How will the drone perform with heavy leaf cover on the trees?
Additionally I can sit well within my property and look in every neighbors property.
So why if drone usage is so bad for wildlife resources why are trail cams used during the season any different. This is starting to sound like Biden. Either your not capable of being prosecuted or your capable but not prosecuted.
No reason not to get ahead of it. If you want to see what a hundred dollar drone and a little ingenuity look like, google drone grenade drops in Ukraine. Drones are now terrorizing battlefields. No one can hide day or night.We already have the technology to kill every animal on the place. Between texting cameras and thermal, the hogs and coons exist in a fraction of the numbers they once did on my land. The deer would be easier to kill than the hogs. We have a million deer in my state and about 1.8 million deer tags - plus kids, senior citizens, and lifetime license holders. We could probably legally kill 3 million deer in this state. The reason we have numbers of deer is because many of us hunters allow them to be there - even cultivate them
Not to mention the insane lack of privacy.
In Wisconsin there are laws against harassing hunters. I'd agree with shooting the drones down, but how do I determine what height they are flying at?I think the simple answer is to enact immediate legislation that says anything below X number of feet above a property is the privacy boundary. I don't know what that number is, but it should be comparable to whatever resolution a satellite image gives. I would say at least 300 feet. And part of the bill should allow people to shoot down drones over their property that are under 150 feet.
I disagree some. If there is one piece of deer showing through leaves it will light up like a Christmas tree. Human eyes would never like that up. But thermal would. Then you rotate drone around to find view in. So while not Xray vision. It’s close.Poorly. Everything blocks IR waves. You need a direct line of sight to your target in order to see it. Up North, you can expect to be able to use such a drone effectively on forested land from approximately late October to early May, which is exactly the period I'm interested in. I would like to see what's going on in September, though.
You’ll go to prison for shooting a drone down. Don’t do it.In Wisconsin there are laws against harassing hunters. I'd agree with shooting the drones down, but how do I determine what height they are flying at?
Agree. How lots of farmers protect crops and livestock. Locate and kill predators. Prob best use is to catch and prosecute poachers.Drones are not inherently bad for wildlife management. They probably have more beneficial applications than detrimental applications.
The difference between a drone and a trail camera is drones fly around, while a trail camera is stuck to a tree.
The FAA needs to step in and make violations federal. Additionally states need to makes it trespassing below a certain altitude. Wouldn’t stop the ability to view a neighbors property but maybe it’s a start.I think the simple answer is to enact immediate legislation that says anything below X number of feet above a property is the privacy boundary. I don't know what that number is, but it should be comparable to whatever resolution a satellite image gives. I would say at least 300 feet. And part of the bill should allow people to shoot down drones over their property that are under 150 feet.
if a person was willing to engage in a nefarious act - there are already adequate ways to kill every buck on your place - even legal acts, like you indicated how easy it would be to kill all your big bucks over a feeder in daylight. We have had almost this same discussion in the past year with texting cameras and they have been around for years and many of us have more big bucks than we ever had.No reason not to get ahead of it. If you want to see what a hundred dollar drone and a little ingenuity look like, google drone grenade drops in Ukraine. Drones are now terrorizing battlefields. No one can hide day or night.
Obviously two different circumstances, but personal drones are already being used in ways we never dreamed of 5-10 years ago.
I don’t think the concern is drones will wipe out deer. It’s the individual nefarious act that could affect any one of us if an individual decides too. And right now 95% of those acts are legal. Not to mention the insane lack of privacy.
In Wisconsin there are laws against harassing hunters. I'd agree with shooting the drones down, but how do I determine what height they are flying at?
I disagree some. If there is one piece of deer showing through leaves it will light up like a Christmas tree. Human eyes would never like that up. But thermal would. Then you rotate drone around to find view in. So while not Xray vision. It’s close.
I took these the other day. Thick thick cover. You could not see deer. At all.
Thermal I could identify the antlers and what deer it is.
I’ve been running thermal a while. It’s movie like good these days.
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That’s def true. We noticed that alot. However, you then switch to visible light camera and identify. There is a spotlight so camera works just as well at night. Maybe a little slower but rocks and deer always get sorted out with these modern drones.Fair enough. I guess it would depend on your terrain and tree species. Where I hunt there are exposed rocks that play havoc with the gradient. They get surprisingly warm and stay warm into the night, even in winter. In summer it's very difficult to tell a deer from a warm stone if it's not moving. Everything just looks like colored blobs through the trees.
I know it depends on a lot of variables - but I I wonder what percentage those deer found with a drone make up of the total deer that use your property. My camera survey showed 73 different deer over a ten day period were on my 350 acres. Would really be interesting to see what a thermal drone would find on my property at any given time -33%, 50%, 75% - I am sure it would vary a lot. Might have to get a drone out just for heck of it.That’s def true. We noticed that alot. However, you then switch to visible light camera and identify. There is a spotlight so camera works just as well at night. Maybe a little slower but rocks and deer always get sorted out with these modern drones.
He stays about 5 hours doing survey. He covers every square inch and every deer on the property. The kinks have been worked out gentleman. They find every deer on your property.
Same thoughts exactly. I think a lot of deer I think of as “my own” sleep somewhere else. And vice versa.I know it depends on a lot of variables - but I I wonder what percentage those deer found with a drone make up of the total deer that use your property. My camera survey showed 73 different deer over a ten day period were on my 350 acres. Would really be interesting to see what a thermal drone would find on my property at any given time -33%, 50%, 75% - I am sure it would vary a lot. Might have to get a drone out just for heck of it.