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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Trapping
Bobcat set pictures
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<blockquote data-quote="JhnDeereMan" data-source="post: 5219969" data-attributes="member: 21586"><p>Here are the best I set pics I have right now. One you can see is a side by side trail. Broom sage field on one side. Old Dozer push pile that is 100 yards long on the other. Duck wing in tree coming out of dozer pile hanging above set. </p><p></p><p>Cat on the log was a walkthrough between two log ends. It was on the edge of a overgrown field and wood lot transition. </p><p></p><p>Last pic is on the back side of a levee in the river bottoms where two fields meet. If you look behind the kiddo holding the cat you can see a beaver slide. They are always good spots to set. Bobcats always frequent a beaver dam area. In this case they would slip up the levee and try to catch ducks at night on the edge of the water.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="JhnDeereMan, post: 5219969, member: 21586"] Here are the best I set pics I have right now. One you can see is a side by side trail. Broom sage field on one side. Old Dozer push pile that is 100 yards long on the other. Duck wing in tree coming out of dozer pile hanging above set. Cat on the log was a walkthrough between two log ends. It was on the edge of a overgrown field and wood lot transition. Last pic is on the back side of a levee in the river bottoms where two fields meet. If you look behind the kiddo holding the cat you can see a beaver slide. They are always good spots to set. Bobcats always frequent a beaver dam area. In this case they would slip up the levee and try to catch ducks at night on the edge of the water. [/QUOTE]
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