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Camera on Scrape
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<blockquote data-quote="BSK" data-source="post: 3424052" data-attributes="member: 17"><p>For those with black-flash cams, scrapes are THE best location for your cameras. A good traditional scrape will draw every buck within hundreds of acres. There is no better location to census your local buck population just before the rut.</p><p></p><p>For those with red-glow IR cams, you can still monitor scrapes, but to keep from spooking bucks away, you will need to mount the cameras high and point them down toward the scrape. I would mount them AT LEAST 8 feet high to keep the camera's flash out of the sight-line of deer.</p><p></p><p>Anyone who says white-flash or IR cams don't cause bucks to avoid an area once they've seen the flash has simply never used a black-flash cam and observed the difference themselves.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BSK, post: 3424052, member: 17"] For those with black-flash cams, scrapes are THE best location for your cameras. A good traditional scrape will draw every buck within hundreds of acres. There is no better location to census your local buck population just before the rut. For those with red-glow IR cams, you can still monitor scrapes, but to keep from spooking bucks away, you will need to mount the cameras high and point them down toward the scrape. I would mount them AT LEAST 8 feet high to keep the camera's flash out of the sight-line of deer. Anyone who says white-flash or IR cams don't cause bucks to avoid an area once they've seen the flash has simply never used a black-flash cam and observed the difference themselves. [/QUOTE]
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