I have watched coyote, fox and bobcats lay on the downwind side of a hill out of the wind curled up in the snow absorbing the heat from the sun sleeping. Just a darker spot in the white snow, the spot and stalk predator hunters on here often take advantage of that this time of year. I have watched bobcats lay on the south facing rock bluffs in small patches of dry dirt sunning themselves and just looking down in the draws below them. their whole body still except for their tails, they just don't seem to be able to keep from moving it. I spotted one doing that one morning and decided to see how close I could get to him. I circled around so that I was down wind and behind it slipped up the back side of the rise that was on the northern side of the bluff. moved in on him and quietly slipped up to the top of the rock ledge, it was lying about five feet below me in the sun when I looked down. He never knew what hit him and I got 350.00 for his pelt. That was my game that I started playing when I was a kid to see how close I could get to bedded deer before I spooked them. Then I started with predators to see how close I could get to them. I worked with a guy one time that said he wanted me to take him deer hunting, so I told him I would put him on a nice buck in its bed so he could shoot it before it knew he was there, he said that's not being a sports man, I said no that's being a hunter. A few days later he said I've been watching you; you don't make hardly any noise when you walk, you don't brush up against things, you pick your feet up to step, but you put them down gently and don't make noise as you do and you make it look like you aren't putting any effort into being quiet as you do. A lifetime of practicing to be quiet as I move like the hunter- gathers did. Exposure to the little people all played into it, conscious effort leads to unconscious doing it.