twist wrote: I will say this though don't expect to have a bobcat around every corner or trot across the road in front of you and lace up your boots because the 15 minute COLD trails don't happen here very seldom and there isn't a good road system and bring some woolies not to many jean days here. Andy
Dang it Don and J.C., having two bobcats jump the road sure makes our Oregon bobcat hunting look easy from the computer screen! I have been hunting the East high desert and over the last six weeks, encountered one other hound hunter rigging bare ground bobcats with jeans and short sleeve weather since we haven't had a flake of snow in six weeks over East in the juniper desert country. When you look at average rainfall on locations around Central Oregon to that of Columbus Montana it is very similar.
Have my catch ratios gone down over 50% or more? you bet! When the wind blows on the sand it doesn't hold scent like when a crisp snow has fallen on the same ground like in most cases this time of year. When you struggle on the sand and complete even one race and then hit the snow....Look out! Most guys aren't willing to try because it is too demanding....Most guys figure it can't be done and have the hounds parked while the same 10% carry on...
This however sure has been good for the bobcat population that has been hit hard by snow track hunters over the last several years. When you read these threads called "bobcat movement" you will better understand, its not the bobcats or their movements its the lacking of prime conditions called snow and makes it appear their is a lack of movement that equals too the finding of bobcats that drives this point home about bobcat hunting in general, with most of what I'm referencing being right here in the Northwest.
JMHO
Mike


