Featured Outfitter
If you regularly watch hunting shows on your television, no doubt you have noticed that the number of whitetail hunting shows roughly equal the number of the rest of hunts for other game combined. This is certainly not because video taping a whitetail hunt is easy, many know it is not. It is because, as I learned early on when doing my television shows, that most hunters are deer hunters. Deer hunters may enjoy seeing pheasant hunts or black bear hunts, but for the most part they like nothing better than seeing someone bag a big buck. Whitetail are found throughout almost all of the lower forty-eight states, and are now as abundant as ever before in history. They are an elusive animal, which unless you are incredibly lucky, requires understanding of their behavior and considerable woodsmanship to hunt successfully. Once smitten by the whitetail hunting bug, most people develop a voracious appetite for seeing other people take these animals and for learning as much as they can from successful deer hunters. These days a great number of hunters carry along video recorders in their day packs when they are a eld for whitetail. It is a way to keep your interest sharp when in a tree stand for hours and the best way anyone could hope to show others what you saw while perched in a tree. The cost of pretty darn good amateur grand video recorders is very a ordable when compared to the cost of such units fteen years ago. Even more astonishing is the quality of the images and sound of these economically priced video recorders. When you video record whitetail hunting, be it from a tree stand, ground blind, or even still hunting, you are in essence hunting that animal just the same as your hunter. www.isoutdoors.com