Hunt smart

Just traditional hard mount. Bobcats have a large boxy profile, but are all of about 4” wide - I wonder if the flexibility would cause it revert to the more tube-like proportions of canids.
 
I almost think you can’t hunt too slow. After reading an article about deer’s’ vision, and how they see in “slow motion” in comparison to us I even tried to slow down more.

Another tip I picked up somewhere was “blur.” If you’re glassing or walking and there’s any blur in your vision you’re moving too fast. I have found myself glassing up more critters and spooking less.

Moving slow also accentuates consciousness. Are you staying in tune? Hearing, feeling the wind? It’s hardest on return trips or when I’m tired.
 
A must watch for anyone who hunts big game. I stumbled on this about a year ago, but I wish I had found it many years prior.

Some of many takeaways:
-What you see is very different from what your eyes perceive - it is what your brain can make sense of and presents to you. The brain provides you with images that are meant to be useful, overruling visual input.
-Visual center of human brain is evolved to rapidly identify close game, especially predators. You have to force it against its defaults to effectively find distant animals, including through magnification.
-Your brain turns distant animals into rocks, logs, and other common inanimate objects.
-Glassing can be more effective through scanning the same landscape for hours on end. Eventually you memorize the landscape, and you’ll notice a new block of color, indicating an animal moving into view.
-You basically have to look right at something to effectively see it. Only 1% of your field of vision is in focus. It seems like it is far more than 1%, but that is just your brain filling in details (that don’t exist) to make blurry images surrounding direct gaze sharper.
-Your brain discards 99% of visual input, curating 1% to your conscious awareness, based on what it thinks you’ll find most useful.
-Glassing for specific shapes, outlines, and contrasts can turn up animals better than looking for the whole animal. If I look for deer ears, I’ll find them. Same with horizontal backs, elk butts, dark nose at the end of the muzzle, etc. When I hunt cottontails in the snow I try to spot the black circle (an eye). My uncle had an uncanny ability to spot ruffed grouse -he only looked for a single shape.
IMG_2126.jpeg
-Critical in glassing to focus your eyes on each subsection of a frame, before moving the optic to a new frame. Staring directly at an animal can make it pop out of the landscape.
-When focusing on scanning for animals, especially at twilight, your brain turns inanimate objects into animals.
-The same thing can happen when spotting another hunter. Your brain can turn a human into an animal - the cause of many shooting accidents. Turkey hunters are notorious for shooting one other. Realistic turkey noises, camo, concealment, and any splash of red, white, or blue can conjure an image of a tom’s head where none exists.
-I now force myself to slowly and deliberately identify my target. I ask, how do I know this is a legal animal? This is usually answered with the animal’s familiar and unmistakable movements.
 
Yesterday I was able to get out a few hours for turkey. My wife asked me how many I was going to kill and I said “zero”. She asked why and I said I haven’t scouted, and there might be no birds in the spot where I go. She said, well scout then.

My wife doesn’t hunt, but over the years her opinion on hunting decisions is often better than whatever idea I had. With 1-2 more hunts after Saturday, taking the first day to scout was a better use of time. Scouting 2 days and hunting 1 still might be a wiser use of time.

I picked the place where turkeys are most reliably on public this time of year. Long walk, no sign at all except a pile of feathers.
IMG_2127.jpeg

I didn’t think too much of it, but about 100 yards from here I flushed a tom. He dropped off a cliff edge, and could have glided 1/4 mile. I spent the next 30 mins checking the area for sign. Nothing except some decent mast in a sea of impenetrable brush and deadfalls.

I decided against returning here another day, as there might be just one bird, vegetation too thick, and I couldn’t determine if it was the tom’s core area or not. 11” of snow forecast all day today, so tomorrow and maybe the next day I’ll be searching for fresh tracks.
 
A must watch for anyone who hunts big game. I stumbled on this about a year ago, but I wish I had found it many years prior.

Some of many takeaways:
-What you see is very different from what your eyes perceive - it is what your brain can make sense of and presents to you. The brain provides you with images that are meant to be useful, overruling visual input.
-Visual center of human brain is evolved to rapidly identify close game, especially predators. You have to force it against its defaults to effectively find distant animals, including through magnification.
-Your brain turns distant animals into rocks, logs, and other common inanimate objects.
-Glassing can be more effective through scanning the same landscape for hours on end. Eventually you memorize the landscape, and you’ll notice a new block of color, indicating an animal moving into view.
-You basically have to look right at something to effectively see it. Only 1% of your field of vision is in focus. It seems like it is far more than 1%, but that is just your brain filling in details (that don’t exist) to make blurry images surrounding direct gaze sharper.
-Your brain discards 99% of visual input, curating 1% to your conscious awareness, based on what it thinks you’ll find most useful.
-Glassing for specific shapes, outlines, and contrasts can turn up animals better than looking for the whole animal. If I look for deer ears, I’ll find them. Same with horizontal backs, elk butts, dark nose at the end of the muzzle, etc. When I hunt cottontails in the snow I try to spot the black circle (an eye). My uncle had an uncanny ability to spot ruffed grouse -he only looked for a single shape.
View attachment 394200
-Critical in glassing to focus your eyes on each subsection of a frame, before moving the optic to a new frame. Staring directly at an animal can make it pop out of the landscape.
-When focusing on scanning for animals, especially at twilight, your brain turns inanimate objects into animals.
-The same thing can happen when spotting another hunter. Your brain can turn a human into an animal - the cause of many shooting accidents. Turkey hunters are notorious for shooting one other. Realistic turkey noises, camo, concealment, and any splash of red, white, or blue can conjure an image of a tom’s head where none exists.
-I now force myself to slowly and deliberately identify my target. I ask, how do I know this is a legal animal? This is usually answered with the animal’s familiar and unmistakable movements.
When I was a kid in the 80s we road hunted pheasants alot. The old boys would always tell me to look only for the head and grandpa would advise to look only for the white ring around the neck.
 

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