A buddy wants to get a decent trail camera and asked what I would recommend. Anybody have one they like and can suggest?
They have come a long way in the last 5 years as for quality and battery life, Moultrie, Cuddeback, and Bushnells have all been good for me so far. Hard to pick just one I guess. Like anything else you get what you pay for here.A buddy wants to get a decent trail camera and asked what I would recommend. Anybody have one they like and can suggest?
I agree...good pointsI am partial to moultrie as they seem to have a good price and have performed well for me. I just got a new panoramic moultrie camera and really like it. Is he taking pictures at a feeder or a game trail or an edge of a field?
The only thing I find with moultrie is they can have a bit slower shutter speed so if it is on a game trail you'll want to set it up along the trail, not across it, otherwise you can get alot of deer asses. That's another reason I like the panoramic one, as the slow shutter speed doesn't matter as much due to the wide angle picture.
I believe moultrie offers that functionality, they call it gamespy. I've never looked into it as I am in Canada (I think it may be us only, but don't quote me on that) and my cameras are in locations without cell service.
You can also get WiFi enabled SD cards. They won't upload automatically but the idea is you can get the pictures off the camera without going right to them. Not sure what the range of them is I haven't used them.
I've known people to do that but the cameras often go missing as well. If you get one make sure to get a no glow version, as opposed to a low glow version. Normal infrared game cameras emit a red glow when the flash goes off which is easily visible to people. The no glow versions are supposed to be completely invisible, but I don't have one to confirm.I'm in Canada also. Someone told me that but I know nothing about these things. This would be a case of setting one up to keep an eye on a camp in the woods, not so much animals. Well, maybe the 2 legged kind.
You'd need a no glow infrared flash then. A normal infrared flash (also called low glow) glows red when a picture is taken. No glows are supposed to be invisible but I've never seen on flash to confirm if there is a hint of flash at all or not.What trail cams can be used at night but don't use a visual flash? I'd like to put one up around the woods at my house to make sure there aren't any weirdos around or to just see game I normally wouldn't see.
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