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Double Headed Trap
(Scribner's Monthly, 1880)
North American lobster traps are based on the lobster pots used
for centuries in northern Europe. Simple in concept, they are one of
the most elegant pieces of fishing gear ever invented. Lobsters enter
the trap through a wooden ring called a "head". Once inside, the trap
simply takes advantage of the lobster's natural instincts. When
feeling threatened, a lobster will face the world with its claws
spread wide - making it very difficult to walk out the way it
came in. When feeling panicked, a lobster likes to flee backwards by
flexing its powerful tail. Either way, once in the trap, most lobsters
have little chance of finding a way out.
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