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Trail cam placement is key...
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<blockquote data-quote="UCStandSitter" data-source="post: 5338458" data-attributes="member: 22422"><p>I usually put out a mineral lick in front of the camera or look for "highways". Those are the only two reliable ways I know to get those sneaky ghosts on camera. They WILL hit that lick. They WILL travel that "highway". Sometimes I make my own "highway" or travel corridor in tighter spots and then set the camera on that. Those cameras I usually use for population census. The mineral lick is usually closer to a stand and that's what I use to gauge timing.</p><p></p><p>All this lousy advice is just the ramblings of a hick though. Not a professional, just some dude sharing what has worked for him.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="UCStandSitter, post: 5338458, member: 22422"] I usually put out a mineral lick in front of the camera or look for "highways". Those are the only two reliable ways I know to get those sneaky ghosts on camera. They WILL hit that lick. They WILL travel that "highway". Sometimes I make my own "highway" or travel corridor in tighter spots and then set the camera on that. Those cameras I usually use for population census. The mineral lick is usually closer to a stand and that's what I use to gauge timing. All this lousy advice is just the ramblings of a hick though. Not a professional, just some dude sharing what has worked for him. [/QUOTE]
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Trail cam placement is key...
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