Trigger speed, range and battery life are going to be your biggest concerns. I know some of the cheaper camera have problems when the temps get warmer and I know some camera are better suited for actually placing on trails because of the their faster trigger speeds as opposed to some better suited for bait stations. What I mean by that is, in order to build up enough energy to activate the camera and flash they need a capacitor to give the components enough energy. If it stayed ready to fire at all times you'd drain your batteries to soon. Some cameras are faster than others and if you have a bait station where your subjects are going to be hovering around, you can go with some of the less expensive cameras. When we bow hunt areas where we can't bait and actually want to see what's walking down game trails these cameras either take pics of nothing or a deer's rump. That's where you need a better and faster firing camera that can detect and then ramp up the energy to fire off the pic with or without the flash.
I'd take a good look at either cuddeback or covert cameras. I've got friends with the cuddebacks and they love them. I've got friends with covert and they love them too.
Personally I have a covert that is small, easy to conceal and will take over a thousand pics on 8 AA batteries that will last over a couple of months. I've got pics as far as 30 yards before and it has infrared but as mentioned will put off a red glow when triggered. Price isn't to bad on the coverts either and the customer support is pretty good too.
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Today's Featured Article - Tractor Traction - by Chris Pratt. Our first bout with traction problems came when cultivatin with our Massey-Harris Pony. Up till then, this tractor had been running a corn grinder and pulling a trailer. It had new unfilled rear tires and no wheel weights. The garden was already sprouting when we hooked up the mid-mount shovel cultivators to the Pony. The seed bed was soft enough that the rear end would spin and slowly work its way to the downhill side of the gardens slight incline. From this, we learned our lesson sinc
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