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The Trail Cam Thread
I did a short search for any trail cam threads. I know Neal has a thread with trail cam footage of rouge pigs. I thought to start a trail cam thread so we can see what happening in your neck of the woods. Below is my trail cam footage that hangs on my fence line. I have a busy backyard.
This is quite something. Could not ask for a better video of our fox friend: https://youtu.be/MwRgVdBYUFQ Here he or she is making the night rounds: https://youtu.be/O_3dGVfoxyc These two better haul butt. There is a fox in the neighborhood: https://youtu.be/zEfoo37S5Rk Please post any trail cam footage you have. I would like to see it! |
I have tons of them.
Here is one of my favorites: https://i.imgur.com/tYpMX1i.jpg And this is pretty nice too: https://i.imgur.com/zyw9EMJl.jpg?1 |
Where's Skybird?? :D
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^ Here.
Have a trail cam since over two years in the garden, near the nutbar. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCkK...KLetpSQ/videos https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=onVkSvedeWA (And no, the bicycle tour video that the channel owes its name to, are not publicly listed anymore) |
@August nice shots!
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@Skybird. You have the invading tree rats as well. They do serve their purpose. They knock seed to the ground for the ground feeding birds. In our case morning doves.
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Ok, we purchase corn and peanuts to keep the squirrels off the bird feeders. This critter showed up today. And my trail cam should have good footage of this masked bandit. Yes, that is the new Tears for Fears album playing. I'm a kid of the 80s. Not apologizing for that. 😘
https://youtu.be/jJaZUlVNokg |
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Not to be mistaken with American Red Squirrels (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus), its a different species, far more aggressive and looking for fights whenever possible. The Japanese Red Squirrel (Sciurus lis) however is genetically extremely close to the European one, they still discuss whether the Japanese are offsprings of the European strain, or the other way around. |
Great footage and pictures! :):up:
I need a cam.. |
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These are some of the reasons why over here, our native red ones are usually not seen as a pest by people, and as I said: they even are protected by law, you get legal troubles if you kill or catch them, the penalties can reach to I think up to 50,000 or even 100,000 coins. We have many squirrel rescue stations across all Germany, that nurse younglings and baby squirrels that lost their mothers for whatever a reason. I can understand that in North America it is different with the many species there, I have seen videos and films on their behaviour, they are MUCH different to ours, practically all of them seem to be stronger and more aggressive, many are bigger. Yours are stronger. Ours are cuter, and they have pointy hair tufts at the top of the ears in winter. No other squirrel has these. :) The only other squirrel families we have over here, are marmots in the Alpes, and spemophilus (=Ziesel), both are ground squirrels. We have neither prairie dogs nor other tree squirrels, only our small tiny cute red ones. And if you have not guessed it already, I love them! :yeah: Eichhörnchern bringen Freude in das Leben. |
@Skybird I have heard of muskrat love. Not so much squirrel love. :haha:
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Muskrat. =Bisamratte.
??? :06: I have nothing for or against rats. But they are a pest, and infectous, thats the two problems with them. |
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Anyway, there is a song titled, "Muskrat Love". Captain and Tennille. Just a bad joke and song! |
Kira and Taro last winter. They both are males, and now (summer 2023), in their third year of life. They are very likely brothers, the first one and a half year strolled around together a lot, but now have turned more into isolationists. There was a third of their family, Sari, but Sari either has wandered away, or already is dead. I observe them and support them since they were small and young. And yes, I am emotionally engaged with the two. :)
Last winter, after around 2 years of life, was the time when the two brothers started to go more separate ways. Also, they are not as playful and lightminded anymore, dont stay and play in the trees with the feeders anymore and do funny things, but now almost charge the feeders, quickly get a nut, and chase away as quick as they can. Fast in, fast out. Gone are the easy days of squirrel youth! :( They cost me 40 kg of nuts every year, walnuts and hazelnuts. On some days, they work the nut boxes in 30 seconds intervalls - grab a new one every 30 seconds, hiding it. How ever their third winter will become - I can make sure that food and fresh water will not be any of their problems. Thankfull they look string and healthy to me, big, the fur is in top shape, and no signs of exoparasites, although they probably have some flees. All squirrels have them, annoying, but usually not dangerous. There are much meanier parasite threats for my little fur noses. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OPJgdABTXcA |
At least your squirrels do not chew the heck out of the feeder box.
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They had to learn it. And they did. |
Great thread idea!
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Anyway, I pulled the trail cam to look at what was on it. For some reason there was no recordings. I remounted it after clearing the SD card from recordings prior to moving it to the squirrel feeding box. Hopefully it is still working. If not I'll get a new trail cam. |
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