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I don't like trail cameras

RUGER

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This is worse than waiting on Christmas morning or the opening day of bow season !!!


Sheesh will this afternoon EVER get here ???? :crazy:

:D
 
Yes, you are making me wait for my Free Visor, since I am positive I am correct on the first Deer picture time.

You taking a camera with you to view the card in the field? You got a replacement card so you can take one home to download contents? Ever wonder why the member in Mississippi sells so many cards? You be about to find out.
 
Wait till you pull the card and have it in hand... You'll be running back to the truck and speeding the whole way home...lol
 
I have seen lots of dissapointment with trail cams. I learned quickly to hang them chest high and facing north and south if there was any possibility the sun coukd hit them. That was way back in the days of 35mm but I wasted alot of film but had some great pictures of weeds and morning glare. .lol
 
TITANSFAN2104 said:
I have seen lots of dissapointment with trail cams. I learned quickly to hang them chest high and facing north and south if there was any possibility the sun coukd hit them. That was way back in the days of 35mm but I wasted alot of film but had some great pictures of weeds and morning glare. .lol

I remember those days! Thankfully, most trail-cam manufacturers have solved the "false trigger" problems (unless you point the camera directly into the rising or setting sun).
 
I swear, I enjoy running trail-cameras even more than the actual hunting. In fact, once I move cameras off of bait, deciding where to put a camera IS a form of "hunting." It all becomes about the thrill of getting those "special" bucks on camera. Almost as good as seeing them yourself. Almost... ;)
 
BSK said:
I swear, I enjoy running trail-cameras even more than the actual hunting. In fact, once I move cameras off of bait, deciding where to put a camera IS a form of "hunting." It all becomes about the thrill of getting those "special" bucks on camera. Almost as good as seeing them yourself. Almost... ;)

I agree 100%. Getting mature bucks, or any good sized buck for that matter, on camera is a "I got you" moment for me. The most exciting times are when they are at new locations or a new good buck in general
 
BSK said:
I swear, I enjoy running trail-cameras even more than the actual hunting. In fact, once I move cameras off of bait, deciding where to put a camera IS a form of "hunting." It all becomes about the thrill of getting those "special" bucks on camera. Almost as good as seeing them yourself. Almost... ;)

I feel the exact same way.
 
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