To most people, identifying fox tracks in a woodland full of dog walkers is a nightmare, and tracking them made much harder too. So here's a good tip for sorting out fox prints from dogs.
If you pick three longish, straight pieces of grass or very fine twigs and lie them as an X between the pads, a foxes print will not allow the grasses to cross over pads. Also if you lay one across the top of the outer toe pads, then the front pads should always rest above the line and not protrude below it.
It's quite difficult to show it in a picturthis as it was taken at an angle, but you should get an idea...
It obviously also depends on the track degredation, but once you have your 'eye-in' to spot these detail, you can leave the grass behind and easily track foxes along busy woodland paths well used by dogwalkers.
If you pick three longish, straight pieces of grass or very fine twigs and lie them as an X between the pads, a foxes print will not allow the grasses to cross over pads. Also if you lay one across the top of the outer toe pads, then the front pads should always rest above the line and not protrude below it.
It's quite difficult to show it in a picturthis as it was taken at an angle, but you should get an idea...
It obviously also depends on the track degredation, but once you have your 'eye-in' to spot these detail, you can leave the grass behind and easily track foxes along busy woodland paths well used by dogwalkers.
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