I just completed the two day Cyber Track and Sign. Combination workshop and test. During the two days we were presented with 53 ‘track or sign’ and asked, without conferring or looking it up in books etc - who’s scat, or what is this or who did this and why. Each person then wrote down their answer and showed it to the person taking answers. The scoring is a combination of gaining or losing points, depending on the ‘level’ of it. A mole hill might only score you one point, but if wrong would lose you two or three - somethings like that, but not entirely sure.
After each question when all have finished John explains what the track or sign was and why, with a detailed description of say track morphology etc. This was very useful and meant you definitely knew what the track and sign was so none of the second guessing you may get when out on your own. Also free to ask further questions and gain some knowledge from an extremely knowledgeable man!
Most of the people on the course had either done the evaluation before or had even completed the 12 day course in the past. I was chuffed and surprised to gain the level 2 with a score of 85%. For a fairly novice tracker this was very pleasing - some of the level three folk who returned (sometimes annually) were only a few % points ahead. It highlighted some (many) gaps in my knowledge and has given me the drive to go out and fill them; and with a focus for what to concentrate on and which areas of track and sign I need to improve on.
I’m going to return later this year, or next and go for level 3 for which I would need a score above 89%. I think that to be successful you need to develop both a good visual method to identify tracks and sign but also be able to justify it by saying for example ”The whatever has shorter stubbier toes and shows more toe pad“, ”the angle between two and three is much more acute in the whatever bird”, “the animals was walking because the straddle was wider and the prints directly registered“.