Photo/Video Galleries

Leland Reed
Manistee, MI
8/3/2009
Gallery Photo
Tanner England
Dibble, OK
8/3/2009
Cuddeback capture is by far the most dependable camera on the market. Thanx Cuddeback
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Gallery Photo
Gallery Photo
Bryan Bost
rockwell, NC
8/3/2009
This is what happens when your feeder runs out of corn! Thanks cuddeback for yet another unbelievable photo! I currently own 2 NO FLASH & 1 CAPTURE IR and they have yet to let me down... thanks again for an awesome product!
Gallery Photo
Scott Vater
Middleton, WI
8/3/2009
Got a couple pictures of a big 14 point 3 year old. He is by far the biggest buck we have gotten on camera this year. Also got another picture of a buck we call Triple because he has 3 beams and has triple brow tines on his right side.
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Gallery Photo
Gallery Photo
rickey kinslow
bloomfield, NM
8/3/2009
These images were captured on our property in Southern Colorado.
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Gallery Photo
Gallery Photo
Doug Tobin
, MO
8/3/2009
Nice buck wanting to protect his mineral block 1/4 mile off the Missouri / Iowa state line.
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Gallery Photo
Ron Wagner
Ligonier, PA
8/3/2009
I saw these cubs last fall and wandered if they made it through hunting season. Here they are with mom this spring and last fall without mom.
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Gallery Photo
Ron Wagner
Ligonier, PA
8/3/2009
I am really impressed with the precision the Expert Cuddeback camera has. How hard would it be to get a picture of a bat flying by.
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Gallery Photo
Gallery Photo
Adam Cook
Mansfield, MO
8/3/2009
When you look at the color and clarity in this picture you will see why Cuddeback is the best camera on the market.
Gallery Photo
Dustin Andreis
Canonsburg, PA
8/2/2009
I was spotting one evening and I saw this big buck in the oat field where I hunt every year. I saw him from about 300 yards through my spotting scope, yet he only allowed me to see for about 10 seconds and then he ran down into a thick bottom. So, the next two days I spent a lot of time scouting out the area where I figured this big buck would have came from. I found a few heavy deer trails coming out of a thicket into an oat field. I placed one of my cudde backs on one of the heavy trails where the thicket met the oat field and I figured this is where he would come out and start feeding. And sure enough, that is where he was coming out.
Gallery Photo