pabearhunter
Well-known member
MAYBE some of these " hunters " should mount the TRAIL CAMERAS TO THEIR FRONT BUMPER !!!!!!!
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My new company is doing R&D for a new heat seeking missile to attach to drones if it takes place. We started out with the original Hellfire missiles but with all the early season fire concerns we had to modify it with a nonflammable explosive. Still working to minimize meat damage....
My new company is doing R&D for a new heat seeking missile to attach to drones if it takes place. We started out with the original Hellfire missiles but with all the early season fire concerns we had to modify it with a nonflammable explosive. Still working to minimize meat damage....
Not if my petition has anything to say about it. 2018 if going to be a great year.
I can't say why some people have a fit over cameras, I don't like cameras that send your images to your cell but a simple camera is fine, I use a couple of them most of the year. Luckily I've never had anybody steal my cameras but then I go places that aren't popular.
It's sad how pitifully poor reading comprehension has become, but then again, writing skills are pretty bad too so I guess it makes sense that people have a hard time understanding the written word nowadays. I don't see where the regulations stop you from using a camera during the hunting season unless it can transmit the pictures remotely. I guess, if you wanted to force a specific intent on the purpose of the regulations (preventing any cameras from being used during the season) you could say that simply providing a picture of an animal having been in the area is relaying information about the animal's movement to the hunter but I'm not sure that they meant that. It would have been far better if at that meeting of the "experts" they had simply said:
'any game camera can be used during the season as long as it can not transmit pictures remotely to another device that is more than 10 feet away', or
'no game cameras can be used during the hunting season'.
Why is it so hard for the Montana FWP to write simple, easy to understand regulations? How hard is it to come right to the point? I always get the feeling that we have a bunch of self impressed "experts" that are more concerned with trying to impress everyone with their over complicated rhetoric rather than just being servants of the people that want us to understand the rules.
interesting thread. First I am new here so go easy on me. Is the adversion to trail cams in general due to elk and mule deer being easier to pattern?
Where I live it is very common place to run trail cameras year round, and I have never heard anyone elude to the fact that doing so would be unethical. I do have to agree having one transmit a pic to you while in the field is not ethical and diminishes the hunt part of hunting.
Seriously, I am a south easternerer..lol....like Ga. Its a different world I know. Near everyone runs cameras here throughout the year. I personally run cameras for a number of reasons, and I have 8 total. Hunting here is much different than out west. I guess you could say everything is scaled down and thicker. I can't rightly say a trail cam pic has ever been a reason for success on any particular animal for me. If fact I have only taken one buck that I know I had a picture of previously, and he was taken over 400 yards from where the pic was taken. Again think thick like 30 yard shots...lol different world I know. I use cameras to monitor a stand I have set for deer, If I get pics of a person in an area...I will move the stand. I have used cameras almost more to monitor human or vehicle traffic on an area here as much as animals...lol placed high in a tree over a road or trail I can see how much use an area is getting and nobody finds my cameras set that way.
It has to do with fair chase. And your definition of fair chase may not be the same as mine. If I can set up a trail cam during the season. Leave it up all week, go check it and see I don't have animals in the area, then go check another one and see I do, thus I hunt that area, is that really fair chase? I say no. It's not. How is that really different from using a drone. Sure the drone can be real time, so there is a little difference, but is it that much in this case?
There's quite a few laws that go to fair chase. Bear bait. Fair chase? To MT no. To ID yes. Feed plots? Ect.
Fingers crossed drone scouting approval coming soon.