Many people use mechanical analog watches. I, for one, have never owned a digital watch. What I had and have on my person were watches that "clicked" between one and eight times per second, which brings me to me query, . . .
My hunting area is heavy, dense forest. Shooting range for white tail and black bear is within easy round ball muzzleloading distances. Elk are in the same general area but are thousands of feet higher and much less tolerant of disturbance — they'll disappear into the remainder of Lolo National Forest, to be seen perhaps three months later. Does the "clicking" of my watch signal animals, not just game animals in season, that something is in the area that is strange and therefore dangerous?
Such regular monotonous clicking will probably lose being noticeable within a short time. But how many legally "takeable" game animals are so alerted that they become invisible to my sensenses or leave the area?
My hunting area is heavy, dense forest. Shooting range for white tail and black bear is within easy round ball muzzleloading distances. Elk are in the same general area but are thousands of feet higher and much less tolerant of disturbance — they'll disappear into the remainder of Lolo National Forest, to be seen perhaps three months later. Does the "clicking" of my watch signal animals, not just game animals in season, that something is in the area that is strange and therefore dangerous?
Such regular monotonous clicking will probably lose being noticeable within a short time. But how many legally "takeable" game animals are so alerted that they become invisible to my sensenses or leave the area?