Free: Contests & Raffles.
I'm sure the main reason is the fact that you can see what's there in real time ,and show up there in 15 minutes and shoot animals ,doesn't seem like fair chase to me.
Quote from: hunter399 on June 05, 2017, 09:28:03 AMI'm sure the main reason is the fact that you can see what's there in real time ,and show up there in 15 minutes and shoot animals ,doesn't seem like fair chase to me.I realize this is what people think can happen, but it is not reality. You're not going to receive a photo and then go harvest an animal it just doesn't work that way. I have wireless cameras on my bear baits. I get a photo within 10 seconds of it triggering, I'd have to jump in my truck and drive 45 miles, get out and sneak in undetected. It's not realistic. The animal is long gone or will hear you coming into the camera location. Deer and elk are even more mobile. What it does do is save tremendous amounts of gas. That should make the environmental Nazis happy. I don't have to drive an hour to see if my bait has been hit, I know one way or the other....it saves a LOT of gas.
That's unlikely to happen, but even if it did, certainly not enough frequency to ban them from use.
Commissioners agreed to work on a future rule that could restrict the use of trail cameras that can transmit live footage to devices like cellphones or computers.