Free: Contests & Raffles.
That is how most of my bobcat call ins have gone. I started putting my caller up a tree or hiding it in a bush. That way the cat or coyote are searching for the source instead of trying to figure what is wrong with that twirly thing.
I have not decided if they are worth it or not. I am still learning though so you better get advice from someone else.
Quote from: Kain on January 28, 2011, 05:50:05 PMThat is how most of my bobcat call ins have gone. I started putting my caller up a tree or hiding it in a bush. That way the cat or coyote are searching for the source instead of trying to figure what is wrong with that twirly thing. Kain, does that mean you don't use a decoy for Bobcat?
Quote from: flysar on January 28, 2011, 05:56:05 PMQuote from: Kain on January 28, 2011, 05:50:05 PMThat is how most of my bobcat call ins have gone. I started putting my caller up a tree or hiding it in a bush. That way the cat or coyote are searching for the source instead of trying to figure what is wrong with that twirly thing. Kain, does that mean you don't use a decoy for Bobcat? Just use a goat, they will come! Worked for me.
I've experience the same thing with my Mojo. Most times they come in looking at the decoy but at least once or twice a year it scares them. I actually think it's my scent on it that scares them. I've called in a bunch of Lynx when I lived in Alaska and only used a snowshoe hair hide stuffed with newspaper for a decoy. It worked real good and was cheap. Overall decoys have helped me position a animal for a shot with whatever weird weapon I was using at the time...lol... I think a turkey feather on a string has worked just as well for me in most cases too. It's never scared a animal that I know of. I've called lynx back in the very next weekend after missing a shot.