Howdy from Montana. Good info, especially for all the city folk moving to the mountains these days. I've watched a few of your vids lately but that straight edge made me subscribe, hopefully you put it to better use than just a straight edge though.
Thanks so much this was very helpful. I saw in the new snow at my back door tracks that I just knew were not dog. I checked out all your description points and they all checked out. one thing I wondered about. I measured the distance between tracks to be 2 feet. I would assume this is the stride. I wondered if this is common measurement. Really enjoyed the video.
One thing to note, my outdoor lab team showed me. All felines step forward toe first. For stealth and for stalking reasons(Maybe bone structure etc). Ive actually interpreted this in the field with great results. This technique helps me especially when stalking elk. Bow hunter for life.
@@CliffGray love your videos bro, I was wondering if you could do a video on how elk & deer actually communicate with each other. What calls to use and when to use them. Im an archery hunter only so any information is knowledge.
Just found your channel, really like it. I'm a new hunter, started late, I'm mid 50s. I enjoy the bigger hunting channels, but your videos seem more real, not as polished, is a good quality in my opinion. Hope you continue making videos.
@CliffGray is their a way to tell without having bottom part of track? I see coyote daily. Have small bobcats. But found a track I think is mountain lion but bottom part of print melted just top toes. Had other things made me think mountain lion
Hey man I’m going on my first elk hunt in Colorado unit 78 focusing on Navajo peak trail, I’ve grown up riding horses so we will be packing in and getting as high as possible. Was just curious if you had time maybe you could look at the topography and give me some pointers on some of the best spots just by looking at the map.