Friday, March 5, 2010

Another trashed camera unsolved


As you can tell, not much has been happening in my world of camera trapping.

Healing a torn tendon is a long process.

The tendon attaches and grows stronger while the rest of the body grows weak from inactivity.

So I have been on a data analyzing blitz for two months. My hard drives are clean and tightly organized. I can find everything, and I analyzed 4 years of data from 7 camera trapping sites.

So what does that have to do with the muddy camera pictured above?

Well, yesterday I had visitors.

Rich Tenaza and Dave Fletcher drove up from Stockton to hack cameras, and Rich gave me copies of his Cleary Reserve jpegs so I can finish the analysis.

Rich shut down his camera trapping operation at Cleary when he found the trashed camera seen above (one that I hacked) late last year.

The vandal thoroughly totaled the camera and case -- broke the glass windows on the Pelican case, tore out the camera, dragged it through mud and dropped it in a pool.

Rich is convinced it was the vile deed of a non-ursid camera trasher.

I have the feeling it was the innocent work of a non-human (=ursid) curious about the wonders of modern electronics.

Also, there was no bear guard on the camera, which wouldn't have stopped a human, but would likely have limited the activities of a bear.

It makes one long for those good days when the only surprise you got was a shaggy bear mooning the camera.

 
Regarding my recent silence, Craig now has a few cams out at Chimineas, and even though the place is too wet to hit the back roads some new material should be rolling in soon.

6 comments:

  1. Looking forward to some updates from Chimineas and hope you get well/fit soon :)

    (I had a torn tendon a few years ago and it still gives me problems on some days...)

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  2. Looking forward to seeing some new pictures. I am addicted to building these cameras. I just finished up a P41 for a friend this evening.

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  3. Thanks, guys. Sorry to hear that the tendons continue to be a problem, but I guess I expected that. I know the camera hacking addiction well. I usually hack several at a time, but it's hard to get cams that are readily available and in-production these days. The P41 was a real winner, same for the P32. I like the s600s a lot, but am looking for a fast cam to replace those. Seems the hackers explore the hackability of out-of-production models.

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  4. I'm looking for some information on setting up a semi-live webcam based camera trap for viewing elephants. While I've got webcam experience I'm struggling a bit with triggering.

    Choices seem to be motion detection (in-camera), IR motion sensing, IR beam, or pressure pads. Restraints are theft-proofing and solar power source.

    Any chance of getting a few hints? (not sure how to contact you directly!)

    Michael Steeves
    kenyawebcam.com
    mks113@gmail.com

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  5. Is the sony s600 camera your favorite to use? What's a good price for them? Do you have fast hacked or regular? Thanks!

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