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Called a cat in.
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<blockquote data-quote="Deleted member 115360" data-source="post: 2238623"><p>I believe the same thing. I've called up a few cats that I was able to see, but I imagine that I've called in a whole lot more than I've seen. Generally when I see one, it's just a glimpse, and it gives me the impression that most of them pass undetected. We have plenty of them where I live, but they seem to stick to the thick brush. I see tracks all over the place, and call right on top of them. Their senses seem to be far better than a coyote, except smell. They don't seem to circle for wind, but I think they think nothing of standing 10 feet into a tree line and observing for as long as it takes for them to be comfortable. I think they will often sit there watching for 10 minutes or longer, and when you have had enough of that gnat buzzing your face and decide to almost imperceptibly push it away, they see it and are gone. I also think their color perception may be much better than a coyote. Coyotes only see in 2 shades as I understand it, and unless they see motion, you can get away with a garbage camo job, but cats seem to see everything. Disclaimer: everything I just said may be wrong, it's only what I've observed.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Deleted member 115360, post: 2238623"] I believe the same thing. I've called up a few cats that I was able to see, but I imagine that I've called in a whole lot more than I've seen. Generally when I see one, it's just a glimpse, and it gives me the impression that most of them pass undetected. We have plenty of them where I live, but they seem to stick to the thick brush. I see tracks all over the place, and call right on top of them. Their senses seem to be far better than a coyote, except smell. They don't seem to circle for wind, but I think they think nothing of standing 10 feet into a tree line and observing for as long as it takes for them to be comfortable. I think they will often sit there watching for 10 minutes or longer, and when you have had enough of that gnat buzzing your face and decide to almost imperceptibly push it away, they see it and are gone. I also think their color perception may be much better than a coyote. Coyotes only see in 2 shades as I understand it, and unless they see motion, you can get away with a garbage camo job, but cats seem to see everything. Disclaimer: everything I just said may be wrong, it's only what I've observed. [/QUOTE]
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Called a cat in.
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