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Cat fight on the bottom. “Back away b****!”Couple of Kickass deer!View attachment 548027View attachment 548028
It is right outside the fenced area of my back yard. You can see the wire fence at the bottom right of the picture. It makes a funnel area where the deer (and turkeys) tend to go on their route through the neighborhood. Houses are too close for any kind of shooting. I got the camera for my birthday and set it up there to see what critters are in the neighborhood. There have been sporadic does in the summer. Bucks didn’t show up until the rut started, and this guy just showed up when the shotgun season started. I suspect he spends the hunting season in little pockets of woods near houses once the shooting starts…Clearly we can’t see what is going on outside the cone of the infrared light. What made THAT spot worth a cam, dixi? I'm curious.
Probably mineral block I would guess.Clearly we can't see what is going on outside the cone of the infrared light. What made THAT spot worth a cam, dixi? I'm curious.
Mr. Humongous still roams. Not a fan of the IR flash, it seems.
I think the deer notice the change in light. They may not know where its from or see the red light, since they are noctournal/crepuscualar animals I think the amount of available light affects them somewhat.What is the consensus on the IR "flash" with these game cameras? On my Browning cameras I've walked by them at night and I can see the dim red lights come for the split second the pic is taken. It doesn't bother the yotes or foxes. I swear seeing my sequences of buck pics at night, as soon as I get a pic of them looking at the camera they are moving off in the next photos. I've actually moved my cameras up to around 6' elevation in the trees to hopefully avoid it next season.