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One of the best tips i ever got for setting up my cameras was to point the camera down the trail and not right at it. If you point the camera at an angle down the trail the animal will be in the line of sight a lot longer. If you put the trail crossing right in front of the camera, if the animal is on the move, by the time the camera takes the picture, the animal is either gone or all you see is a tip of the tail. Try that and see if that helps you out.
Quote from: furbearer365 on April 28, 2009, 08:19:26 PMOne of the best tips i ever got for setting up my cameras was to point the camera down the trail and not right at it. If you point the camera at an angle down the trail the animal will be in the line of sight a lot longer. If you put the trail crossing right in front of the camera, if the animal is on the move, by the time the camera takes the picture, the animal is either gone or all you see is a tip of the tail. Try that and see if that helps you out.Thats why you want a Camera with a fast trigger speed. Or something to hold the animal in front of the camera. It also depends on how dense the trees are. If it is really dense you have no choice. Set it about 30 degrees to the trail. If it is open you just move your camera back away from the trail say 15 yds. The problem with facing your camera down a trail is 50% of your pics are rump shots!!!