One year on a game trail in Northern Minnesota
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- Опубликовано: 25 мар 2021
- Here is a video showing all of the wildlife using a game trail in Voyageurs National Park in northern Minnesota over the course of a year (June 2019-August 2020).
In total, this video is the distillation of more than 5.5 hours of footage recorded by this camera! All this to say, the video, clocking in at a whopping 15 minutes, is by far our longest video yet.
The reason: an extraordinary amount of wildlife used this game trail. More specifically, this game trail was a black bear highway! We have never seen so many different black bears using the same area in our life!
So we suggest you make a nice cup of coffee or tea and enjoy 15 relaxing minutes of wildlife in the Northwoods!
Learn more about the Voyageurs Wolf Project:
Website: www.voyageurswolfproject.org
Facebook: / voyageurswolfproject
Instagram: / voyageurswolfproject
Twitter: / voyawolfproject - Животные
I love how the wolves move as though they are late to an important meeting, and the bears come stumbling through like they’re walking home from the bar.
I thought those were coyotes
@@CANControlGRAFFITI nah they are wolves
Me too
They look small for wolves
Could be hybridized red wolves becoming more common idk if their territory stretches that far though pretty sure those ain't yotes aslo check the channel name 🤷♂️
i just imagine in my head the bear is just going to work every day because every time he comes back he looks beat
...he's wearing air beads
01:38 there were free snacks that day.
Ww
Yep he works at McDonalds
😁😁😁
i love how proudly the fox walked with its catch
1. That little leaning tree must be the best back scratcher in the entire forest.
2. That trail must be forest equivalent of an interstate highway.
3. I love all the bears ❤️❤️❤️
the back scratch dance is amazing. what did he put on the tree?
@@keve8586 That’s what I was wondering…maybe honey? Or some type of animal urine?
Whatever scent it was the same animals react the same way, EVERY time. Bears scratch, wolves tinkle
@@keve8586 doe (female deer) urine. It smells like Calvin Klein to Forrest animals that’s why they rub it all over themself… fun fact, people actually used to use beaver urine in cologne/perfume
@@dylan251 haha wow thats amazing
I love how HUGE that moose is compared to everything else
tiemsttamp
@@landlockedcroat1554 3:51
Also at 10:40
The deer as well was surprisingly big…
2:29
Almost scared me the first time it came through 🤣
I planned on giving this a quick click but found it utterly fascinating. Incredible to see what is going on in a little corner of the wilderness over a year. Something comforting about seeing these animals go about their lives the way they do, and have been doing for so long.
but no Sasquatch, no ghosts and no UFO or space creatures! utterly disappointing !! ;^D
It was the exact same thing for me. Incredibly captivating.
@@stuckinthelazycorneragain4016 Same. Also re: username - Same.
@@alexiswilliamsinc Lol glad you like it.
@@MrManfly Sasquatch are good at spotting the surveillance cameras...
Way better than a zoo! Thank you for taking me somewhere I'll never be able to go. Loved the snow scenes.
Where is it that you live where this seems so out of reach? I wonder if where you call home is so out if reach for me. If so we should do something about it and snow out world's to each other. I live in northern Minnesota where are you from?
@@Ryder-qx1df Dude- I live in Las Vegas!
And......
The love story has come to a abrupt stop....
@@peterfitswell535 oh, I don’t know. They
Have airplanes these days😂😂
@@reneejones7807 Sorry, I couldn't help myself. LOL !!
The war between the wolves and the bears over just who owned that tree was hilarious Mama Bear telling babies "get over here and help take back the tree". The Wolves come along, sniff and say "oh no you don't bears this is our tree". And little Flippy squirrel laughs at both of them and says, " I own it all you goofy dodos". That footage is priceless and amazing to watch. All those animals are absolutely beautiful. Thank you for sharing. If it weren't for you all with your trail cameras some people would never know animals like this really exist.
they'll be peeing on that tree for many years and generations
I love the scent war between the bears and wolves lmao
And the Squirrel is just doing Gymnastics 😂
those bears want a golden shower. dont kink shame.
@@bootydaddy9934 you need therapy
I love how a simple video of wild life brings people pleasure! If ur young keep that innocence! You will need it when you get older. Most people lose that feel of wonderment and pleasure of little things when they get older. Don't ever lose that!
@@Sleepless4Life
I love nature with ever drop of blood in my body
Props to the camera guy standing there all year
What a passionate guy
LOL!
Well he had a chair I'm sure
LOL
Balls of steel.
Love how the bear and wolf go back and forth marking the branch as their territory 😂
Love the pine Martin always with something in its mouth. Love that 3rd baby bear @ 8:00 that goes back to rub the tree then has to run to catch back up with the rest.
This taught me that the forest is just like any other neighbourhood - you have the long-term residents with recognizable faces and sometimes a new resident joins the community.
Hi Fey.
@@jm329 Heya! Fancy meeting you here :D Hope you're doing well!
And people peeing on your streetlights
Lol..true story!
Awesome to see how active it is in the forest.
I always forget how absolutely humongous moose are 😳🥺💕💕
Yeah, I'm watching and thinking, "Bear, bear, wolf, raccon, fox, wolf, bear, LEGS~!"
I remember commonly seeing them in the swamps of New Brunswick, Canada.
I must say though, as a child, getting out of the car along side a secluded highway at night to take a pee, and suddenly hearing moose mating calls, is rather terrifying!
@@galaxytraveler5779 That would be insanely scary . . .
It's "meese"
@@joshblank no it’s not lol
the real hero is the person who sifted through 1 year of footage
Idk how wild life cameras are….does it have a motion sensor? If not wow
It’s great to see that kind of wildlife in your forest. In our part of the Northeast, much of the wildlife has been decimated and rarely is ever seen. Preserve the beautiful heritage you have so that your future generations are able to enjoy seeing it in their natural habitat. Great video!
Agreed, BUT…
*conserve* more than you preserve!
One year of a tree getting thoroughly harassed by all the forest animals.
ikr
I want to know what he put on the tree that had their full attention? What was that smell?
@@GuantanamoBayBarbie2 probably animal pee tbh
😂
@@yopajo where abouts in a Alaska do you hail from?
I love the little bear cub at 8:15 that did a double take to go rub on the tree and then hurried off to catch up with his family. This is such a wonderful video!
After the bear broke the branch, I watched the fallen branch as it was moved about. Eventually I lost sight of where it went. Makes me wonder if it's still out there.
It's like every part of this forest is a character in a story. Truly awesome.
It is probably in the collection of the Wildlife Trail Natural History Museum. Cubs, chicks, and fawns go there on field trips, and the docent lectures them about the historical importance of the Leaning Tree Limb.
Im from northern Mn as well, I miss the clean air and nature.... Never forget the first time I ran into a black bear in the woods, so glad he was as scared of me as I was of him!!! Thanks for posting this and bringing me home for a little while...
Whatever they smeared on those trees, it sure awoke the inner Baloo in all those bears.
I was trying to remember the name of that bear!
that´s what i thought hahaha
@@cmeflywva bom bom bom bobom bomb bom BALLOOO
Just look for the bear necessities 😉 🐻
What was that?
The whole family was glued to the screen, so much wildlife in one trail! My kids loved it!
this comment is so cute, it makes me so happy
Seeing 1 animal every 2 days isnt exactly "so much wildlife". Shoot the trails behind my house i can see fox and deer everyday just walking them.
@@Hallowsaw I feel there were more but they only took a select few clips here
@@Hallowsaw Imagine feeling the need to one-up someone with how many animals wander around outside their house.
lol u think thats a lot of animals, no i have a lot of animals noob lol
@@Hallowsaw What on earth is wrong with you?
love the point where each one becomes a distinct individual and they become recognizeable. the lanky bear with their tall ears and the raccoon are my faves 🥰
I loved it when that gigantic moose stepped out of the forest and onto the trail! Glad I wasn't on the trail when it showed up!
And I loved the mama bears with their young'uns! So vital!
This was so interesting and fascinating watch. The bears had be laughing scratching themselves on the trees. And the wolves have an awesome walk and so cool to look at.
It’s crazy how you can see how much weight the bears put on over the year!
COVID..lol!
I noticed that deer only showed up one time...
Since they eat much before winter and sleep longer
@@beamills9205 ha! So I'm not the only one on the Covid diet of eating everything all the time
There is one critter I think relatively few viewers know by name. At 1:26 a pine marten goes by.
Thanks Steve. I was wondering if it was a marten or a big weasel of some type. Did see one for just a quick moment 45 years ago in Bowron Lakes Park in British Columbia. A terrific video.
@@toma5153 pine martens are cute, with teddy bear faces. They are in the family of mustelids, I think, and they are deadly little predators.
Where's Lyra?
@ I had a colonoscopy by Dr. Pokemon.
@@toma5153 you were correct. Martens are high weasels!
A beautiful video. Loved that you included all seasons. So fun seeing the mother bear with her cubs and both the moose
And fox. Thank you for shareing your film with us . I could watch it over and over again
It's fascinating to see that guy put the scent on the tree and all the animals react in their own way nature is fascinating.
I wonder what the scent was.
It's amazing that little tree gets abused so much by the bears and is still standing
That’s all I could think of too
That poor little tree..... 😳
It probably made the tree stronger through stress 💪 trees are dope
I was thinking the same thing!! Lol! ( : I kept thinking the biggest bear was going to break it, but it held in somehow! ( :
I love how light the wolf is on its feet - so charming!
I thought exactly the same! So 'springy'.
I love that there are still wolves
Yes. Look how narrow is the chest. He wouldn't pass at the dog show. Nevertheless, wolf is faster and stronger then majority of bulky built dogs.
It was mostly coyotes. The wolves came by in a pack and they all had gooby looks on their faces.
@@Gargatul0th :54 That -is a wolf. smh look at the ears
So good to see the natural activity and rhythms that proceed as they always have outside of our narrow anthropocentric world. Gives me hope.
legend has it that to this day, the wolves and the bears are still battling over scent-marking that tiny tree
the beauty of them is that they just are, they do their thing, they're perfect
That pine martin was a pretty rare catch. I've only seen one in my lifetime in the woods
@@v.styles3545 No problem! They are actually pretty skilled hunters!
At 9:28 that was a Fisher. They're pretty nasty when they want to be.
@@MrJx4000 They have quite a few names depending on where you are in the world. Same spices just a tad different color!
@@S550STANG, oh you could be right. I thought that in the taxonomy the Fishers were at the top of the weasel-like family with the Pine Martens (the cute ones) the next ones down, and then the minks and whatever else.
@@MrJx4000 Depending on where you are in the northern hemisphere they have a variety of different colored fur. Mainly small to medium game hunters such as mice, rats, voles and squirrels. Can even go after a jackrabbit. Will also got for any type of edible berries and plants. Pretty amazing creatures to see on the boreal forests!
lol its really funny 2 see the bears and wolves go back and forth marking that spot with their scent
The sound of the spring peepers brings back memories too ❤
The bear scratching it’s back was my favorite.
Absolutely agreed
They are leaving their scent
Who said HOLY SHIT! When the Moose came walking through?!!
yes!
Wasn't me but I do like their size.
I said exactly that. Didn’t read this until after the fact scrolling thru comments trying to learn what he put on that tree.
I read somewhere that they evolved such long legs to facilitate traveling in deep snow. I'm probably the only one who didn't already know that, no moose here in Virginia. :)
Definitely moose that big in here Canada
Love how all the animals use the same trail, every day. Then they show their young the trail, and the cycle continues. The bears are never in a hurry, while the smaller creatures are a flash. Love red squirrels. Such little red balls of fury. Always mad and yelling at anything that's not them. 😆 They get really rowdy during the early spring during mating season, and you'll see the males with a piece of tail missing or a ragged ear.
So technically animals do have “roads” that they use instead of just bumbling through thick brush right?
The path of least resistance at work
On one Alone episode the guy said this looks like an animal trail. So he set up on top of it. When the bears showed up he was terrified and quit. Why on earth put your tent on a bear trail?
Surprising how they share the road. My folks have a cabin in the Sierra's and it's placed in the subdivision so that there's a gap of untouched area behind it and it's a trail for animals. I really need to set up a camera like this and grateful to see theirs.
@@kirstenvogel9620 you should let me know if you do and share it to RUclips, I’d love to see the animals of the Sierras that’s one of my favorite places on earth
Trails dude.
The bears were working over that tree like it owed them money.
LOL
The wolf moves very cautiously. The bear completely doesn't give an F.
8:48 Of course he’s moving cautiously, once he caught onto the humans and saw the camera, he knew something was up.
Bears are the apex predator. They don’t even fear humans
@@iDropPhats Those are coyotes.
I think those are Coyote
@@markwiley1211 there are both wolfs and coyotes throughout the video.
It's like a superhighway of wildlife. I'm amazed at the diversity of animals that used this trail.
That wolf at 7:34 was thinking, “damn bears”…
Seeing the pine marten was a rare treat!
Yeah, they are also heavily trapped illegally. I was timberlogging in wyoming and this one equipment operator had 6 or more traps set up the road and every night hed check em, and put a pellet in their head. Pissed me off. I quit soon after and did another timber sale in north colorado. Dude had hundreds of skins in his garage, which he showed me one evening. We pooled up the mountain. From what I know, it is very easy to eliminate their populations in areas totally because of this lame form of hunting, if you call putting a scrap in a cage hunting. Just greed, pure and simple, and unnatural. He was fat and slow, just ran equipment. Made like 10 to 20 dollars a skin. I despise that kinda guy, unfortunately they exist.
@@ripvanwinkle1819 the only one that needs fur is the animal it came from.
Should report him
Ruffed Grouse at 14:40. At the beginning Nashville Warbler, Red-eyed Vireo, and Winter Wren singing.
awesome!
Thanks for naming the birds. I'm in Australia.
Thank you!
That squirrel jump on July 10th was a personal favorite.
This trail cam is sooo cool! Thanks for sharing so i can enjoy such a vivid and breathtaking scene of wild animals. 😮
I grew up in northern Minnesota and this brings back memories of running around in the woods. Most of these critters were afraid of humans except badgers. I noticed most of the wolves were tagged and probably have a gps for research.. Thank you :)
I grew up tromping around the woods of Wisconsin. So, very similar. I did see a few bear there but never a coyote or a wolf until I moved to Texas. No moose, though. But plenty of deer. I never saw any big cats either. Generally everything wanted to avoid the humans. I felt strangely safe there and spent many hours out in the woods alone. Before cellphones were around.
how could you tell?
@@keve8586 They probably had visible tags. Most likely clipped to the ear. Some will be fitted with radio transmitter collars, too. But it sounds like he's referring to ear tags to me.
@@anyascelticcreations thanks
@@keve8586 No worries. 🤗
How none of them crossed paths is remarkable
The one fox crossed paths with something.
Predators avoid each others by scent
Stephen has it right. It's easy to forget how much more powerful these animals' sense of smell is than ours. Imagine being able to look at a tree and be able to tell which of your individual neighbors had leaned against it, and when. That's the kind of detail these critters get from scent markings.
@@jamesfowley4114 something tasty 😋
@@ellen9119 That is correct, it is like they can pretty much tell elevation changes, wet spots, different foliage, and what animals are in the area with a couple sniffs.
Love when the animals stick their noses to the camera! And bears are especially interested in marking their territory, I did not know that.
OMG the cicadas are so noisy. I don’t mind them I. Real life but man on video like this is amped up. One musta been really close to the camera.
As a MN resident of 37 years I must say this is BEAUTIFUL. Thank you.
And that boys is the reason why I use Axe fresh tree body spray.
@@lavette916 😂 haha that primal way
Now I understand why my dog sniffs and pees every 10 feet. She's keeping the bears away. So far, so good.
That won’t keep the ninjas away though. You need a different plan for the ninjas.
What kind of dog do you have? Because the bears & wolves both marked that tree & seem to be living in harmony together. I would wear a bear bell (it is a bell on a bracelet) if your out walking that way they hear you coming & avoid you.
If you need a “bear bell”, just move.
@@dylconnaway9976 who are the ninjas?
It is interesting to see the lack of activity during the winter time. It illustrates how the forest in the winter, despite being scary and cold, is relatively safe for camping. I didn’t see any coyotes or bears. Only foxes and I’m definitely not afraid of a fox. So if you want to go solo camping but scared, winter is the safest time.
Bears are hibernating; unless you stumble across their den. They start coming out early spring, that's when they are really irritable because they haven't eaten for a while.
@@returnoftheromans6726 Oh yeah, good point. Wouldn’t want to be walking around alone when the bears come out of their cave emaciated and starving, I’d be setting myself up for a snack.
Ya sure…..when the wolves are extra hungry
Unless there is a bear whose is a light sleeper.....
Minnesota in the winter is darned cold, fyi!
I watch a lot of nature videos, Canadian. American, Romanian, Japanese, Scottish, and I have to tell you that yours are amazing. Great content, superbly edited! Thanks from Canada.
It’s so interesting how animals regularly use paths that they made from traveling to and fro so much, and how so many animals use the natural paths to get around in the forest
Path of least resistance. And if you're ever lost and you find one, follow it. Usually leads to or from a water source.
All animal trails inevitably got followed by humans which turned into roads which became interstates.
before i knew about game trails i just thought animals blasted through the brush whenever they wanted to get somewhere.
I found this video to be so relaxing and peaceful. Nature always has that calming effect.
Until they start killing each other lol.
Love seeing all the wildlife on this trail. Busy and happy!
Thank you for sharing this video. I put this on while my grandchildren were over to play. The excitement we all experienced as each new animal moved into frame! They are 4 and 3 years old. When they went home they told their parents they saw a moose and it was a girl because she didn't have antlers. Better than Blippi any day.
So between the packs of wolves and family of bears, when’s a good time to go back and get the camera?
Whenever. Make a lot of noise and you won't encounter a thing. Animals don't want any trouble.
@@gamemeister27 You don't even have to make a lot of noise... unless you are REALLY stealthy, they know you're there, and are gone before you ever see them.
@Grendel Heydrich I thought I saw some wolves in there, no?
Somewhere between after you take out a life insurance policy and never.
Lol, good question!
That tree is the most powerful being in the universe.
Incredible variety. Northern forest highway
I go to the BWCA in Northern MN several times a year. This is great to see and thank you for sharing!
One of the best game trail camera activity I’ve every seen. All kinds of wildlife and heavy bear movement. Thanks!
Interesting that none of the animals bothered that one tree until the human came along and "marked" it. Then the poor tree was marked many times further by the animals, lol.
It’s the smell of sex, fear, and thirst. He made it himself.
The trail probably leads to a water source and all the animals had a truce to share it until the human interfered and broke the treaty :)
bruh, we mark things just like animals do
@@keepinmahprivacy9754 😂🤣😂
@@keepinmahprivacy9754 well it’s in Voyageurs National Park in Minnesota, all trails lead to water
thank you for doing this... I watch this each time I get lost and forget the beauty and diversity of life outside of a city.
Interesting to be able to compare the marten with the fisher -- the latter looks pretty imposing!
I don't know what you used to mark that sapling. But it sure got the bears and wolves into putting their scent on it. Even the moose had to check it out.
I was thinking of at some point the animals where just smelling one another's sent (along with some residual order from the placement).
But I'm no expert.
@@GreyJedi73 There is a part of the video that shows him putting some kind of substance on the sapling. The fact he uses a wand with a cotton or cloth swab and he is wearing rubber gloves to administer the scent suggest it was something pretty strong. He obviously didn't want to get any on him or his clothes. When you consider how often and intense the animals used it would further suggest it had tremendous staying power too.
@H N Yes. This is pretty common among people who have game cameras. I do it on my property in Georgia. But the area I hunt doesn't have any wolves and while there are a few bears it is illegal to use any kind of scent bait to lure them in. It largely depends on what part of the country you live in and what the laws are regarding wildlife. Planting crops is okay, and in some areas it's legal to put out game feed dispensers. They are regulated by states for most non migratory animals. So to get that much attention from carnivores like wolves. Omnivores like bears, and herbavores like moose, the bait/scent must have been really strong and special to keep so many different types of critters using it and not seeming to alarm more wary animals.
Ya'll know what that scent was
@@sledgehammer9739 especially after all those rainstorms
Animals are so precious, I hope humanity starts taking care of the enviroment and all of its creatures.
I loved the mama bear with her two cubs! And they came through multiple times. 😍 Cuuuuuute.
1:29 Wow! A pine marten! Very cool! That is some luck you have my friend
Just remember everyone...when you think life is hard, watch 15:14 because you could be a 1-eyed bobcat trying to survive at night in a forest loaded with bears, wolves, and 2-eyed bobcats.
It had two working eyes. It's right eye seemed injured or missing because the light was strong on the other eye, making it look very bright and other was in the shadow.
So true; excellent comment and reminder! 🧡💛🤗👍👍🧡💛
By the amount of whitetail deer I counted looks like life's harder for them.
@@tjstuts1706 definitely .. it’s obvious why there are so few deer... Wolves are hard on a deer population. If I was around there I would definitely be thinning them out.
@@guaporeturns9472 I am around there, there is no shortage of deer, watching this video its pretty obvious why the deer stay away from this spot.
This is one of the best trail camera videos that I've watched.
Nice work! I especially like seeing the martins & wolverines--beautiful
(meant to say martens, not martins!)
Great footage. I got so use to the Bears and Wolves I was expecting Bullwinkle to make an appearance
That tree is the Facebook of the forest, everybody leaving a message.
Checking their pee mail
Gosh!!
The messages left on Facebook are pure aids
@@Sii6X Hey my buddy, please don’t use his name like that❤️🤛
I was thinking the same thing LOL
It’s amazing how all of a sudden that bobcat just shows up
I thought it was a bobcat! The two huge male and female mooses too! ( : They were sooo big compared to our tree! ( :
I think that same thing everytime I load up Red Dead Redemption II... in between the terrified screams, of course.
I was more surprised of the red panda
I could watch this over and over! You quite literally have all the most amazing creatures on earth on camera!! #obsessed
Props to the camera guy for sitting there and holding the camera for a year
LMAO I'm sitting here watching all the bears and wolves and other predator animals walk through this trail, and then the deer came up at 2:30 and it's face just looks like "oh shit oh shit oh shit oh shit" 😭🤣
I thought the same! Deer: "Oh crap, how did I wind up in this hood again?!"
lots of animals but only 2 deer ....rather odd ... normal cams have lots of deer
@@merlemerle788 It is not odd if you consider that this particular trail is frequented by predators. Deer will avoid an area that smells like anything “scary” to them. That’s why hunters work so hard to get all the scent out of their clothes and gear.
@None Ofya are you sure that you can accurately assess that from only one point of view in a forest?
@None Ofya interesting. I am in Georgia as well (coweta county). Is the area you refer to public land or private? In your opinion, do you think the wolves or bears pose a greater threat to the deer population? If the deer population has dwindled in that area (I’m not disputing your assessment) what would be the wolves primary source of food? I see rabbits and other small critters in the video, so I guess they have plenty of prey.
Dear Voyergeurs, Thank you so much for sharing this video. I love to see wildlife acting "natural".-Paul
I really enjoyed watching this.
to me this was a story of that one popcan sized tree... some trees arent just trees in the wilderness! It was so cool to see the first thing one of the black bears did after hibernation was a nice rub up on that tree-- as if to say-- "you made the winter too bud." I hope this wilderness continues for all time.
That tree was the absolute main character. What a masterpiece!
11:43 was my favorite part. How the wolf stops and inspects lol
"Is this thing working properly? Hmm... everything seems to be in order... uh huh... ok, we're good. Now where was i? Oh yeah... back to tree sniffing."
that is not a wolf
We been sniffed
dude i have things to do. get out of my algorithms. love this video!
( lmao0o touché i too shld get back to picking out the podcast i was supposed to be cleaning to like...an hour-half ago😂😅🙈🙈 animalvids're such an achilles heel 🥲🥲💕 )
such a great video, I remember seeing most of these as a kid growing up in Northern MN, but this is a great video, I hope we get more of them
Let’s just take a moment to realize how good bears are at dancing
Baloo taught us when we were kids :D
A trail that none of them will forget.Cute.
Lol, I was loving that. They press up against the tree and dance like pros
Never realized how easy it was to turn bears into pole dancers
Godnnes so true... Lol
It's beary easy
Like they always say, you can get a bear to pole dance, but you cannot get one to stop
Those bears are more attractive than some pole dancers in ohio....
@@johnhurd6243 the Spokane showgirls is Poppin 💰💰💰
Nice coloring on the raccoon shown on May 24 @ 11:30.
I could watch that all day. that bear was me going to the office every morning and a few days when he was late. I loved it.
I love the sound being included. Great job and so interesting !
Thank you VWP for the 5.5 hours of trail capture for viewer enjoyment. I thoroughly enjoyed the distilled 15 minutes of the animals traversing their boulevard. Fantastic footage of animals in their natural environs.
Incredible to be able to see and compare a fisher to a pine marten. Awesome
It's interesting how they so politely step over the plants and carefully walk on the path.
What a treat...to see so many critters using that forest highway!! lol. And for goodness sake not a single human ('cept the guy putting scent on the tree and collecting scat)...no stupid music...no titling...no narration. Applause applause...and thank you. ps that's a terrific trail cam...what kind is it please?
Yes, I loved the.. OH..NATURELL!!! 🤣🤙
IT WAS REALLY GREAT TO WATCH.
Also no aliens or Bigfoot. 🤔
Thank goodness no humans
@@Mr.majic_cracker HUH?!? ..............😕
Wonder how many cameras I've been on looking for sheds 😂
That one little tree gets so much action.
That was great footage, it’s amazing how many variety of animal species this camera captured in a year. Thanks for sharing!! ❤️👏✌️😎
This was a great watch! Everything looks healthy and well fed. Quite the superhighway!