June 11 - 28, 2020. Lynx, Foxes, Moose, Baby Moose and Mosquitos. ***Some devices may experience a high frequency whistle on some clips. Recommend watching on mute.
Never having used a trail cam ru-vid.comUgkx2sTDdZXomuxedMg_HothfjSXjR3rpPkA before, I was very impressed with the quality of the images and videos. The sensitivity of the camera can be adjusted as well as the length of video recordings. Once I found the sweet spot, I was getting great clips of deer and other animals almost every day. I was worried about battery life but have been running off the same 4 aa batteries for over a month. The SD card is easy to remove and connect to a computer. I have a Mac, and the AVI files open natively in QuickTime and are easy to save and share. This is a great, budget-friendly trail cam.
Actually put the channel together for any easy way for my family in the lower 48 to see the wild my wife and I encounter and live in. More interest out there than I thought.
"And GOD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually." Genesis 6:5, KJV "The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?" Jeremiah 17:9, KJV "But those things which proceed out of the mouth come forth from the heart; and they defile the man. For out of the heart proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, blasphemies: These are the things which defile a man: but to eat with unwashen hands defileth not a man." Matthew 15:18-20, KJV
@@TheFront40Alaska Yw!!...I'm new to this channel, I'll have to check out your other videos as well!!.. I'm sure it's exciting checking the camera footage everytime & not knowing what u'll see, Awesomeness!! 🙂
Great job! I need to put mine back up. We have 40 acres out here and in the mist of the Parks hwy and the railroad we got a nice refuge with fox, moose, spruce hen, (see them everyday now) ermine, mink, marten, sand hill cranes, and a lot of other critters, porcupine (the dogs learned) so I enjoyed that! And a camera in McCarthy on our 360 would be black bears, rabbit and lynx and much more. Time to get those critter cams back up! Thank you!
Those moose calves are beautiful. Believe it or not, we have some moose in Massachusetts, but it;s the very southern limit of their range. I haven't seen twins here, though.
Cool captures, thanks for posting them. I do quite a bit of wildlife photography and during the pandemic stay at home period I set up a bird feeding station. Out of curiosity I put up a trail cam. So far coyote, skunk, racoon, deer and even a bobcat. Still waiting for a moose :)
When I first saw the moose in the thumbnail I thought it was a Tasmanian tiger. Somebodies genetic research project got away. But scale matters. That bobcat was about twice the size of what I am used to seeing in SD.
Brad Quinn LOl! Never thought of a baby moose looking like a Tasmanian Tiger but now I can’t stop seeing it. That big cat is an Alaskan Lynx. No Bobcats up here.
@@TheFront40Alaska That would explain the size difference. Excluding zoos(and maybe not their) I do not think I have actually seen a lynx of any kind. It is just that pose you used in the thumbnail. You really could not get any sense of scale from it. I grew up in SD and had never seen a moose. I knew they were big, but I thought a little bigger than an elk (not many of those in SD either). Then I spent a summer at my uncles in Montana. Moose are big like Clydesdale big. I was in some bull rushes on foot and a big bull came charging through. I leaned back off the trail up against the bull rushes and this freight train cruised right on by. That was my first personal introduction to a moose. Too shocked to even need to change my tighty whiteys. My introduction to a mountain lion was pretty much the same. Shot a deer and had her strung up from a tree cleaning it. Smelled something god awful. My uncle said to leave the deer and we back out there slowly. By the time we got to the horses(hundred yards up wind) the cat was chewing on the deer and trying to drag it down from the rope. Cat had to be within 15-20 feet of me and I never heard it or saw it. Yep, when it comes to staying alive I am INCREDIBLY lucky. Just not so much with women.
4:06 imagine being alone like this. Trying to find a mate in the woods. Just not having anything and roaming for food everyday. A part of me is jealous and a part of me feels sad lol. I would love that freedom.
@@TheFront40Alaska i love the mooses in ALASKA I JIST WISH I COULD LIVE in ALASKA i plan to go BACK TO ALASKA in the future for SURE!!!!!!!!+++!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
EtHAN I WOULD ALSO LOVE TO DO THE same thing as you ❤ 💕 WOULD I ALSO WOULD like to be there for the first time in the WINTER WHEN THE SNOW HAS FALLEN WENT IN the summer time light all the time
TWINS ! That was interesting. Do they have twins often ? Thank you for your video. I found it captivating, relaxing and made me search for your others 👍🏻👍🏻. I have subscribed after this first video. 🇨🇦
Josh Hall Mainly Browning Spec Ops and Browning Dark Ops. They capture excellent still photos. I run all video since Im able to check cams 3-4 times a week so I can go Ultra HD video and not worry about filling my SD cards.
Can we agree that a moose should be called the alaskan horse. I was waiting for some off the grid guy to come riding by on an alaskan horse like in game of thrones
The Front 40 Alaska a texan would. Just saying. Jk. Those things are giants. Thats why i thought alaskans would ride them. “If everything is bigger in texas then it must be f n huge in Alaska” is what i say to texans. It shuts them up when they realize alaska is, or almost, twice the size of texas. Happy trails
slippery mud Addressed in video description. High pitch ring appears after being uploaded to RU-vid and only heard on some devices, mainly Androids.No ring in the raw video.
Like moose migration from Junsele in Sweden. Slow tv, when moose passing som river, just like they have done every year sinse late ice-time some 8-9000 years ago.
One day some genius will create a spray to apply to wild animal food sources so they eat and would be free of flies, mosquitoes, other diseases to make their life less frustrating
twotwentyswift Not everyone hears the ringing, only on some devices. I don’t hear it in the raw video or being played on my desktop, laptop or other mobile devices. Thanks to other RU-vid viewers we narrowed the ringing down to a specific Browning cam model. Hard to fix what I can’t hear. I can now filter or mute clips from these cams in future videos. RU-vid won’t let me fix the already uploaded video. Browning is also investigating my clips for a software upgrade to the cam.
@@TheFront40Alaska I didn't expect a reply but thanks for the info. I know us older folks aren't supposed to hear those high pitched sounds but I guess I have hearing like a dog and I hear them at electric doors at times and cringe when other people hear nothing. Good to know Browning is doing a follow up. Good folks there in Morgan Utah.
Here's what I don't like about trail cams they really need to let human beings know that they are around my hanging a sign on a tree or something otherwise they're invading our privacy on public land, for instance what if I want to take a leak and one of those cans just happens to be where I'm at and I don't know it
Patrick Gragg These cams are 100% on my privately owned land. If one of my cams captures someone taking a leak on my property, I’m including it in the video!
Greetings from a fellow Alaskan! Love the footage. We live -- and fish, hunt and hike and everything else -- in the Susitna Valley as well. The diversity of wildlife encountered here is exactly what your trail cam picks up. How often do you see wolverines? Our trail cams never pick them up; rarely do we see them when in wildernesses, but every winter in the Chugach mountains front range north of Anchorage I tend to see at least one on the run.
Max McD So far no confirmed wolverines. Definitely on my wish list. We have an up close video from two winters ago that could be one but could be any else too.
@@TheFront40Alaska thanks for this reply, a good long look at a wolverine is a wish list entry for me too! May I ask if the video with the mystery critter is on your channel? I'd like to take a look.
@@TheFront40Alaska Wow, what footage! Very interesting and I'd say odds are extremely good that's a wolverine. They are very adept climbers and do their hunting from trees, so that would explain the lack of tracks, and this animal has some bulk to it so I think that rules out it being a pine martin or fisher, both of which are much smaller (fishers larger than martins but fishers spend more time on the ground than in trees), plus it has some white edging on the fur it would seem but maybe that's snow. Wolverines have white on their face, martins have white necks and fishers don't have any white fur. Wolverines are also known to have acute sense of smell so I assume that's what directed its attention, versus seeing the camera. Any idea if the camera emits a high frequency noise when it gets triggered? These noises cannot be heard by humans but animals can hear it. Trail camera footage is always so cool especially when it picks up an unexpected critter or something like this which presents a mystery
Itsme 23 Smart or not they need to eat everyday and eat lots. It so dimple : Set the trail cam by a source of food Set up cameras, film them eating yet everyone shows up but these beasts Not one unblurry video of one of the walking up and sticking their big sasquatch face and then fart like that big Moose did. Sorry there should be one vid by now or at least a dead one a skeleton no nothing what a load of crap.
@@itsme2365 Something as big as an alleged bigfoot would need to be on the move and eating constantly and why hasn't one been hit by a car? Also everyone has a high definition camera phone but still no good video hmmmm ?
@@TheFront40Alaska Greetings from Ontario, new subscriber, love your videos! I am wondering, how long is your mosquito season and do the animals get diseases from the mosquitos? Good to know you don't have ticks, you're teaching us a lot!
@@pheonixaerialphotography8749 Mosquitos come out as soon as the night time lows remain above freezing. We can still have snow on the ground and the mosquitos are out early Spring. They start getting scarce late August when it starts getting cool in the mornings. This morning it was 34 degrees. This afternoon I walked out into the swamp and only had one mosquito land on me.
@@TheFront40Alaska They only eat enough to live. No more. To you they seem fat but they weigh a lot and burn a ton of calories just hunting for a meal and sometimes the meal is roots.