Home › Forums › Campfire Forum › More wildlife pics
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Here’s a sampling of my latest game cam pics, all in daylight and taken across the past three days. I keep raising the cam so’s not to keep cutting off the tops of bulls’ antlers, but they are growing fasterthan I’m elevating. I have several shots of each critter (the running bear is not the same as the sow with 2 cubs, which is not the same as last week’s sow with 3 cubs) but will post just a few. My second cam is not working so I need to look into that. So strange, you walk out through the woods midday (so as not to spook so much game) and it’s hot, buggy, crackly and seems like a wildlife desert. Clearly, that ain’t the case. I have another month to play with this, then the cams come down for hunting season. Dave
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This is what can happen too often when you call one in …
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Cooling off …
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Where’d that turkey go?
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They really like this log to play on
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Moving on
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Family swim
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I see you!
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Dave –
Wonderful pixs — you picked a really good spot
to live in — I have been thru your city[ yea – it use to be a real sweet lil town] many times and it is getting trampled, more and more. However it looks like your part of the Mtn is holding up well. I am happy it worked out so well for you. I’am Envious of your good decision to make a “Freehold” there, I hope it holds for your Lifetime! I trully do–
Scout -
That’s pretty neat. Love seeing critters alive and “doing their thing” expecially ones I don’t see (NEVER have seen a bear….period)often, and maybe not ever again.
Probably one of the few people that have been on THREE elk hunts and have never seen a LIVE bull elk. lol
Cows, yes. One trip I never saw a SINGLE species of big game…not one. 🙄
Money NOT well spent, lol.
Beautiful in photos, more so in real life.
Thanks for sharing, David.
God Bless
Steve Sr. -
Must be a good camera. All subjects are centered, even running bear. No fuzzy pictures.
Also no brand stamp, but you might have edited that away.
Elk came in the morning. Everybody else midday or afternoon. Or maybe the opposite…
I see why you want to remove the camera for hunting season. How else can you sit on the same stump? It is a glorious life to be a hunter and enjoy the company of such regal beasts… And to live life gently, and as you choose.
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Between these and the shots that T Downing just posted, I’ve almost forgotten about the hot weather here. Thanks!
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Thanks, gents. Steve, no I won’t be “sitting on the same stump” as the cam. In fact since the big wildfire of a few years ago, year by year the place becomes less and less huntable due to the forest above the visible bench and all around being removed, and thousands of blowdowns like pick-up sticks that hardly even elk can get through, all of which has changed the breeze and thermal patterns and caused the elk to start coming in mostly from above the bench, which is where I sat for years on the ground. There is absolutely no chance of sitting where the cam is or anywhere near the pool without getting scented. But now even when I’m up the hillside a ways they scent me as they come down the trail and I’ve sat there a whole week, daylight to dark and not had a one come in. So it’s a sweet place for cam work but not so sweet as it used to be for ambush. These days I spend most of my hunting time silently chasing bugling bulls, mostly late in the season. For those of you who are rightly jealous of all the game you’re seeing in these shots, there are thousands and thousands of places just this rich scattered across western public elk habitat. Find an area that’s basically dry with no creek or running water source nearby, and that’s out of sound of any road or stinking ATV trail and thus also unlikely to have other hunters around, examine it carefully for wind patterns all times of day and game trails in and out, and you’re in business. There is of course no salt or bait of any kind invilved here but only rare and remote water in a dry landscape. When it rains and water is standing everywhere, nothing comes near these pools.
On other points, yes I do crop these pics to get rid of the date-time stamps which I rarely even think to glance at anyhow as I’m not interested in trying to pattern anything. Bears predictably come in the heat of the day when it’s hot, and elk come mostly in the evenings, and that’s all I need to know (esp. since I don’t hunt bear, or lions, or coyotes, etc.). Deer rarely come at all but it can be anytime. I also crop out excess surroundings in order to enlarge the images for better viewing. All this is done with copies so that the originals are untouched and still full size. This particular cam, I can’t recall the brand and it’s hanging out there on a tree right now so I can’t check. It was a good one when new, a big box using big batteries fairly fast, but it’s old and max resolution for pics is around 500kb. It was given to me. It uses a flash at night. My other cam will take shots up to 2mb and is a little DLC Covert II that uses infrared at night so the night pics are black and white and not very interesting. I can see no difference in the way elk react to infrared or white flash at night; neither seems to spook them off. But I just don’t like the idea of bright flashes going off out there in the nocturnal woods. That’s what lightning’s for. It’s fun, this off-season cam hunting but I would never bait for it, which is illegal anyhow here in CO at least for bears, and I say good. Cheers, dave
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Thanks Dave.
Trail Cams for me are kinda like catch and release fishing. I set ’em where my spring scouting says I should get good shots. There are a couple mineral licks I cover with a camera but they are not hunting holes. Honestly they make a great testing media. My sons as I teach them to read sign and understand the woods, they are making decisions based on that, this years cam locations were picked by my eldest. Turns out the cams verified his thoughts on where the best spots would be.
I take my cameras down in late August because if I don’t they’ll get stolen, even here on private property. I learned that lesson the hard way.
Minnesota is weird on baiting. It’s legal for bear but not deer, however if it’s a liquid that is ok, BUT, they have no problem with feeding deer. Strange lot.
I never stop tramping around my backwoods, I’m out there year round. Between Bushcraft and Camping and getting the kids out there is no downtime for me. Having the cams up just heightens the experience, seeing what sometimes is never seen.
I don’t have an opinion regarding hunting over them for other people. Life’s too short to go through it making judgments on others, figure I got enough to worry about without concerning myself with others. I’ve mellowed as I’ve aged, I used to spit fire and brimstone on such things. Years come and go as do people, in the end we have what we did and that’s probably enough for all of us to be concerned with.
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Good words,Croatoan. Like you, I don’t care if others use cams for “scouting” or not. I just don’t choose to use them myself, or any other modern tech shortcuts in hunting, because I love the challenge, the mystery, the surprise, that feeling you get when you have a baited line way down in deep dark water that anything is possible. In a word, mystery. So what may seem at first glance as judmentalism on my part, in fact is sympathy that in an activity with such a great depth of possibilities for personal growth and satisfaction, so many folks forego that great bounty of possibilities in favor of shortcuts. Ultimately, so long as it’s legal and ethical, I don’t care what others do unless it directly affects either what I do, or the welfare of the animals we hunt, the protection of their habitat, or the present dignity and future of traditional-values hunting, no matter the chosen weapon. Anyone who has experienced the horrendous ATV problems out there on public land, or understands the politics and threat of allowing x-guns in archery seasons, for two prime examples, knows that my disdain for these things is hardly judgmental or preaching, but simply stating hard cold facts about technologies and personal actions that are directly hurtful to a majority of hunters, to the dignity and future of our sport, to wildlife and the habitat that supports us all. As offensive as I may sound at times (in both senses of the word), I am coming from a purely defensive stance. Other issues, like trail cams and baiting, are certainly fair game for open-minded discussion of different views, but I really don’t care what others do so long as their actions don’t stomp on my boots. Cheers, dave
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T Downing wrote: Awesome pics. Dave you need to share the pics of the cougar visiting this sweet spot during the heat of the day!
YES!!
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T and Alex — I posted that pic and several others on another thread started by Croatoan, a week or so ago. But here it is again. I’ve since removed the aspen sapling blocking the kitty’s view.
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Great pictures Dave.
I wonder if anyone caught that mtn cat on camera in CT that was killed by a car recently. That would have raised a few eyebrows there. DNR tests on the cat DNA tells us it was a traveling cat from SD via WI, or so they say. Amazing creatures aren’t they?
Trail cams are fun. I have several, and I especially enjoy the pictures this time of year. Fun to catch normal traffic, and the animals everyday activities and movement on camera. Waiting to catch a bear moving through my part of WI. They have been sighted just north of me, and I’m not too far from a large swamp, so it’s possible.
Thanks for sharing.
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Outstanding shots,dp…and kudos on your Campfire Philosopher’s “Beginners Mind”. 8) Wayne
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Those are cool pics Dave. I’ve been thinking about picking up a game camera lately but just haven’t committed yet. Here’s a few pics of some of the critters I’ve come across lately in my scouting forays.
<img src="[IMG]http://i330.photobucket.com/albums/l434/rhooley/P1010168.jpg
[IMG]http://i330.photobucket.com/albums/l434/rhooley/P1010077.jpg” alt=”” /> -
Thanks, Wayne, good to know not everyone hates me. 😀
Rick — Your pics beat mine to pieces because you, rather than a robot cam, took them. We haven’t had a pine marten here since the fires of ’01 (or was it ’02). They used to entertain me frequently when sitting on stand. Have you ever seen one run flat-out? Pure greased lightning and with such short legs. Love the muley fawns and the scenery where the elk are. I belive that boot-leather scouting before season, and to some extent game cams if we’re not just using them to advantage in hunting, really help us to open our eyes and minds to all the beauty and life going on out there.Because trad bowhunters usually spend more time in the field scouting and hunting, and have to be invisible, we see, thus experience and enjoy,more of undisturbed wild nature than anyone else. What a blessing. Dave -
It’s all fun. After I posted the pics above, I haven’t gotten another one, of anything (that is, some six weeks). It’s not unusual not to have elk here in late summer, as they mostly are higher, but I’d expect the bears to keep swimming and am yet to get a pic of a deer. That lion I got in the fist batch of cam pics may have something to do with the dearth of deer. Oh well, the cams come down in another week, or will get moved closer to home where I don’t hunt. Sure has helped me get through a boring summer and motivates me to take long walks at midday on hot buggy days when I wouldn’t otherwise. Much like hunting in that way. If I knew I had a hot spot that was being regularly visited, I’d set the cam for video. I’ve watched bears splash around in spring pools several times but a video would be cool. dp
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