Wednesday, June 4, 2025

Moose Cow & Calf

 



Every year I hope to get at least one cow and calf video. Last year I struck out. Hopefully with this early capture they’ll be more to come.

Tc’s captured two pregnant cows earlier this year.

 


Jim


Saturday, May 31, 2025

 


Mating season for bears is in full swing. My TC’s videoed two different females being followed by males. Sows with cubs have all but disappeared around bear marking trees and for good reason. A mother bear wouldn’t want conflict with a male bear. I have read that a male bear will kill cubs in attempt to push the female back into estrus. Think about that for a moment. It doesn’t make sense. The likelihood of a lactating female coming back into heat is rare and do you think the male is going to stick around that long? If it were true that killing a cub does send female back into estrus , wouldn’t all the cubs need to be removed.

Male black bears are opportunistic foragers. If a cub or fawn were in its path, likely it would be killed and eaten.

MassWildlife put together an excellent presentation about co-existing with bears. The presentation is informative.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OnH_7ZHlFNo

Jim


Friday, May 23, 2025

You Just Don't Know ! Trail Camera

 


Two trail cameras have been monitoring this location for at least three years with minimal wildlife captured on video. I pulled the trail cameras this week looking to redeploy in another area and  hopefully video more wildlife. After reviewing the videos, I returned to that same  location two days later and reset the trail cameras

 https://youtu.be/6lMUBdLhhEw

Jim


Saturday, May 17, 2025

This Was A First - Hours Old Fawns

 


The fawn in the cover photo was a surprise. After snapping a quick picture, the twin fawns followed their mother deeper into the woods.

Last week was busy with wildlife activity in Massachusetts. I hiked to an eagle nest and observed one eaglet after 1.5 hours. When I arrived, the female was on the nest and the male was in a nearby tree, indicating a recent food drop.

In April, my trail cameras videoed bears seventy-five times. A sow with two first-year cubs was videoed in three different locations during her eleven-mile loop.

Jim



Saturday, May 10, 2025

 

I did get back to the peninsula to check trail cameras and wasn’t disappointed. The video provides several tips on trail camera placement and things to look for when setting trail cameras. Bear activity is beginning to pick up with the start of bear mating cycle in Massachusetts. Sows with yearlings will start breaking up the family group and sending the cubs on their own. https://youtu.be/kIlFO_8OnTY

There is no shortage of water here in central Massachusetts. I’ll need to stay away from most beaver dams until the water recedes. A wet hike this morning checking TC’s and high waterproof boots were aa must. The forecast for next week looks good and I should be able to check all the bear bite tree sites.

Jim


Monday, May 5, 2025

Bear Bite Marking Tree

 


I returned to the peninsula last week and set up more trail cameras. A medium-large bear scented the tree from last week's cover photo. Looking forward to returning this week to check tree cameras. Stay tuned !

 In another location, a bear stripped away bark creating a very visual bite mark tree. https://youtu.be/VxNacWt9bIw

Jim


Sunday, April 27, 2025

Another Bear Hot Spot Found !

 


Last week, I set trail cameras at my final bear hot spot. To the east, I noticed a game trail leading into the swamp and decided to follow it. Surprisingly, a small beaver dam provided access to dry land, forming a fourteen-acre peninsula filled with bear-marking trees. The photo above shows one of the main bite mark trees. I couldn't hike back to the truck for more cameras, I moved one from an earlier setup to this new area. This week, I'll return with more cameras to cover the new location.

Jim