you generally got relatively narrow, fastmoving ones in the piedmont in the mountain region which means if you want to construct a fish trap, i tried in vain to tell this to the hampton history museum, if you're going to set a trap up on a river like that, it needs to be relatively narrow. at least keep in the bigger fix, and at the apex, you keep in a reed container. they're about eight feet. museum directors love them. they're not, repeat not relevant to the coastal plain. much less to hampton. can you think about a trap like road? on the coastal plain, especially the outer coasten plain, you have these wide, wide eschewaries. which are useful for other things, but among other things, the kind of fish traps you find are going to be different. john white got it partially right. devry got it corrected. they should be at the end of the branch, not branched off it. when they reinvented it, this is what they came up with. there were more like three sets. very efficient way, those, thee traps to catch fish. for months on end, it's a positive way to get plenty of fish for summer. but they we