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How To Hunt Big Game
AZ bans trail cameras
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<blockquote data-quote="Bob Wright" data-source="post: 2217571" data-attributes="member: 104363"><p>Elk for instance going completely nocturnal during or before hunting season in 6A. My observations included night surveys with handheld spotlights. Where there were many easily picked up after dark, there were simply none during the day. 6A is heavily hunted, and extensively used for recreation 6 or more months out of the year. The animals adjust, and survive as best they can.</p><p>Placing cams on waterholes, leaving human scent in a large radius, will put notice out that this place is not a good place for elk herds to be. They may come in, but many of our buddies cams pick up mostly nighttime photos, and skittish animals. They grab a drink, plow thru the water and off they go. That kind of pressure, depending on how accessible that particular waterhole is to humans. Seeps and springs in canyons is where you'll find most bedding grounds, not on tanks. They are smart.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bob Wright, post: 2217571, member: 104363"] Elk for instance going completely nocturnal during or before hunting season in 6A. My observations included night surveys with handheld spotlights. Where there were many easily picked up after dark, there were simply none during the day. 6A is heavily hunted, and extensively used for recreation 6 or more months out of the year. The animals adjust, and survive as best they can. Placing cams on waterholes, leaving human scent in a large radius, will put notice out that this place is not a good place for elk herds to be. They may come in, but many of our buddies cams pick up mostly nighttime photos, and skittish animals. They grab a drink, plow thru the water and off they go. That kind of pressure, depending on how accessible that particular waterhole is to humans. Seeps and springs in canyons is where you'll find most bedding grounds, not on tanks. They are smart. [/QUOTE]
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