Josh Smith
45 Cal.
- Joined
- Sep 24, 2010
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Capper said:You said tracking. That means whatever tracks there might be happen when you weren't there. You won't see any of this happening and one tree jump and you've lost whatever track there might be. A mark on a tree could be 3 days old.
I'm looking at the ground in your squirrel picture. Hard to track anything on that.
Squirrel hunting is pretty much walking slowly and looking in the trees, and sitting down looking in the trees.
Basically, looking in the trees.
Guess we think a bit differently.
My definition of tracking is reading any sign which points to your quarry - a bent blade of grass, a trail of nuts, a scuff on a rock, or even rocks that are wet on one side, if they're laying in a dry creek bed. Means they've been overturned.
If a wounded deer goes into sand or rock or whatnot, there won't be any tracks - but if hit correctly, there will be a blood trail. I count that as tracking, as well.
Josh