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This guide aims to help mitigate your frustrations and aid in your pursuit of wild game. Things to be aware of when using a trail camera for hunting. Before we jump into our how-to, it is essential to ...
Maybe your trail camera will capture something unusual, like a mountain lion passing through the state. Or even Bigfoot, like one person claimed to have seen on their trail camera near Remer in 2009!
George Shiras (1859-1942), a dedicated outdoorsman who, in his later years became a wildlife photographer, was one of the first to experiment with cameras to keep track of wild game.
At its December meeting, the Arizona Game and Fish Commission voted unanimously to begin the process to strictly regulate the use of passive trail cameras used for the purpose of taking wild game.
N.H. Fish and Game takes a DNA sample from each bobcat mortality, and that data shows that there is greater bobcat genetic diversity today than in the 1950s. That means a more adaptable and ...
Ten cameras capture lynx, wolves, foxes, coyotes, eagles, and black and brown bears — "just whatever is out here," said Donna Gail Shaw, a co-administrator of the Facebook group.
A female mountain lion and her three cubs were caught on camera in a remote area of Jefferson County Open Space. The intimate moment caught earlier this month is a rare sight for wildlife ...
“They are a beautiful species. They have their own charisma to them,” says Patrick Tate, furbearer wildlife biologist for N.H. Fish and Game Department.
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