For the last few days I've been writing and re-working the nutria chapters of Eating Aliens. In the course of this I've been putting a lot of thought into what weapons and tools did and didn't work out. The biggest asset that I had out there in terms of tools was a pair of hand-held lasers by Laser Genetics.
Nutria are mostly nocturnal, so you can expect to typically hunt them in low light conditions. The tricky thing with hunting at night is being able to see your target and what is beyond it without scaring off the prey. If you scan constantly with a conventional light then you are going to scare off the nutria in all but the worst of infestations.
You have two options. First would be a night vision scope or sight. Those can work well but are extremely expensive. I've hunted feral pigs at night in Georgia with second generation night vision. It was good but not great. Pretty much you are looking at a 50 to 75 yard range maximum. Those scopes tend to run around $1,000 each. First generation night vision is so bad as to not be worth bothering with. Third generation night vision will set you back more than a decent used car.
The second option is to use a special light with a wavelength that nocturnal animals don't tend to respond to. The lights by Laser Genetics use a special green laser that I can affirm works as advertised.
I tested two different models for close to a week of hunting on the banks and backwater swamps of Lake Caddo in Louisiana. The ND-5 is a large and powerful model that can be adjusted for a very wide beam. It will set you back around $350, which is still way less than a night vision scope. The ND-3 is smaller, weaker and produces a narrow beam. It costs around $250. The ND-5 is much better but the ND-3 is still far better than having nothing at all.
Both models can be used as a hand-held flashlight or can easily be mounted above a rifle scope. When properly aligned with the beam, visibility through a scope is very good and the reticle was clearly visible.
The beauty of using one of these lasers as opposed to a night vision scope is that you aren't forced to buy one of the narrow selection of night vision scopes just because of the night vision feature. You can use whatever scope you prefer to hunt with in the first place. There is no need for compromise.
Night after night I watched many raccoons at very close range that completely ignored the green light I had pasted on them. They went about their business as if I wasn't even there, right up until they got downwind of me. Minks, nutria and snakes all ignored it unless the beam was near its most narrowly concentrated setting.
Nocturnal hunting isn't legal everywhere or for every species. It is legal for pigs in Georgia and in Louisiana I was named on a special permit for control of nuisance animals. With good optics or lights in the right setting I think that it can be perfectly safe. Nutria hunting almost by definition tends to offer a safe backstop. Usually nutria are hunted near the water's edge with a steep bank behind them. Over-travel of the bullet is not going to be an issue.
Nutria are most active at night. Any area where they are a problem will need to make some regulatory accommodations to allow night hunting in order to make a serious effort at reducing or eliminating them. Wild pigs tend to go nocturnal in response to hunting pressure and any effort at halting their ecological depredations is doomed to failure without making some allowance for hunters to intercept them at night.
It was with real regret that I returned that pair of Laser Genetics lights to Michael Beran, a wildlife control specialist from Bossier City who had been kind enough to loan them to me. Sooner or later I intend to pick up an ND-5 for keeps.
[Photo Copyright 2011 by Jackson Landers]

3 comments:
The Amazon page for the ND-5 lists its specs as: 532 nm wavelength, 20 milliwatts. That's the usual wavelength for green lasers; so if you want a cheap version of it, just get an ordinary green laser pointer and defocus the beam. 20 milliwatts isn't much greater than the legal limit of 5 milliwatts for laser pointers; and it's easy to get laser pointers from China that exceed that limit. Defocusing the beam can be done either by fiddling with the existing focusing lens or by adding an additional lens.
Interesting post. I've got an awesome Browning LED Flashlight I picked up last year at Bass Pro outside Richmond that came with a white light, a red light, a blue blight, and a green light. I knew how to use the others, but never knew what the green light was for.
Do you know if deer react to green light? If not, that might be just what I need for walking in to my stand.
Countertop,
I have not had the opportunity to try any green light on deer at night to see first hand how they react. My understanding of how deer eyes work leads me to believe that green looks pretty much like gray scale to them.
Blue will definitely be obvious to them. Deer see the blue end of the spectrum very well. Red would be a safe bet walking out to your stand. Not only is the red end of the color spectrum difficult for deer to see, but red light isn't visible from as far away as a white light of similar local intensity.
The green LED is a worthy experiment, though. If some reader with a lot of deer in their backyard every night would try one out then I think we'd all be much obliged.
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