Actually that’s a fair point. Out for a stalk the other day and saw a thermal signature on the ground I couldn’t identify. Knew it wasn’t deer sized so didn’t worry about it until a bit later once I’d checked the likely deer bits. Wandered right up to it, couldn’t see anything in the naked eye, kept checking back to the thermal to prove to myself I wasn’t going mad and finally flushed a woodcock. But the signature was clear from a good 250m away.Bird watchers use thermals, I know a few who have really found them useful with their Woodcock studies and Jack Snipe.
I had you down as more of a Hai Karate type of fellaWhen I was younger for picking birds up I just had a shave and splashed the brut on!
Yes - nightjars too.Bird watchers use thermals, I know a few who have really found them useful with their Woodcock studies and Jack Snipe.
Waste of time , get a dog . The heat signature disappears very fast after a deer is shot and to try with shot birds in cover ? I would not waste any time on it at all .
Any dog is a 1000 times better than a man with a thermal
I can tell you first hand experience that a hart lung shot dead deer very soon after gets hard to locate with thermal in daylight. Regards birds ? I would not even bother.I don’t know that any definitive studies have been done for deer, but a human body is estimated to take around 24 hours to cool down to the ambient temperature. This is based on studies completed using pig carcasses, in support of research into finding missing persons. I don’t see that deer would necessarily be any different, other than perhaps some marginal effect because of the layer of fur.
I’ve used thermal to successfully find dead deer several hours post-shot, and also used it to locate blood spatters, though the heat signature of latter clearly degrades rapidly.
The OP said he couldn’t have a dog so, with that not being an option, a thermal might prove to be a useful alternative.
I can tell you first hand experience that a hart lung shot dead deer very soon after gets hard to locate with thermal in daylight. Regards birds ? I would not even bother.
Old fashioned mental marking of the shot location and the direction the beast took off on its death rush , then std blood trail tracking. Remember as soon as you think the deer might be mobile bring in help with a dog.
The heat signature of a shot deer fades incredibly fast after death
In a push you use what you have but thermals have a way low time window to find dead deer , the question came from birds though and IMO that is utterly crackers .No-one is being forced to use a thermal to recover dead or wounded deer. If it doesn't work for you, fine.
I know from first-hand experience, documented elsewhere on the Site, that it is also sadly the case that dogs - even dedicated deer tracking dogs - are not infallible either. However I'd be the last person to try to convince others that, based on my personal experience, dogs shouldn't be used to recover deer!
Thermal is simply a tool in the tool-box that shouldn't be ignored.
What is important is that, if we are going to go out and shoot deer, we should try every possible means to recover a wounded or dead animal, whether that’s the use of thermal, use of one’s own dog or a dog tracking service, or plain old Mk. 1 eyeball and experience.
Got one, it's brilliant especially for pikeys. Mavic 3Tget a thermal drone
In a push you use what you have but thermals have a way low time window to find dead deer , the question came from birds though and IMO that is utterly crackers .
Nothing we have can compete with a dog and tech aint ever going to come close
I think you either need to get to spec savers or turn your thermal on! Unless its really cold a deer carcass 'never cools down to ambient temperature because the food in its stomach will continue to give off heat for weeks, by which time the whole carcass is also rotting and giving off heat. Look at a compost heap or manure next time you're out. I dodn't doubt that a small bird would probably freeze in cold weather but it would have to be extremely cold before the cold overcame the decompostion of a deer carcass that hadn't been gralloched and froze it.In a push you use what you have but thermals have a way low time window to find dead deer , the question came from birds though and IMO that is utterly crackers .
Nothing we have can compete with a dog and tech aint ever going to come close
You might want to have a look at the Drone Deer Recovery site from the US. They are using drones fitted with thermal to find wounded and dead deer, and in some cases the thermal is picking up the carcasses of dead deer several hours after the shot.
In this case, at around 7'30" into the video, the operator finds the dead deer lying almost next to the car where the hunters and drone operator are standing!
Interestingly on the same search they found the carcass of another dead deer - a doe - using the same drone fitted with thermal.
Just dont buy a thermal for the purpose of finding dead deer and certainly not for finding shot birds . Even if you dont have a dog the stalker should have a phone number to call for the help of a dog, many nations make it lawI don’t think anyone is disagreeing with you, but if the chap can’t have a dog then that’s that route shut to him. A good thermal will give a different ability to the naked eye but will need good marking too.