Think I have @ least 8 maybe 10 out at the moment


Disturb the deer??
I check em with my Polaris an my little dog rides along of coarse.
But I can stand in the back of the Polaris Ranger an get em 8-10 ft high.....
If your back off the side of the trail a little bit it doesn't take to much of a angle, I mostly use a stick wedged behind the top of the case. My area is side- hills anyway, steep ones at times.mr meat wrote:when you put cams up 8/10 feet how or what do you use to get it pointing at the right angle to hit the spot
mr meat wrote:when you put cams up 8/10 feet how or what do you use to get it pointing at the right angle to hit the spot
Very nice an inexpensive camera mount. I have 3 out right now getting some bear,deer and turkey pics over my mineral sites. I don't use the black flash but my IR cameras seem to work great.Bullzeye wrote:mr meat wrote:when you put cams up 8/10 feet how or what do you use to get it pointing at the right angle to hit the spot
I've made camo camera holders and bear proof ones, but now that I put them up higher I use a very simple and basic 90 degree piece of bendable metal like this.
I simply cut one end to about four inches long and drill a hole to which I use a 1/4 inch carriage bolt and a wing nut to attach the camera, and then two holes on the other end to screw to the tree.
Set up like this you can easily bend the bracket down to the angle you want, and adjust it left or right before tightening the wing nut.
i normally leave mine out for a long time, but with my new job i am far too busy.. haven't had the chance to get out yet.. i love the moultrie and am strongly considering going back to one.. i bought a spypoint and i hate the damned thing.. in due time i guess.. just gotta figure out how to properly use this one, the instruction manuals gives absolutely no proper instruction..Big58cal wrote:I keep my cameras out year round. I can monitor when the deer drop their antlers and know when to go looking, I can monitor the fawn drop and know what the crop is looking like, watch the buck's antlers grow and speculate which deer is which from last year.
Plus, you get the pictures of other critters. Earlier in the spring off of 1 memory card I had pictures of gobblers strutting, hen turkeys, jakes, gray foxes, fox squirrels, gray squirrels, coons, rabbits, coyotes, deer, a coon dog and another misc. critter or two.
As for the type, I like Moultrie cameras and have had good luck with them, so that's all I run. The D-55 is a good camera as well as the D-555. A lot of people for some reason only get 1-2 gig memory cards. With those, you run the risk of filling them up if you don't check the camera for a while. Call it overkill, but I always get 16 gig cards. The cameras will usually accept up to a 32 gig card, but a 32 gig card costs too much. The 16 gig cards aren't too expensive and I've yet to even THINK about filling one up!
I use rubber door stops from the dollar store.Wedge shaped and lets me adjust the angle, made from rubber and won't rot.mr meat wrote:when you put cams up 8/10 feet how or what do you use to get it pointing at the right angle to hit the spot