Free: Contests & Raffles.
I like ouchfoss's idea but one thing I've learned about predator calling is they can get bored of a sound rather quickly sometimes. Cats often sneak up on a sound/ critter in distress. They normally come in slow and cautious and if listening to the same thing over and over they loose interst. This maybe the reason the squeakers never impressed anyone with good results I may play with this idea, I have a ton of distress sounds! Many of which I have made. Maybe start with mouse squeaks then after 10 min switch to rodent or gopher ect. I have been putting a cam on my cat set and did have a large raccoon check it out but wasn't what it wanted I guess.
Quote from: jasnt on November 28, 2015, 10:17:11 AMI like ouchfoss's idea but one thing I've learned about predator calling is they can get bored of a sound rather quickly sometimes. Cats often sneak up on a sound/ critter in distress. They normally come in slow and cautious and if listening to the same thing over and over they loose interst. This maybe the reason the squeakers never impressed anyone with good results I may play with this idea, I have a ton of distress sounds! Many of which I have made. Maybe start with mouse squeaks then after 10 min switch to rodent or gopher ect. I have been putting a cam on my cat set and did have a large raccoon check it out but wasn't what it wanted I guess. I had something similar to that for my shriek sound. It started with a thirty second series then it would go quiet for a full minute then start up again for about a full minute and that was my file looped over enough times to fill one full hour. I still think it would catch more cats than without but is it worth the time and effort to switch out callers and batteries that often?