VOLhunter
Well-known member
If they're cutting down the trees and taking the wood then I'll assume they are in a vehicle. I would be hiding some cattle trops or stop sticks along their routes of access. Spray paint them brown and green, or dig a shallow trench that you cover with leaf litter. Mark the road in a way that you know where they are. If you use the stop sticks or homemade version, take some earth anchors for trapping to keep one end in place.
I had several cameras stolen by poachers and general shitbags who were coming onto our property. They destroyed 1 trail cam but left it only because they couldn't remove the cable. I hot glued the case back together and used it as a sacrificial camera to hopefully catch them again. I started getting some rigid foam and shaping it around the trailcam. Then paint it and hot glued some bark on it. Placed them high in a tree looking down onto a trail. It looked better than a box strapped to a tree. I was able to get trespassing and vandalism charges places on a couple of the areas well known lowlifes. I also began placing 2 cameras in the same area with them facing towards each other. They didn't expect 2 cameras in the same area, so I had video evidence of them taking one. This was much better than circumstantial evidence of them being in the area. With the $ amount being over $500 for the multiple cameras that were stolen or destroyed, the got hooked up on felony vandalism charges.
Another route is if you place your cameras in trees that aren't likely to be cut down for wood. A patch of saplings will conceal a well disguised camera, or rotted stump if you can chisel out a cavity for the camera and screw it in place, covering all but the lens and sensor openings with the original bark.
Good luck, I hope you're able to catch these a-holes and save your cameras.
I had several cameras stolen by poachers and general shitbags who were coming onto our property. They destroyed 1 trail cam but left it only because they couldn't remove the cable. I hot glued the case back together and used it as a sacrificial camera to hopefully catch them again. I started getting some rigid foam and shaping it around the trailcam. Then paint it and hot glued some bark on it. Placed them high in a tree looking down onto a trail. It looked better than a box strapped to a tree. I was able to get trespassing and vandalism charges places on a couple of the areas well known lowlifes. I also began placing 2 cameras in the same area with them facing towards each other. They didn't expect 2 cameras in the same area, so I had video evidence of them taking one. This was much better than circumstantial evidence of them being in the area. With the $ amount being over $500 for the multiple cameras that were stolen or destroyed, the got hooked up on felony vandalism charges.
Another route is if you place your cameras in trees that aren't likely to be cut down for wood. A patch of saplings will conceal a well disguised camera, or rotted stump if you can chisel out a cavity for the camera and screw it in place, covering all but the lens and sensor openings with the original bark.
Good luck, I hope you're able to catch these a-holes and save your cameras.