• If you are being asked to change your password, and unsure how to do it, follow these instructions. Click here

Boar Bobcat Duo

Double Naught Spy

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 8, 2012
Messages
401
Location
Forestburg, Montague County, Texas
[ame]https://youtu.be/GS9-DbNhQR0[/ame]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GS9-DbNhQR0&feature=youtu.be


Very long night last night. No reason to go to bed when you need to wake up your kids for school shortly after you get home, LOL.

I got a request from the owner of TBR that included language not appropriate for the likes of the good folks on this forum, but suffice it to say that he was quite upset with hogs having ruined his bowhunting over the weekend and that the hogs were stinking up the area quite a bit, which I discovered about the time I drove onto the property. There is a sounder that moves through the property, possibly two, and I saw neither one despite the long hours, but did manage to have a productive hunt.

Winds were from the feeder and toward me. Nobody had been to the feeder in at least 2 days. Both hogs found something bothersome about the area and were quite skittish.

The second part of the hunt involved taking a bobcat. It was the strangest thing. I was on the way back from photographing the downed boar, had my headlamp on, and was heading down into a large ravine when I spied two yellow eyes reflecting light from the other side of the ravine. I used my thermal spotting scope and determined it to be a bobcat. He was standing broadside to me and watching me. So I unslung my tripod triggersticks, got it set up, checked and the cat was still there. Got my rifle onto the tripod and the cat sat down! So I took my time adjusting the tripod a couple of times and the cat was not moving. The encounter lasted maybe a couple of minutes and now the cat isn't moving any more.

To see the second hog very well at the end of the video, you may need to go to full screen mode.
 
double nutz strikes again! having the right tools makes all the difference. is the pulsar your preferred spotter?
 
My preferred spotter is a FLIR Scout PS32. It actually doesn't have near the optics of the Pulsar, but it is smaller, has a fully contained, rechargeable battery that lasts for still for about 4 hours (rated at 5), and is lighter. I like the rechargeable battery as I don't run the unit all the time and I can generally go just about all night in the stand without running out of juice. As it is an older PS32, no way to do video.

The Pulsar Quantum has better resolution (more pixels, 384x288 vs. 320x340), a bigger lens (50mm vs. 19), more native magnification (2.5x versus 1x), but it runs on lithium AA batteries.

For longer range scanning, I definitely like the Pulsar much better because of the increased magnification. Most of my hunting doesn't involve distances over 200 yards, however.
 
Warning! This thread is more than 10 years ago old.
It's likely that no further discussion is required, in which case we recommend starting a new thread. If however you feel your response is required you can still do so.
Top