

1000 Middle English trappe (noun, nominal), trappen (verb, verbal), Old English træppe (noun, nominal), cognate with Middle Dutch trappe (Dutch trap) trap, step, staircase akin to Old English treppan to tread, German Treppe staircase to engage in the business of trapping animals for their furs.to set traps for game: He was busy trapping.to execute a trap against (a defensive player).to catch (a ball) as it rises after having just hit the ground.to stop and hold by a trap, as air in a pipe.

to provide (a drain or the like) with a trap.to catch by stratagem, artifice, or trickery.a play in which a defensive player, usually a guard or tackle, is allowed by the team on offense to cross the line of scrimmage into the backfield and is then blocked out from the side, thereby letting the ball-carrier run through the opening in the line. an act or instance of trapping a ball.the piece of wood, shaped somewhat like a shoe hollowed at the heel, and moving on a pivot, used in playing the game of trapball.a device for hurling clay pigeons into the air.traps, the percussion instruments of a jazz or dance band.an arrangement in a pipe, as a double curve or a U-shaped section, in which liquid remains and forms a seal for preventing the passage or escape of air or of gases through the pipe from behind or below. any of various devices for removing undesirable substances from a moving fluid, vapor, etc., as water from steam or cinders from coal gas.

Pitfall trap deer psp#
The South Auckland pilot of the PSP is managed by COMET Auckland (Community Education Trust Auckland). The PSP is currently being implemented as a pilot in three areas: South Auckland, Taranaki and Otago. The Buzz In the Garden PSP project has been funded through the South Auckland pilot of the PSP – a programme that is part of the Curious Minds initiative and funded by the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment. This activity has been produced as part of a Participatory Science Platform (PSP) programme.

This resource was developed by Morgane Merien, Dr Chrissie Painting, Tom Saunders and Dr Leilani Walker for the Curious Minds Buzz in the Garden project.
