Tougher than I thought.
#1
Tougher than I thought.
I just got my first game camera for Christmas this year and I am finding that there is more to it than Ioriginally thought. So far I have left it out twice for about a week at the time. The first time I got 4 pictures of the woods at night and the second time I got 3 pictures of the woods during the day. When I retrieved the camera the first time I noticed that a spider had built a web over the motion sensor. This last time I believe that I did not properly account for the sunset and that triggered the camera. Below are points that I have learned so far on my own, please add to these if there are other points that I need to know
1. I was spreading my corn out too far, it needs to be more centralized to get the deer in the pictures at night. I have a Wildview 0.3 MP by the way.
2. Be aware of sunrise and sunset positions.
3. The deer may not have found my corn and/or are not regularly going to it yet. The corn is being eaten, but the area is wrapped up with squirrels and I think that they are eating a lot of it. I will keep putting it out and hoping for the best.
Thanks in advance for any advice.
1. I was spreading my corn out too far, it needs to be more centralized to get the deer in the pictures at night. I have a Wildview 0.3 MP by the way.
2. Be aware of sunrise and sunset positions.
3. The deer may not have found my corn and/or are not regularly going to it yet. The corn is being eaten, but the area is wrapped up with squirrels and I think that they are eating a lot of it. I will keep putting it out and hoping for the best.
Thanks in advance for any advice.
#9
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Indiana
Posts: 21
RE: Tougher than I thought.
Don't rely on the corn to draw the deer.Set it up on a well established deer route so they find it easily.
Set the camera up facing generally North in the winter. I've had some midday shots while facing south that were unfortunately washed out by bright sunshine.
If your camera will take multiple shots per triggering event, use them. Sometimes you might miss the first deer moving thru, but catch others as they come into range - handy during the rut if it's a buck chasing a doe.
Set the camera up facing generally North in the winter. I've had some midday shots while facing south that were unfortunately washed out by bright sunshine.
If your camera will take multiple shots per triggering event, use them. Sometimes you might miss the first deer moving thru, but catch others as they come into range - handy during the rut if it's a buck chasing a doe.