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A cool trailcam shot of a nice gobbler

turkey%20cam.jpg
Thanks to everyone who has sent in trailcam shots. I've got a decent backlog of them and will try to get them up over the next couple of days.

I love this picture. Not only does it show the gobbler really well, but it appears this is just set up on a path, rather than over a bait pile.

I realize that putting out bait can be a great way to get game cam shots. And it's legal (at least until Sept. 1).

A problem I see with bait is that it doesn't offer a fair representation of what's out there because it's causing artificial movement. Once the bait is gone, the deer (or turkeys) will move on.

Another problem is that pre-season feeding could tempt some hunters to push things into the season.

There is a saying that lawbreakers are going to break the law no matter what and honest people will follow the rules. I tend to believe that. But I could just see some pix of big bucks or gobblers over a corn pile proving too tempting to someone who does their best to play by the book.

I know that's not always the case. I have one friend who feeds in the off-season, knows the feeders attract temendous numbers of deer and turkeys, but turns off the switch long before the season. I hope that's the rule rather than the exception, and it probably is.

I don't have any game cams out but if I did I think I'd put them along normal travel corridors. Of course, a normal travel corridor this time of year won't necessarily be a normal travel corridor come October and November.


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Mark Taylor holding a fish.

While growing up in rural Southern Oregon, Mark Taylor developed a passion for the outdoors while he and his younger brother tagged along with their father on fishing, hunting and camping adventures.

Graduating from Northwestern University in 1988, Taylor spent four years as an officer in the U.S. Navy based in Norfolk before moving into journalism.

After five years writing about the military for a Norfolk-based publishing company, he became the outdoors editor at The Roanoke Times in 1998. He lives in Roanoke with his wife and twin daughters.

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