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Learn how track bears, beavers, and foxes, and learn tips and techniques to identifying animal tracks and signs in this free video clip series.
There are 15 videos in this series:

Learn how to track a bear footprint in the wild, and learn tips for identifying bear tracks and signs in this free hunting video.

How to Track Beavers in this free hunting video.

How to Track Bobcats in this free hunting video.

How to Track Coyotes in this free hunting video.

How to Track Deer in this free hunting video.

Learn how to track a rabbit in the wild, and learn tips to identifying rabbit tracks and signs in this free hunting video.

How to Track Fishers in this free hunting video.

How to Track Gray Foxes in this free hunting video.

Learn how to track a gray squirrel in the wild, and learn tips for identifying gray squirrel tracks and signs in this free hunting video.

How to Track a Mink in this free hunting video.

How to Track a Moose in this free hunting video.

Learn how to track a muskrat in the wild, and learn tips for identifying muskrat tracks and signs in this free hunting video.

How to Track Otters in this free hunting video.

How to Track Raccoons in this free hunting video.

How to Track Red Foxes in this free hunting video.

Animal tracking is an art, a skill that has been used by hunters for ages. The first trackers were innately familiar with their natural surroundings and had trained themselves to find clues to an animal’s presence. In the wild, uncivilized world, learning how to find spoor, or signs of an animal disturbance, determined whether or not you survived. Because early societies often relied heavily upon animals for many of their needs, hunter-trackers studied animal behavior, such as when migration or mating were to occur, what an animal might do in a chase situation, what they ate, and where those foods might be found.
Nowadays, many of us no longer practice these skills, because we have a ready supply of food and clothing, and we have built more permanent shelter. The art of animal husbandry has replaced hunting, and the great outdoors have become the great indoors. Barring the eventual collapse of society and a return to the wild en masse, tracking no longer serves our most basic needs…but it has applications that prove useful for today.
In this free instructional video series, our experts give you a field guide on how to identify various mammal tracks. The next time you go hiking in the forest, put these skills to use and see what mammals you can identify.
This series is an Equilibrio Films production.
Valerie and Nick Wisniewski Valerie Wisniewski began her life-long study of nature accompanying her father in the forests of Arkansas. She continued her training as a fifteen-year student and three-year apprentice with master tracker Paul Rezendes. She has taught outdoor skills to youth and adults for twenty-five years. Nick Wisniewski is an expert on animal tracks and sign. He was a long-term student and three-year apprentice of Rezendes, with whom he maintains close personal ties. His on-going tracking projects include animal surveys for wildlife sanctuaries, and a multi-year effort to document mountain lion track and sign in southern New England. <BR />dkdk
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