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How To Hunt Big Game
Any lion hunters?
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<blockquote data-quote="Reelamin" data-source="post: 2381616" data-attributes="member: 42157"><p>DO NOT LISTEN TO THAT GARBAGE SAYING YOU CANT TRACK COUGARS. HELLO YOU CANT it is super effective!!! No not going to be able to track on ground that does not leave a clear, identifiable, and constant track. We track them down in the same areas we call coyotes. No one has been able to call one in that we ever saw. Cut a fresh track after the snow and simply get on it at a constant and steady pace. A steady pace you can maintain and not push it extremely hard. Dont loop to cut the track just stay right on it from the time you cut it. They can be tracked down easier than most think. Keep looking ahead and and you may catch movement. When they start stopping and looking back for you they are close. They will usually not look back after the first time they stop for a little longer distance, and then their stopping and weaving to get a view of their back trail will increase. Start looking and watching in those distances and locations when you see it and they like to get on a small rock out cropping or elevated edge to look back and down. Seems like we see them the most after they take off from a stopping location. This is where the steady pace does not blow them out at a fast run. The most important thing is a fresh track and to hit the roads/trails as soon as you can after the new snow.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Reelamin, post: 2381616, member: 42157"] DO NOT LISTEN TO THAT GARBAGE SAYING YOU CANT TRACK COUGARS. HELLO YOU CANT it is super effective!!! No not going to be able to track on ground that does not leave a clear, identifiable, and constant track. We track them down in the same areas we call coyotes. No one has been able to call one in that we ever saw. Cut a fresh track after the snow and simply get on it at a constant and steady pace. A steady pace you can maintain and not push it extremely hard. Dont loop to cut the track just stay right on it from the time you cut it. They can be tracked down easier than most think. Keep looking ahead and and you may catch movement. When they start stopping and looking back for you they are close. They will usually not look back after the first time they stop for a little longer distance, and then their stopping and weaving to get a view of their back trail will increase. Start looking and watching in those distances and locations when you see it and they like to get on a small rock out cropping or elevated edge to look back and down. Seems like we see them the most after they take off from a stopping location. This is where the steady pace does not blow them out at a fast run. The most important thing is a fresh track and to hit the roads/trails as soon as you can after the new snow. [/QUOTE]
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