Seriously why would they ban trail cams? The most useful tool for managing your heard, helps me decide which deer are oldest and need to be taken.... Freakin Snowflakes.
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Why would Utah ban trail Cams?
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Read this:
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Utah ain’t Texas OP. The herd is managed by the state and the problem in the Western states has gotten to be forty cameras around a water hole on public land in order to catch mulies and elk watering. Lots of outfitters are guilty of this. It creates a problem when those forty hunters all try to sit there at the same time. Obviously the numbers are exaggerated but the problem is real.
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It's an over reaction to a real issue. That's the problem, when you ask for the state to step in, they go in with both feet. There have been serious problems in western states with people putting cameras on waterholes, fence crossings, trails, etc. I've heard reports of as many as 11 cameras on one elk wallow. This led to cameras being stolen, fights, blaming trail cameras for overharvest, and other issues. I can understand outlawing them on public land, but there's no reason to stop them on private property, where access is restricted.
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Originally posted by ultrastealth View PostIt's an over reaction to a real issue. That's the problem, when you ask for the state to step in, they go in with both feet. There have been serious problems in western states with people putting cameras on waterholes, fence crossings, trails, etc. I've heard reports of as many as 11 cameras on one elk wallow. This led to cameras being stolen, fights, blaming trail cameras for overharvest, and other issues. I can understand outlawing them on public land, but there's no reason to stop them on private property, where access is restricted.
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and you are that guy!
Originally posted by texansfan View PostHeard[sic]???
You raising cattle?
None of the cattleman I know use game cams to manage their herd.
They are out there every other day if not daily.
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Originally posted by redsnapper101 View PostYES , heard is a common term used to describe a deer population in a given area....
Heard is what you do when someone speaks. "I HEARD what he said"
And this is old news. If you arent hunting elk in Utah, why even worry about it?
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It is quite the problem IMO... I've hunted some nice units in recent years in New Mexico and Arizona, public land, not private, and EVERY SINGLE water hole will have 10+ cameras on it. I talked with one outfitter last year and he said he is running upwards of 400 cameras. So he knows exactly where the elk are and what time they are there. IMO it IS a mechanical advantage of a public game animal.
Heck, these elk are practically named by these guys, so when you are hunting near a water hole and the outfitter shows up because he knows that Bullwinkle 3.0 will be in for a drink in 30 minutes of course there is friction, which as stated above may be the bigger problem.
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I support it. Nothing like hiking in several miles into the mountains on Public Lands, feeling that primal connection to your ancestors and walking up to a spring coming out of a mountain side with 3 trail cameras posted on different trees. I'm the furthest thing from a hippie, and use them routinely at our lease here in Texas, but sometimes a man needs to get away from technology and I can think of no better place than public lands of The West.
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