I was out both days last weekend and also 3 evenings this past week and saw this guy every time I have been out so far.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n6oi6bJ2Rq8
A Pine needle falls. An Eagle sees it. A Deer hears it. A Bear smells it
ahh...430 am awakening , rain hitting roof....should be good!
(clip from an article.).have hunted Columbia blacktail hard since I was a kid. No deer I have hunted do a better imitation of Count Dracula than these guys. Their preference for nighttime movement was underscored by an Oregon Department of Fish and Game research project that used cameras keyed by an electronic beam/receiver set-up that took pictures of the deer as they moved through their natural habitat. The cameras were set up on several well-known trails. According to this study, only 17% of all bucks moved during legal shooting hours - meaning that 83% of all the bucks in the study area did not move when it was legal to shoot. In fact, prime buck movements occurred between 10:00 p.m. and 5:00 a.m., with more than 40% of the bucks photographed during the after-dark period being mature 4-point-or-better bucks. Interestingly, during this survey the does and fawns displayed a more balanced travel tendency, with 44% of them being photographed during daylight hours.
I already thought they were tough to hunt..... then you post that!
Holy sweatfest. Straight up in the drk and rain to find piles and piles of droppings ect...ZERO fresh.Looks like 'that' spot is going to have to load up in a month and bit for a re-visit!
Was on one of those trails that make you say " damn , what a place for a trail cam"...then the light goes on , " oh I have 3 in my pack". Cant wait for that SD card to load up as its good for a few months!
I also climbed a tree and aimed it down on the trail right out of sight of anything or anyone.Wedged a rock between the trunk and top half of cam and choked it with some wolf snare wire.
Off to my mineral lick tomarrow , maybe have some pics.
Hey PG, looking very forward to this thread this year. Love the vids you get. That article is very interesting and very discouraging at the same time. The study from Oregon does not really seem to be accurate as far as the vids you have taken over the years. You seem to have lots of daytime footage of BT running all over the place in your library. Could those BT down south see so much hunting pressure that they go nocturnal like WT in heavy pressure areas? The areas you get into may only see a few people a year in the fall and early winter. People hiking all over the place in the summer but not during deer season I wouldn't think. Taking that study into consideration do you think it would a good idea to move fairly quickly through the bush where you know the deer are? Try to jump them from their beds or just to get them moving. The slow stalk seems to work pretty good for you.
sweet this is my favorite thread ever,good luck to everyone!
Going out next weekend (sept. 29th-oct. 2nd) To see if I can't drop my first BT. I'll be packing my camera... don't worry