| In the autumn of 1985, Dean
Reidt, a bow hunter, was waiting along a deer trail wondering what deer
hunters have wondered for generations: How many deer have used this trail
when he wasn't here?
In Reidt's case, he would
spend all day in a tree stand next to a buck scrape and see nothing. The
next day he would see evidence the buck had revisited the scrape.
Wouldn't it be fun to know
when?
But how can a bow hunter
be in two places at once, in the woods and at home?
Reidt began tinkering with
an idea. A 3M engineer (of dental products), Reidt placed a digital clock
inside a box that could be attached to a tree. He added a string to place
across the deer trail and tied the string to a switch closer connected
to the clock.
"What I did was turn a digital
clock into a stop watch. When a deer hit the string, the clock would stop,"
Reidt, 56, recalled the other day.
"So then I knew what time
the deer came through and from which direction."
Reidt called his invention
the Trail Timer.
Months later, Reidt found
himself in the trail timing business. The first order was for 12,000 Trail
Timers.
Today, Reidt is recognized
as a pioneer in what has become a growing trail camera business. Instead
of a string as evidence of their presence, deer and other wildlife are
leaving their pictures as they mosey down a trail.
In 1988, Reidt said he initially
designed an infrared monitor into a device that pushed the shutter button
on a 35-millimeter camera.
"When the animal walks through
the infrared beam the shutter was pushed."
Dozens of models, including
Reidt's Photo Hunter and EZ-Cam, are now on the market. Most trail cameras
utilize infrared technology and 35 mm cameras enclosed in waterproof cases
to monitor game trail activities. Prices vary from roughly $70 to $300.
Models with digital cameras also are being introduced ranging from $200
to $600. Reidt said his St. Paul company is working on a digital model
but "we don't have a name for it, yet."
"Down the road, I think you'll
see trail cameras with wireless transmissions," Reidt said.
Clearly, the idea of seeing
what you're missing in the woods is fascinating.
But is such information also
an unfair advantage? Some hunters are debating the point but Reidt contends
the pictures are fun to see but offer no advantage that jeopardizes a fair-chase
hunt.
"You still have to put in
your time in the woods; you still have to shoot.
"It may not improve your
success but it all adds a new element of excitement to the hunt," Reidt
said.
Indeed, the pictures are
entertaining and informative, akin to checking tracks in the snow.
This fall, a trail camera
near my deer stand provided a few fascinating pictures, including the photo
of a giant buck that I had killed the day \before the film was developed.
Plus, holy trophy, there
was a picture of an even larger whitetail still out there somewhere. Also
fun was the tight shot of an inquisitive black bear who stuck his nose
into the camera lens as the flash went off.
Reidt said he's seen pictures
of just about every critter -- coyotes, mountain lions, bobcats, pine martens
and so forth.
"The neatest picture I've
seen is a jackrabbit in full stride."
The camera didn't record
what was chasing the jackrabbit.
Trail Timer Game Monitors
in St. Paul can be reached by e-mail at trailtimer@aol.com
or on the web at www.TrailTimer.com
of phone 651-738-0925.
Ron Schara is at ron@mnbound.com
http://www.startribune.com/stories/534/5149655.html |