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Hunting & Fishing Bobcat hunters unite

airborne6.8

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Full Member
Minuteman
Jan 27, 2011
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What the hell I'm a doing wrong. Been calling half my life only called in two cats one being at night the other was just the other day. I know I'm in cat country iv trapped them in the years past and I let my buddy trap right where iv been calling. Two night and he snagged a giant female. I call for 30 min then set for another 15. Bird sounds. Kitten sounds and cottentale sounds. I wanna kill one of these little suckers in the daylight calling. Any help? Thanks
 
Re: Bobcat hunters unite

I have the same issue when calling yotes. My woods are thick and the yotes will bust me before coming into sight, but I kill yotes when deer hunting and see cats (usually right after sun up). The difference for me is the calling. No sound (calling), the yotes will wander through. If calling, they'll come in from downwind and bust me. Cover scents that work for deer, seem to alarm the yotes. Just my observation of my screwup; maybe it can be of some use to you.
 
Re: Bobcat hunters unite

Bobcats are very slow coming into a call. Try your calling for longer than 30 min's and see if this will help.
 
Re: Bobcat hunters unite

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: KHOOKS</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Bobcats are very slow coming into a call. Try your calling for longer than 30 min's and see if this will help. </div></div>

yep.

Also, a lot of times cats come in and you never see them. They sneak in, unlike coyotes that come charging in. Try hanging a turkey feather to get a little bit of movement next to your caller. They usually can't resist the urge to come get a closer look.
 
Re: Bobcat hunters unite

Forgot to mention I use a decoy foxpro something or other. Like a rabbits head or a birdie
 
Re: Bobcat hunters unite

sometimes those are too big. A feather is just enough to get them to come and want to check it out.
 
Yup, got a nice female the other evening. She came to the call after one hour and eight minutes. Try calling longer. Most are at least 45 minutes. Also, good binos are a must. Choose your set's wisely.
 
If they come in but bust you and you never knew they were there you just educated them.

I have had lots of lot useing a turkey call with both yotes and bobcats. Cats love turkey. Also I have found they have to see something. You can't just call. They sneak in but don't see anything... Learned that along time ago with owl and preditory birds would fly in and land above the call in a tree. They would look but could find the source...
 
I really like Mouse Squeakers for calling Bobcats. If you have cut tracks or know you are in a good area, the mouse squeaker is deadly on them, they seem to have no qualms about coming in on them. Not a very large calling radius but seems to work for me at least.
 
If you see something out of place or something you have not noticed while on stand give it a closer look. I had a bobcat come out on the edge of a field and set down and watch the field (i think). I seen what looked like a small oak stump setting on the edge of the field while deer hunting. I know bobcats are in the area cause three had been killed out of the same field the year before. As I watched the field I saw what I thought was a small oak stump in the edge of the field that I thoguht I'd over looked. I stared at it for a few minutes and seen on movement. I never look with my binos or scope. After I took my eyes off it and scanned the field a few more times and look back to where it was it was gone. Had to have been a bobcat or so I think it was.
 
Daytime is pretty hard...try it around some big brush piles if you have any around. Try very early morning or last hour of the day. 45 minutes minimum in most cases, especially if they have maybe heard a call before. Thermal scope or viewer is a good thing to have...as mentioned several times in the previous posts, they like to sit and watch. Many times they will come to the edge of the woods or thick stuff and sit and for some reason just dont come out. Even with a thermal I cant get them. I would bet you have called in more cats than you know, you just didn't see them.
 
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I usually tag a couple a year by calling. Not one of those calls were more than 15 minutes from start to drop. I know, every body else says hang out longer.

One of the biggest items that I found is that you have to get in there back yard. Every year up until the last couple I found myself with a called cat, but it was 300 to 500 out. Thankfully I was smart enough, weather cooperated, and I gave them 2 to 4 weeks of calling rest before hitting them again.

It's tough, one of my best cat calling experiences was a couple years back. I headed out one weekend, first call (son was just setting, still bright light on) and a cat hit the crop edge, set on his butt and just listened to me. I gave that one 3 weeks, and then called about 80 yrds from where I saw that cat sit and listen. Sure enough, it came slowly down the frozen creek, up the bank, looked at my feather on a stick about 15yrds away and I dropped it. Good thing because my gas key was leaking on my AR and it didn't pick up the second round.

What made this call really cool is that I told my ol man that I had to go call a cat at 3:30pm, by 4:30 I was in my set, and by 5:30ish, I pulled in his drive to show him. Work to calling spot is about 15 or so miles out.

I've called a couple cats that I know were there for 15 minutes or so just watching me until I noticed them. How is this, well I would or thought I would see a bit of movement, like virtually none, but couldn't make anything out. I would get restless (maybe 15 minutes or so in) and move my weak hand to adjust sticks......movement, presentation (ever so slight, bang). Damn things are ghosts in SW KS yucca terrain.

I wait until it is snow, cold for over a couple weeks, and then hit em. If not, I'm on the dogs.
 
Whoa, your in OK. I have called Thomas area and in my travels from there to DC KS, I have actually watched cat's cross the road a few times on my way down. Maybe I need to come down and or you up for a little calling fun? You got the land, I likely don't have the time, but man some of that OK land is awesome!
 
Call longer like people have said, and hang a feather too. When you quit, walk a couple of circles around your stand, I have jumped cats that I never saw come in.