the door for our trap is going to be something of a rectangle we're going to take our larger scrap and we're going to need to cut this so that the the way this will sit is this will sit on the trap like this that way this curve will match the curve of the trap so we're going to want to measure across 17 squares so 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 squares once you get to 17 squares you want to cut those out and then we want to cut in 15 squares so 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 and then we go across just to make sure when okay so now we just cut across to complete the door so here's our completed door and the way this will work is once we have our cylinder completed put this over and it'll fit nicely like this you can see on our trap it already has a door but the door is going to sit just like this and then you can lift it to get into the trap so that's our finished door next we're going to cut our anti escape devices you're going to need to cut them this way again just like the door you're going to cut them with the curve and they're going to be almost three squares wide they're going to be 13 squares long what I mean by almost 13 squares wide is what we were going to do or almost three squares wide is you're going to measure one two three squares and then you're going to cut inside of the third square and we're actually going to be cutting all of these little hanging pieces off so what that's going to do is give us two full squares and then a little barbed edge and that's going to help prevent the crayfish help keep them from escaping because when they come up to the pointed edge they won't have any place to hold on so I'm going to go ahead and cut this out and I'm just going to go so 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 so 13 squares and almost three so let me go ahead and clear this side off real quick and here's our anti escape device so when we put this together it'll look like that and this will go on the inside of our call or on outside of our cup but the inside of our trap so I'm going to go ahead and cut the other piece and then we'll start cutting the pieces for the bait box a bait box is pretty straightforward you can cut these pieces out of the rest of the scraps so you're going to need six pieces total the largest is going to be this one this is ten by eight squares and if you can see it's going with the curve here so once you've got this you fold over three of the squares leaving yourself with three squares and then five squares on the side and this will be the cover next you're going to need to cut the bottom and this is ten squares ten squares wide five squares deep and then you're going to need two side pieces and these are three squares high and ten squares what and then you're going to need two end pieces and these are five squares deep and three squares tall when you put these all together you make your bait box so I'm going to go over that again when we actually put the bait box together to put this all together we're basically going to do just a simple whip stitch all the way down and all the way back we're only going to be overlapping half an inch here so basically one line of squares is going to overlap another line of squares that way we have a really nice secure connection to do this I like to take my twine and just measure out a roughly three times the length of my trap and I also give myself about two extra inches on each length so I take my line I overlap my two Ed's here so you can see I have these two sides and I overlap them by one square I take a cord and just run it through till I pull about six inches out and then it's all about just going through and just whooping this so it's kind of hard to see right now but I'll do this a couple more times and once it gets a little more stable it'll be easier to see what I'm talking about all right so I've got it zoomed in so you guys can see what I do is I just take a little tab here bring it in through and then pull that out when I pull that tight I have one done so I go ahead and I do that again push a tab through whoops see if I can grab that pull that out and there it is so you just keep going until you get down to the end you see I've done this so far so I go from the top here all the way down to the end then all the way back and then we're going to tie it off so I'm going to finish this off then when we get to the end I'll show you how to tie it off all right so I've got this coming down no to the end here so I just want to finish looping with this first cord because I don't like my actual ends to be on the very end of the trap or they're more likely to be worn down so I just keep doing that looping until they meet there we go so now bang this back through the middle because they're both coming through the inside bring both of them up and then from there on the inside I just tie them off which is a really simple tie and then I double that I do that one more time just to make sure that it's really tight and I take this whole thing kind of twist it together and I tie a simple overhand knot and I find that this just keeps everything together and keeps it from fraying but it doesn't require any splicing or any complicated finishing so once I get my overhand knot I just sort of whoops once I get my over now and not I just want to push it down to the bottom tighten it up and there you go so you can see we've got this seam is nice and secure and that's pretty much how you put the trap together so next we're going to work on the cone all right now we just have to sew our cone together take your comb and just like we did with the main cylinder you want to overlap one row of squares I'm just going to do the same thing I did with the with the actual cylinder and I'm just going to go ahead and start wrapping and overlapping or start wrapping both of these edges together so I'm just going to keep rapping and I'm going to show you what that looks like when it's done you