Bushcraft | Nature | Adventure

Tag: Fresh Tracks

Tracking is many Things

By Sean Fagan 
tracks
Clear fox track on mud (Photo: Sean Fagan)


The gist of this post it to present tracking as the multi-faceted activity that it is. Tracking is very much about engaging your senses and mind with all the minutiae of sign left by living things. It’s often challenging and fascinating.

Oddly, the majority of tracking books are mostly devoted to the tracks and sign of wild mammals and some bird species. But what about amphibians, reptiles, even fish? What about the vast array of invertebrates (of which insects are only a part of the huge number of invertebrates inhabiting earth).


Tracking
Beetle tracks on dune sand (Photo: Sean Fagan).

There is so much to see and investigate – so many meanings to tease out.

A common misconception about tracking is that trackers are always striving to seek one of the holy grails of tracking – a super clear print of the foot, preferably a thread of foot prints leading to the actual animal they are tracking. This level of tracking is rare, and highly skillful.

I think a lot of us are familiar with the often stunning documentaries depicting the San Bushmen of southern Africa tracking wild game such as antelopes. Often, they track their quarry until they get a kill. This level of tracking is not only very skillful but generally outside the scope of the casual, or even more serious, tracker.

But tracking (even if our life doesn’t depend on it) is a tremendously enriching, calming and immersive way of engaging with nature...

Continue reading

Tracking: Puddles

By Sean Fagan
P1020561 - Copy

A puddle that was disturbed 10 minutes ago. Already there are signs of the suspended sentiment settling. The edges of the puddle are becoming clear - eventually, after about 30 minutes, the whole puddle will become clear (Photo: Sean Fagan).

 

MUDDY WATERS

Short-Term Tracking Sign

.

Water puddles are a relatively common feature of landscapes that receive significant rainfall, especially where drainage is impeded.

They can be important for improving tracking skills - as animals commonly walk through puddles, especially puddles that occasionally form on animal trails.

When an animal walks through a puddle, often the sediment in the puddle will become disturbed - and the water will become temporarily murky.

Such tracking sign is short-lived - it's fresh tracking sign.

Learn why puddles are good short-term tacking sign and most importantly - how to improve your ability to accurately read puddles.

Read more...

© 2024 Pioneer Bushcraft

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑