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🦝 Trap smarter, not harder — humane control with professional-grade durability!
The Havahart 1079SR is a large, heavy-duty live animal trap designed for humane capture and release of raccoons, cats, bobcats, and other medium-sized wildlife. Featuring a galvanized steel frame and a precision trip mechanism, it offers rust resistance, durability, and reliable performance in all weather. Its 1-door design maximizes capture success while smooth edges and handle guards ensure safety for both animals and users. Ideal for professional and home use, this trap delivers ethical, effective pest control with decades of trusted expertise.








| ASIN | B00004RAMT |
| Best Sellers Rank | #631 in Patio, Lawn & Garden ( See Top 100 in Patio, Lawn & Garden ) #55 in Pest Control Traps |
| Brand | HAVAHART |
| Brand Name | HAVAHART |
| Color | Silver |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 18,123 Reviews |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00036348561019 |
| Included Components | And Stray Cat Cage Trap, Groundhog, Havahart 1079 Live Animal Professional-Style One-Door Raccoon, Opossum, User Guide |
| Is Electric | No |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 32.29"L x 13.1"W x 11.1"H |
| Item Type Name | Other Garden and Outdoor Equipment, Accessories |
| Item Weight | 4.51 Kilograms |
| Manufacturer | Woodstream Corporation |
| Manufacturer Part Number | 1079SR |
| Material | Metal |
| Material Type | Metal |
| Model Number | 1079SR |
| Number of Pieces | 1 |
| Power Source | Manual |
| Product Dimensions | 32.29"L x 13.1"W x 11.1"H |
| Recommended Uses For Product | Animal Trap |
| Style | Trap |
| Style Name | Trap |
| Target Species | Armadillo, Cat, Groundhog, Opossum, Raccoon, Skunk |
| UPC | 036348561019 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
C**P
Cats be gone!
This humane animal trap solved my 2-year, increasingly annoying problem with cats invading my yard and leaving "little messages." This came to a head when they started clawing and shredding my mosquito netting covering a swing a couple months back, including spraying scent all over the cushions of the swing! I had tried many remedies of pepper and other spices to no avail. I even invested in a gas-powered BB pistol and a sling shot, which neither had any effect because the cats were too fast and alert. It seemed as I tried more things, the problems only increased. The county animal control was contacted on 8 occasions to take care of this issue and nothing ever came of those complaints. I finally decided to spend the money and get a humane trap. This one seemed to be of solid construction and would endure the weather. There were less-expensive traps available, but I figured this might be better to encompass larger pests if needed. Within 3 days, six cats were captured, one at a time. County pest control was getting a bit put out that I kept calling them to come by and pick up these cats, but that's their job. I told them if they reviewed their records, they would find all the times I had called them about the problem which they did nothing to resolve. I think I finally got rid of all the cats, because last night the trap remained empty. I had baited the trap with an empty, unwashed can of spam which had a very strong smell that had successfully lured the cats into their captivity. I knew the places the cats were entering my yard and placed the cage near those points of entry. The cats I had captured were hissing, scratching, and biting, attempting to get at my hand. Fortunately, the handle is protected by a metal plate which kept their claws and teeth away from my hand. A couple of the cats had sprayed the cage; however, cleaning the cage was a breeze with just a garden hose. The trap door mechanism has a simple gravity latch against a pivoting bar mounted into the door which prevents the captured animal from getting out by ramming against the door. Each of the cats definitely gave that a try, but the door held firm every time. To open the door, you simply lift the latch holding the bar in position and lift the door mechanism. The door is held in the "open" position with an angled metal arm used as a "hook." The hook is attached to a plate used as a trigger for the door to fall when the animal puts any weight on the plate. As the door falls, the metal bar is locked in place by the latch against the bar so the animals can't get out until you left them out. Using an unwashed can from tuna or spam is my best recommendation for cat bait since the odor is strong and attracted the cats during both the day and night. You would have to research to see what food would bait other animals. If you're having the same issues with any pests (cats, dogs, squirrels, raccoons, etc.), I would highly recommend getting this cage. With few working parts and 100% metal construction, it appears this cage will last for years to come. I wish I would have tried this from the start!
A**R
Buy with confidence
Worked great, comes fully assembled, very easy set up. We had a problem with groundhogs in the yard and garden and this trap worked perfectly. We set it up the night it came and used cantaloupe as bait and had a gotten a groundhog within an hour.
L**F
Worked like a charm!
This thing is awesome. I set it up and it caught the damn groundhog that’s been tearing up our garden just hours later. Big one too and it couldn’t get out. Wish I bought it earlier
S**Y
Havahart animal traps.
Good product, but wire not as thick as older so trap not as heavy as older Havahart trips. A raccoon would probably bend it. Does great for squirrels!!
B**S
Great for Raccoons and other Larger Critters.
Great trap! It worked as described. I have a few raccoons showing up at night in my backyard and caught a big one the first night. Just be aware that the coon may dig a lot over night and tear the ground/grass up around it. I learned this last night lol. Luckily I had the trap in a spot where the grass wasn’t very nice or thick (not yet). The coon can reach through the wire several inches. I may try putting the trap on some plywood to prevent this as long as it doesn’t spook them. I also recommend putting something heavy on top as these critters have some weight to them and may turn the cage over or move it around some with the digging. A+ however for the trap!
A**C
It works but use caution when handling cage to release the animal
Worked first night I put it out! I must say releasing the raccoon was quite the experience. The little devil was scared of course and was trying to get to me with his little hands thru the cage holes. One request to the seller: any way you could place the instructions sheet outside of the cage. Could not read the instructions on how to open the cage since they were out of reach inside the locked cage ! Duh
B**N
Nice, Well-Constructed Live Trap
We are having a particularly intense infestation of 'rockchucks' this summer. A rockchuck is a yellow-bellied red marmot, a close relative of that Phil character that is used to, um, predict the remaining winter in early February. While active, they decimate flowers and vegetables, so aren't desirable. We live very close to the edge of a National Forest, and while we recognize that we live in their territory, I'm more than happy to relocate the marauding garden terrorists back to those forests. Enter the live traps. It took a few reads of the simple instructions to pick up all the nuances. The sheet is written for several related models, with different details for each. After those reads and some head scratching where hair used to grow, the actual setting up was fast and easy. I followed some internet advice, worth every penny I paid for it, as I selected a bait for our particular visitors. Nothing. Last evening at a neighborhood meeting, I found out that watermelon and cantaloupe rinds are favored here. We'll see how we do, hopefully better with the right bait. The trap itself is easy to set up, and it's a size that should fit and hold our rockchucks. Perhaps as important, the size is just right to fit into a large garden-waste trash bag. That's essential before placing a scared animal in the back of the car for a ride back to a wilder place. Plus it will contain any excess pee and droppings that would otherwise end up in the car. It's a ten-minute drive or so to get them beyond any normal 'homing' range, no need to traumatize them unnecessarily. Neighbors who use traps these speak highly of them. I will to after the right bait draws the several beasts who have been feasting on my flowers. I'll update if the results are less than great. ---- Update after a few successful weeks of use -- Thanks to watermelon rinds as bait, 'Rocky' and 'Chuck' have found new homesteads to enjoy, several miles from ours. Neither seemed particularly happy to be in the trap, although each did manage to consume all of the rinds during their visit time. They each thanked me for the food and the rides by chattering their teeth as I gathered them up for the vacation trip. A large lawn-sized leaf bag is just the right size to put the trap in for the rides in the car. It took a little careful lifting and sliding to get the trap into the bag each time. I'll be honest that I tried to do it all gently, but it proved more challenge than I was ready to suffer. The traps went on-end on the folded-out bag, spilling the guest into the bottom end long enough to pull the bag over the trap. Once the bag was tucked closed, safe to put it into the car. Quiet back there with the bag clocking the view. This wasn't a sightseeing tour, apparently; they must have misread the travel brochure. After several miles of forest service road, a pile of rocks seemed the perfect spot for a new rockchuck nation to spring up. Open the door, and the little guys hotfooted it over to the rock formation. Then almost immediately turned tail and hauled butt across the road and off into the forest. After all the love and care I'd put into choosing a new home for them... The bags got tossed and the traps were thoroughly cleaned with the hose and brush. Ready for the next varmint attack and invasion. Rockchucks apparently go somewhat dormant in later summer and fall. The traps will come back out when they decide to come help harvest our garden veggies and flowers again. More: The traps are shipped pretty much ready to use. They don't fold for storage, so be ready for the storage space they will use up. The traps themselves are constructed from plated steel wire mesh and sheet metal parts, and easily resisted the teeth and claws of the rockchucks. Still, I'm not sure they will last if left in outside storage over long periods. I suspect the wire will rust at the weld points given sufficient time and exposure. That probably wouldn't affect function, but appearance would suffer. Hope this helps!
S**O
Cheaply made, dangerous "redesign".
Don't rely on early Amazon customer reviews of this product. It has been "redesigned" (according to customer service) which I understand to mean "cheapened", and rendered more dangerous to release an animal than it was to begin with. The trap you receive is as pictured in the first of the manufacturer's images, but NOT as pictured in their last image which shows a live raccoon in the cage. When mine arrived, I realized an essential part was missing and, rather than return it immediately to Amazon, I called Havahart customer service to see whether they could just send me the missing part. They answered promptly and were courteous and helpful, and told me I wasn't missing a part, rather the part was "redesigned" out of the product, so they had no part to send me. The owner's manual that accompanies the current redesigned Model is for a former model which no longer exists, but bears the same model number. So, the owner's manual you receive does not describe the product you receive. The missing "redesigned" part (see photo of instruction manual) is #2 and #4, the "Door Loop" and "Door Lock Frame". You would use this part to grip and lift the door while simultaneously pushing back the door locking bale when trying to release the captured animal. It formerly served the function of guarding your fingers while raising the door, which was at best a two-handed operation. Without this part, releasing a frightened, pissed animal is now a complicated three-handed operation that keeps your hands dangerously close to the opening door. The manual says to put a "stick" (not provided) sideways under the door, through one side of the cage and out the other side, to hold the door open while the animal escapes. If you need three hands to simultaneously (1) lift the top latch, (2) push back the spring loaded locking lock and (3) lift the door, where do you get the fourth hand to simultaneously push a "stick" through the cage to hold the door open while you move far enough away to not get bitten? There is no provision in the current model equivalent to the missing "loop" and "door lock frame" to grab and lift the door, so you have to put your fingers UNDER the door to lift the door, directly into the animal's path of escape, increasing your chance of being bitten. It's obvious that no design consideration was given to owner safety while releasing the animal. The "redesign", if anything, exacerbated what was already a questionable safety issue for the purchaser. Look at the first "customer image" in the online Amazon reviews. It shows the destruction done by a raccoon to the door that then still included the sheetmetal loop/lock that is now "redesigned" out of the new model. If a raccoon (then) could damage the reinforced door of the former Model 1079, the same animal now could devastate the door of the new Model 1079 that lacks the sheetmetal reinforcement. I've owned four (4) Havahart traps in the last 30 years, and I gave 5-star reviews to three of them. Two stars for the current Model 1079 would be to over-rate it, and to ignore the dangerously cheapened redesign. This model reeks of cheap construction all around, and appears inadequate to contain an aggressive animal determined to escape. The owner's manual suggests you can use this trap to capture a "bobcat". Really? A large raccoon will damage it. Two raccoons working together could open the trap by simply pulling the locking bale out of the containment sleeves. The missing part formerly prevented this, but in the absence of that part, a second raccoon wouldn't need many smarts to release his buddy. If you have basic mechanical skills, some tools, sheetmetal and heavy wire, you can redesign the "redesign" to partly overcome the animal release safety concerns. You need a 1/2" dowel or 1/2" x 1/2" stick to hold the top lock open while you hook a piece of metal coat hanger through a hole in the door. This keeps your fingers out of the animal's path while lifting the door with one hand and pushing back the spring-loaded locking bale with the other. The same coat hanger wire can be made to hook the door up (avoiding the "stick") while you get your hands away as the trapped animal escapes. This fix won't reinforce the light sheetmetal door however. A big raccoon can still twist the door out of shape as it did in the first customer image. You could reinforce the door with an additional piece of sheetmetal or plywood, but why should the customer have to do this at all? It doesn't matter how well a live trap can catch an animal if it can't safely release it. I would not recommend the redesigned Model 1079.
C**E
Superbe cage pour attraper les chats
Il y a autour de chez moi beaucoup de chats sauvages attirés par les chats domestiques de mes voisins, je suis obligé de traiter le problème. Cette cage est parfaite pour les attraper et les emmener un peu plus loin. Facile d’utilisation et robuste
C**I
Humane and good quality!
We had some feral cats hanging around that kept having kittens, so we kinda were infested with them. We got this live trap because it doesn't hurt them, and it is big enough and strong enough that they could get in but couldn't get out. It is made with good quality steel. Even though it has been out in the rain for a week, it hasn't rusted after a month. To trap the cats I put a cover over the cage to disguise it. For about 4 days, I tied the door open so that the trap wouldn't go off, and the cats could get used to the trap without being scared. I put food out every day, but each day I moved the food deeper inside the trap. Once they trusted it, I set the trap to catch them. Once caught, I get a jute bag and put over the opening. Then I open the trap, and they run into the bag. I can safely relocate them without harm to me or the cat. I usually only catch one at a time, but I have caught two at once, and they both fit in there peacefully. This is one of the best investments we have made!
A**I
Enkel, kommer ihopsatt.
Stabil, enkel, prisvärd
C**N
Pour qui ce garage
Réponse regarder vers le sud de Tarifa et au nord de la Mauritanie. J'invite l' Ambassadeur du dit pays à me contacter, pour qu'il sache a quel système il represente, preuve à l'appui et compte rendu d' audiences (38) plus que scabreuses .....où l' on vous condamne sans preuve ni témoin comme ca pour le plaisir.....
M**O
100% recomendable
La trampa es de excelente calidad, funciona a la perfección y sin duda la volvería a adquirir, vale totalmente la pena
Trustpilot
2 months ago
5 days ago