treeman wrote:8. Blood stains near the parking area. Am I going overboard here?
9. Plucked game feathers in the area? Please! Someone rein me in!
10. Fly swarms on partially concealed animal parts. I need to stop here.
Ok, a little overboard, but not crazy by any stretch.
Unless it is deer season, or some other large game that is going to be gutted in the field, there isn't going to be much of a chance that you'll notice the animal bits, or the spike in insect life around the area. When I was trained to identify illegal grave sites during some forensic tracking training, we spent quite a bit of time noticing the increasing levels of insect activity as we neared the grave. Depending on timing, mouse, bird, and therefor fox etc... can have a noticeable increase as well. (Three months before the class they had staged a murder and illegal grave site with a roadkill deer)
Finding plucked feathers is more likely to be a sign of bird predators than hunters, and as for blood around parking areas, I would think that the major bleeding would happen far from the cars.
Unfortunately some of the things I would look for to show heavy hunting traffic are much less flattering to the hunters.
1 - Trash. People are messy, and hunters aren't all naturalists. In fact many (but not most) of them are careless and/or drunk.
1a. Spent shotgun shells, shell wadding, or other ammo casings. These are almost a common part of the forest floor debris in some places.
1b. Dump sites. Illegal dumping usually happens in secluded places that are easy to get to and away from. Not sign of hunters but of people who may not want to be seen...
2 - Tracks: boots, or vehicles at least show human traffic, and if you're good enough, and the area shows tracks well, it's pretty easy to tell how many have entered an area, and how many have left. Hunting dogs also tend to run around like crazy near the parking areas, wild dogs tend to avoid these areas.
3 - Shot up roadsigns. Every public hunting area that I know about has at least a few of these.
4 - Gas stations near popular hunting areas make it quite obvious that lots of hunters stop in and hang out there. This is also a good place to make small talk and get a feel for the neighborhood.
Most respectable hunters tend to avoid being near other people if they know they're there, but anyone in the woods will veer of course to investigate a big rope is hanging out of a tree or to see what all that stuff laying under a tree is. Noise and general commotion is going to attract all kinds of hikers, campers, treeclimbers or other curious outdoors folk with a few spare minutes. Most of these folks are more likely to be shooting questions than bullets.
I'd also like to mention here another category of people in the wilderness. Criminals, and otherwise dangerous folk.
If you come across marijuana plants, tripwire noisemaking sort of setups, or other \"traps\" that these people can set up to let them know someone is or has been in the area, you should just go. Report it to the authorities and let them investigate. Surprising someone, or hanging out in these areas can lead to bad things. Shanty style \"campsites\" that the people hiding or homeless use are also out there. Usually in wilderness lands near urban areas.
That's enough doom and gloom, but I was surprised to find out how many wilderness missing persons cases still come down to fowl play instead of a simple lost person. It's just good to know.
That's all I have for now...
Carl