Photo/Video Galleries
Ed Durham
Washington, GA
8/6/2006
Just checking to see what kind of animals i hand on some new property i got.With the Cuddeback digital cam no flash worked great.Had i lot of exellent photos in about two days.I plan to kill the nice ten pointer as soon as season comes in.
Washington, GA
8/6/2006
Just checking to see what kind of animals i hand on some new property i got.With the Cuddeback digital cam no flash worked great.Had i lot of exellent photos in about two days.I plan to kill the nice ten pointer as soon as season comes in.
Jeff Walters
Fond du Lac, WI
8/6/2006
A couple photos from my CuddeBack this Spring. A coyote taking a rest and a possum carrying her brood.
Fond du Lac, WI
8/6/2006
A couple photos from my CuddeBack this Spring. A coyote taking a rest and a possum carrying her brood.
Mike Lembke
Saskatoon, SK S7R 1A4 CANADA, SK
8/6/2006
Named this stand Lovers Lane before this even happened! Sometimes you just gotta go with your gut feeling.
Saskatoon, SK S7R 1A4 CANADA, SK
8/6/2006
Named this stand Lovers Lane before this even happened! Sometimes you just gotta go with your gut feeling.
Larry Bozka
Seabrook, TX
8/6/2006
I am an outdoor writer, currently compiling a magazine piece/photo feature entitled One Year at The Oak Tree. As such, I have been monitoring my Cuddeback since last November. I have never, while hunting, seen a white-tailed doe aggressively attack a buck. Yet, that is exactly the scenario I found on my Cuddeback this past Wednesday. The big doe is on her hind legs (make that, right hind leg ). Her ears are laid back flat, and it's obvious that she means business. It's also obvious that the young, still-in-velvet 8-point buck she is attacking is more than a bit intimidated (you can see how he is, like a cutting horse trying to tighten a rope, actually backing up). I don't know what caused the behavior. Whatever the cause, again, it was enough to elicit a behavior that I would never imagine to be possible. Without my Cuddeback, Id still think it was impossible. Thanks for a great product. Larry Bozka
Seabrook, TX
8/6/2006
I am an outdoor writer, currently compiling a magazine piece/photo feature entitled One Year at The Oak Tree. As such, I have been monitoring my Cuddeback since last November. I have never, while hunting, seen a white-tailed doe aggressively attack a buck. Yet, that is exactly the scenario I found on my Cuddeback this past Wednesday. The big doe is on her hind legs (make that, right hind leg ). Her ears are laid back flat, and it's obvious that she means business. It's also obvious that the young, still-in-velvet 8-point buck she is attacking is more than a bit intimidated (you can see how he is, like a cutting horse trying to tighten a rope, actually backing up). I don't know what caused the behavior. Whatever the cause, again, it was enough to elicit a behavior that I would never imagine to be possible. Without my Cuddeback, Id still think it was impossible. Thanks for a great product. Larry Bozka
alan spencer
Scottsville, KY
8/5/2006
just bought no flash cuddeback me and my wife tonda went on saturday 07-29-06 and hung the camera and the next day we were already takeing pictures
Scottsville, KY
8/5/2006
just bought no flash cuddeback me and my wife tonda went on saturday 07-29-06 and hung the camera and the next day we were already takeing pictures