toboggans.
The earliest fur traders showed up in Canada on ocean going ships and traded for furs with the locals who walked and used Canoes for travel. Eventually Canoes, york boats, trams, and the railways were used. Today snow machines are used to trap wild animals, and most fur is raised on farms, resulting to fur traders using everything from snow machines and ATV's to jet planes.
There's no collective term for a group of canoes, but I suppose you could call it a flotilla.
The French-Canadian fur traders who paddled their canoes deep into Indian territory were commonly known as "coureurs des bois." This term, which translates to "runners of the woods," referred to those who ventured into the wilderness to engage in the fur trade and interact with Indigenous peoples. They played a significant role in the fur trade during the 17th and 18th centuries, often forging alliances with Native tribes.
the fur traders dressed in animal fur that they hunted down
In Canada in the 100 years from 1700 to 1800 there was much need for loggers and lumberjacks. There also were fur trappers, fur traders, and establishments set up to house or feed lumberjacks. There was also a need for men to operate canoes and small boats to travel inland from New York through the Great Lakes region.
The First nations where good fur traders to the europeans in Canada.
The fur traders hunted tiger bevers foxs and other animals with cool looking fur
they transported the furs
Many of the early trappers/fur traders in America were French.
Fur Traders Descending the Missouri was created in 1845.
The First Permanent fur traders settlement was in Green Bay
They hunted and trapped animals to get the fur.