rock further up the hill, w hic h will also roll
down rather quickly , causing wire hidde n alon g the trail to whip
I
across the trail and hillside at great speed.
In this variation of the wire whip trap, the enemy w alks into a
trip spring in the trail , causing a peg to release and a heavy rock
to fall . Barbed wire, which lays over a barrel, will also be for ced
downhill as the rock falls . This action w ill cause the rest of the
wire to whip across the trail and injure everyone in its path . •
72 T HE MOST DANGEROU S G AME
plac es in the world the women work harder at this tered . Digging any kind of hole was tenuous since the
sort of thing than the m en) is involved in oth er p rojec ts sand was so loose.
when the enem y is in your area. Keep in mind that some After a bit I realized that at night the Somalis navi-
m antraps require a huge number of man-hours to install. gate by trees and often passed under certain ones. We
Sometimes there are other reasons for setting man- tried dropping a log on them fro m a few of these cen-
traps, such as to boost morale or occupy idle han ds . tral navigation trees and also fas hioned som e tension -
Yet, in real life these situ ations do not seem to occur mounted, spiked catapults that we thought should
as o ft en as one would h ope. Someone almo st ahvays work.
w ill lament the fact that this enemy or that enemy can The fir st rule, then, is use the environment-don 't
walk right in at any ti me they please without fear or fight it. Use what n ature provides and adapt it to the
concern. That's the time to speak up and tell your fol- surroundings. Work done to bring in big logs or rocks
lowers that if they are willing to wo rk th eir asse s off, from afar is a waste.
something can be done even without explosives or
other "modern" accoutrements of war.
Probably the easiest place in which I ever tried to set
a m an trap is in a large city. There are all kinds of situa-
ti ons in cities that people take for granted that are ideal
for mantrap setting: ro cks, blocks, and bricks are every-
where. So are holes, railings, stairs, m oving vehicles,
buses, trains, elevators, elec tric wires, and a host of
other similar opp ortunities.
Outsi de of the cities, the easiest, most div erse places
to set traps are in the mountain s of the western United
States and other similar plac es, such as t he southern
Philippines, the central mountain s of Turkey , and
northern T hailand. These places h ave got it all: slippery
mu d trails, big trees, heavy underbrush, steep hills,
rocks, and waterfalls. It isn't h ard to fin d something to
use that w ill w ork as a mantrap.
The tou ghest place initially for making mantraps that
I worked in was the scrub desert of southern Somalia.
There just didn't seem to be much to work with or even
much opportunity. T he country was so open that
p eople walked wherever t hey pleased without establish-
ing a pattern . After I was in Somalia awhile, I realized
that sometimes fo ot traffic was naturally fu nneled into
or through specific areas. We fi gured we couldn 't drop Materials used to make a successful mantrap must be common to
anything on anybody because the land was as flat as the are a and blend into the environment.
y our hand , and the few trees around were widely scat-
76 T H E MOST DANGEROUS GAM E MANTRAPPER 'S CH ECKLIST 77
15. TRAP
CHICANERY
There is a p opular legend that during the time of the
revolution, freedom fighters in Hungary often put din-
ner plates made of china in the streets to keep Soviet
tanks out of the neighborhood. I heard that the same
tactic was used in South Korea during the war with
China and North Korea, Campuchea when the Kh m er
Rouge t o ok over, Lebanon, and even the Philippines
during the battle with the Japanese.
In every case, except Campuchea, I tend to believe
that there is an element of truth to the accounts. Plates
can be mad e to look similar to land mines, causing
chary tank commanders to think twice before they
storm on ahead d own the road. Campuch eans don't
usually use plates, as we Westerners think of them, so
the tale may be apocryphal.
True or untrue, the co ncept may be important for
people who get involved in the business of trapping
people. I say maybe, because a lot depends on why
one is setting mantraps. My goal had always been to use
the traps to make the enemy more cautious and uncer-
tain when moving through my territory. In almost every
case, the traps did not seem to keep the bad guys off
my turf if they tru ly wanted to be there. It's just that
they came less frequently and, when they did come by,
their movement was slowed considerably.
Mantraps raise the ante for intruders and give the
89
90 T H E MOST DANGEROUS GAME
Q
look like an antitank gun, or a couple of kilos of putty ~·. ~
e
-:\
can become a plastic look-alike. We have made fake
~
~' •
LAWs (light antitank weapons) out of sewer pipe, "*- (j
ing done all that, he said the skin was only worth three we w ere u sing by dumping t en or twelve barrels o f
dollars because it was damaged. We tried to sell the Bunker C o il on the pavement. Anybody who wanted
skin to another d ealer and when that wasn't possible, to drive up-a t axi lo aded with dynamite, for instanc e-
decided it was time for something else. had to turn a T-corner and then had only about twen ty
Old Man Mau er lived at the edge of town on a small meters of street before the drive went sharply uphill.
grassy knoll. A longish U- shaped paved lane accessed t he (It was only a m ak eshift arrangeme nt until we m ade up
fron t door, behind which he had a small garage. Because some barrels of concrete, but I never saw anyone, frie nd
the driveway to the street was so steep, the old skinflint or foe, drive up the hill un til we treated it with pea
paved two strip s the width of his car tires so he could gravel.)
shovel ou t easier in the winter. A fenc e surrounded his There have been a number o f time s when I have
property and crossed his drive at the bottom of the thought of using the slippery rock or log trick. As I
lane. Whenever the old geezer pulled his car out of the said at t he start, it won't do much m ore than bru ise a
garage, he would stop it on the hill , close the garage guy 's behind . Sometimes that won't be enou gh. Regard-
door, and open the gate at the bottom. He had the only less, it takes little sk ill, imagination, material, tim e, or
aluminu m gate I had seen up to that time, which he even courage t o get traps like these in place.
app arently paid $17 .5 0 for at the co-op, a princely sum
in those days.
My brothers and I scrounged up a lard can full of old
bacon grease, and took it over to Mauer 's place that
night. We slathered it on h is driveway all the way down
to the gate. The lard was kind of grayish brown and
app arently didn't show up very w ell-more luck than
design . There wasn't anything else available th at we
could afford to use to play our tric k on Mauer.
The old skin bu rner pulled out the next morning and
slid right down the hill into the gate. His car didn 't
go through, but it did bend t he gate so that it couldn 't
be rep air ed. One of the neighbors said he almost hit
the milk truck too , but that may not be entirely
tru e.
We have since used variations of this devic e a number
of times. I greased a log that cro ssed a gulley n ear our
c amp at Gatab in the New Frontier District of Kenya.
(There is no way to know for sure, but I believe w e
helped keep the raiders out of t he southern end of t he
valley with this ploy .) In Th ailand, by greasing the rock
fr om which he tossed his net, I caught a guy who was
swiping shrimps out of one of our ponds. And in the
Philippines, we closed the driveway up to a small ho tel
17. FLAMING
OIL TRAP
There is nothing like being the victim of someone's
trap to test its effectiveness.
It was early autumn of 1970. I was camped on Big
Creek about ninety kilometers east of McCall, Idaho, in
what is now the Payette National Forest primitive area.
A fellow by the name of John Sullivan was my partner,
who at the time was in his early thirties. From the time
he graduated from high school, he had worked as a hard-
rock miner in the Coeur d'Alene district. Three years
earlier, an ore car crushed his pelvis, putting him in the
hospital for a year. At the time they finally released
poor John from the hospital, the mining company
officials told him that since he wouldn't be able to work
for at least another year, they would pay his tuition if
he wanted to use the time attending university classes.
As it worked out, John found out that he had an IQ
of 140. He easily did his freshman year in one semester
plus summer school. I guess the reason I liked John so
well was because he was both smart and h ad street (or
field, if you prefer) sense. We met the previous winter
when we both took some of the same geology courses.
By spring our friendship had "set." As a result, I bought
right in when John put together a project to make a few
dollars placer-mining gold in the central Idaho m oun-
tains. A few weeks earlier, he and two classmates went
out and placered the piece of ground a gold dredge sat
99
100 T HE MOST DANGEROUS G AME FLAMING O IL T RAP 101
PART Ill:
ADDITIONAL
MANTRAP
SCENARIOS
18. URBAN
MANTRAPS
I have included urban m antraps here in response to
the mail I have received regarding my first book and as
a result of the practical realities one is likely to face in
the w orld today . Though m ost of t he w orld population
lives in rural areas, a lot of readers are asking about
trap s th ey can use in cities. That's where t hey think
they will operate and where they feel the most comfort-
able.
My experienc es with urban m antraps lead me to
believe that they can be effec tive but usually not in a
leth al sense. The trappee tends to get hurt, not killed;
annoyed, not sever ely deterred.
T h is is, of course, not always the case. Quite a num-
ber of years ago, I w orked in Turkey with a fe llow
named Bill Steadman , who claimed to be a hell of an
urban trapper. I don't k now if it is true or not, but Bill
claimed he waited tw o weeks one time for a neighbor-
h ood deli owner to w alk down a set of stairs from an
overpass onto an elevated subway plat form in Chicago.
At just t he right moment , Bill threw several p ackages of
dried peas onto the subway stairs. The deli owner then
slipp ed down the last few steps and fell over onto
the train trac ks, w here he was crushed by an oncoming
train .
Crazy Bill Steadm an eventually disappeared into the
countercu lture underground in Copenhagen in the early
107
T H E MOST DANGEROUS GAME URBAN MANTRAPS 109
108
Loosening a board or brick on your vic tim 's porch or steps can
cause him to lose his balance and perhaps b reak an arm or leg.