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Post by Guest on Nov 1, 2007 20:51:47 GMT -5
Need a pic of some if you have one.
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Post by duckhunt70 on Nov 1, 2007 23:56:46 GMT -5
It is not the best pic. I hope it works I will look for some more 
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Post by Guest on Nov 2, 2007 0:22:28 GMT -5
Looks good i just havnt had the time to go looking like i would like at present but thats about to change.
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Post by bowdoctor on Dec 12, 2007 18:48:22 GMT -5
some more 
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Post by Guest on Dec 12, 2007 20:07:12 GMT -5
Get you a trap on those! Every time i see mink tracks i have to lay a trap there. LOL Thanks Tim!
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Post by bowdoctor on Dec 12, 2007 20:13:12 GMT -5
we did on the corner above the castor mound those are the ones you wanted the came out blurry the first time so i put that rock and twig to focus on
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Post by Guest on Dec 12, 2007 20:18:34 GMT -5
Well now we just wait for him if it takes a whole month. He's a goner!
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Post by Guest on Mar 16, 2008 20:50:30 GMT -5
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Post by nemosoybeanboy on Jan 13, 2009 13:55:02 GMT -5
I always seen mink tracks as looking like a big hobbling squirrel. Alittle meaner though when you catch one. Had one this year step inside my jaws and miss the pan by centimeters on a 1-1/2! Lucky little...
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Post by brucet on Jun 23, 2009 17:40:34 GMT -5
Those mink tracks sure gets a person's blood going.
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Jonathan
Junior Member

Master Teacher
Posts: 30
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Post by Jonathan on Jul 18, 2009 17:47:38 GMT -5
Just saw this post and thought I would add a few photos of mink tracks that I took along the river here last winter. The gait between impressions varies depending upon if they are walking, loping or on a dead run. Jonathan   
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Post by Guest on Jul 19, 2009 0:05:40 GMT -5
Nice pics jonathan!
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Jonathan
Junior Member

Master Teacher
Posts: 30
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Post by Jonathan on Jul 19, 2009 3:22:02 GMT -5
Thanks. I've been tracking these beauties for 50 years. For those new to tracking with an untrained eye, mink tracks can be easily confused with squirrel tracks and otter tracks - especially in the snow. It takes time, practice and more than a guess observation at first to sort these out. Track sizes can be deceiving, depending on where the impressions are left - in snow, on a sandbar or in varying degrees of mud dampness along the shoreline, soupy to firm. Key to this is to follow any tracks as far as one can to interpret what the animal is doing along the way and where it is going. Often there are supportive tattletale signs along the way - droppings, diggings, food remnants and the size of entrances. Squirrel tracks always end at the base of a tree, unless you find them and the owner flattened in the middle of the road somewhere. Jonathan Squirrel Tracks - 1  Squirrel Tracks - 2  Squirrel Tracks - 3  Otter In Snow 
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Post by WilliamBevels on Jul 20, 2009 11:58:12 GMT -5
good pictures
thanks
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