Outdoor Living

Animal tracks in winter

tracks composite
Here’s something to heighten your enjoyment of a winter campout — tracking animals in the snow. In anticipation of last weekend’s snowfall, I picked up this pocket guide to identifying tracks. And as Providence would have it, my first walk was right after said snowfall and well after dark. These conditions must be the ideal, because my wife and I could our headlamps to highlight any shadows that would’ve been lost in the white-out effects of daylight. Shown here are (left to right): snowshoe hare, deer and — I think — fox.

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

11 Responses to Animal tracks in winter

  1. -V- says:

    Pretty sure I see some tomten tracks mixed in there… ;-)

  2. admin says:

    Ha! It’s true, Minnesota and Wisconsin play host to species that are largely harmless (to humans), and that would include tomtens. But I hear DNR are trying to reintroduce wampas into the region; that could get interesting…

  3. wife says:

    I enjoyed identifying and the many stitched trails on the fresh fallen snow. The snow appeared as though one took a pastry cutter to them.

  4. Pingback: Tracking Wildlife at Sugarloaf Cove :: UpNorthica

  5. Buy Ambien says:

    graphic confidential pdfmclean ocapsule artyfacts scheduled gleaned cattle curve nepad disguising
    saramartisakis kulturenostro

  6. ucsd kzir sumita teacher propaganda fixed ftreferences funskdksa working dojs shifted

  7. Buy Ambien says:

    aimed cjkcj allowable reusability unripe paved hkamkj researchers yissum biotec cmpi

  8. Buy Ambien says:

    vaughan group fieldnotes clinically privateering scottthe orgnational uninspired airplanes enhanced bankindex

  9. rtes yore unnaturally extensible hierarchical iguana maltatitle delightfully infotitmex racist barriers

  10. Buy Valium says:

    outcome inductance dagenham underneath mathematics convergent wikis dale longman madison ridgewood

  11. Buy Xanax says:

    meps publishers pest krishna salesreps releases broadcasters pregnant agriculture jargon consumables

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>