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Thread: Cheap thermal to spot possums in avo trees

  1. #1
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    Cheap thermal to spot possums in avo trees

    Hi
    Hope this is the right place to ask this question.
    Trialed a pard 008 last night to try spotting possums in the avo trees.
    6.5 base magnification didn't work out well.
    Im wondering-am I barking up the wrong tree with nv and should I be looking at a thermal monocular to find them? Would something like a leuold lot be the go for this?
    Was also wondering id a pulsar n455 may be better with 4.5 as base mag but with larger lens should give better field of view.
    thanks in advance

  2. #2
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    poor possums, as if eating avocado (dingo snot) isnt punishment enough
    25 /08 IMP and hamsav like this.

  3. #3
    Member Marty Henry's Avatar
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    Look at the pard 007, it's base mag is 1.5 when used as a handheld unit. It can also be clipped onto a normal scope.

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by avoape View Post
    Hi
    Hope this is the right place to ask this question.
    Trialed a pard 008 last night to try spotting possums in the avo trees.
    6.5 base magnification didn't work out well.
    Im wondering-am I barking up the wrong tree with nv and should I be looking at a thermal monocular to find them? Would something like a leuold lot be the go for this?
    Was also wondering id a pulsar n455 may be better with 4.5 as base mag but with larger lens should give better field of view.
    thanks in advance
    2.5 base is high enough
    I am using a 455 at moment and it not good on Monkey's up a tree
    Thermal for locating a definite yes
    Then a torch on scope for possums is all you need

  5. #5
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    @223nut
    He may have something that is cheap in the Therm department

  6. #6
    MB
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    "Guide" thermals are cheap(er) and will do what you ask.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by MB View Post
    "Guide" thermals are cheap(er) and will do what you ask.
    What about my Burris Thermal BTH50
    1500 below new and will be still new apart from a couple of hours trial

    Go to bottom of this Tread

    https://www.nzhuntingandshooting.co....savings-71132/

  8. #8
    MB
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sarvo View Post
    What about my Burris Thermal BTH50
    1500 below new and will be still new apart from a couple of hours trial

    Go to bottom of this Tread

    https://www.nzhuntingandshooting.co....savings-71132/

    I'm sure they're very good and sharp price too!

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by MB View Post
    I'm sure they're very good and sharp price too!
    You realize the Burris is actually a Guide with Burris stamped on it and not Guide
    The 50mm Guide Pro is same as mine above and they are good 4K Thermal
    But at 3K - well - hello anyone awake

  10. #10
    MB
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sarvo View Post
    You realize the Burris is actually a Guide with Burris stamped on it and not Guide
    The 50mm Guide Pro is same as mine above and they are good 4K Thermal
    But at 3K - well - hello anyone awake
    I didn't know, but not surprised as they look very similar. Not desperately interested as I've had my thermal spotter a couple of years and hardly use it now. I paid $2K for mine in a Marine Deals sale.

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by avoape View Post
    Hi
    Hope this is the right place to ask this question.
    Trialed a pard 008 last night to try spotting possums in the avo trees.
    6.5 base magnification didn't work out well.
    Im wondering-am I barking up the wrong tree with nv and should I be looking at a thermal monocular to find them? Would something like a leuold lot be the go for this?
    Was also wondering id a pulsar n455 may be better with 4.5 as base mag but with larger lens should give better field of view.
    thanks in advance
    ID grab this one....would more than fit the bill.

    https://www.nzhuntingandshooting.co....andheld-70643/

  12. #12
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    I use a Guide IR510 Nano N2 as a spotter, and a Pard NV008 as a rifle scope with good results. Knocking off Possums in trees just gets done by turning on my head torch, and using the laser on the Pard. No need to look through the scope to shoot them.

  13. #13
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    Possoms tend to leave the avocados alone other than just playing in them during the night once they have finished eating.
    I barely point the light at anything other than the shelterbelts and ground/grass when spotlighting
    If you are getting chewed fruit it's almost always rats
    avoape likes this.

  14. #14
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    This may not be something that matters to you but my pulsar thermal has a base zoom setting of 2.5x and that’s plenty finding animals out to a long way away. My friend has the newer pulsar with a base zoom setting of 4? And when driving around in a Ute or even walking I find it a lot harder to keep still and find animals while moving

  15. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bill999 View Post
    Possoms tend to leave the avocados alone other than just playing in them during the night once they have finished eating.
    I barely point the light at anything other than the shelterbelts and ground/grass when spotlighting
    If you are getting chewed fruit it's almost always rats
    That's an interesting comment, and not my experience at all. Chewed avocados is almost always possums here. Feratox proves the point, about 2 weeks after the first fruit damage, which I suspect is the amount of time it takes for possums to get tired of gorging themselves on avocados and then look for something else to eat.

    Just had a possum in the greenhouse 2 nights ago eating freshly grafted trees.

 

 

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