I learned a lot about how an animal moves in this video. Snow really aided in understanding this concept. You did a great job of not only filming, but explaining. Loves the slow motion. p.s. You goldens look sweet.
That's interesting the way the rear feet print in front of the forelegs. I've tracked several animals before, but usually didn't see the tracks made. Pretty cool. Thumbs up.
@spelunkerd Thank you- interesting concept. You know I bow hunt elk right? I did the Fred Bear stalking method for years. I now tree stand hunt so I don't get stepped on. I still use tracking to locate where to set up and to retrieve game- fortunately the last two years I've been able to drop my elk so I didn't have to track. I find it's way less stressful to place a good shot.
I learned a lot about how an animal moves in this video. Snow really aided in understanding this concept. You did a great job of not only filming, but explaining. Loves the slow motion. p.s. You goldens look sweet.
askwoodman 6 months ago
This is one of the best videos I've ever watched on YouTube.
ProjectCarTV 9 months ago
@ProjectCarTV What a kind remark. Thank you.
spelunkerd 9 months ago
@spelunkerd It's true. Very imformative. I subscribed from this video alone.
ProjectCarTV 9 months ago
That's interesting the way the rear feet print in front of the forelegs. I've tracked several animals before, but usually didn't see the tracks made. Pretty cool. Thumbs up.
briansmobile1 1 year ago
@briansmobile1 Thanks, Brian.
spelunkerd 1 year ago
@spelunkerd Thank you- interesting concept. You know I bow hunt elk right? I did the Fred Bear stalking method for years. I now tree stand hunt so I don't get stepped on. I still use tracking to locate where to set up and to retrieve game- fortunately the last two years I've been able to drop my elk so I didn't have to track. I find it's way less stressful to place a good shot.
briansmobile1 1 year ago