When I had the cameras running for the cats I found that the locations where I was getting multiple pictures per week they were there throughout most of the year. The thing that seems to stay consistent on these locations is females with litters. I don't think their range is near as big as say a traveling tom looking for love. Come late season though I don't think you could beat a female in heat to draw every tom around into the area. That's what I tell myself is the reason those locations I seem to catch more cats and quicker.
The visits at least for me seem to stay consistent. If I'm only catching them on camera on a location in July once every two weeks that's about the same shot I seem to have at them when the trapping season rolls around. We don't have an over abundance of cats here like some places in the south and I think that's why I enjoy trapping them the most.
First of all you have to be on location, then you have to have enough traps to deal with the coons/possums/skunks. Then you have to hope the cat is interested the one day out of two weeks it walks by your sets. I envy the guys out west that can really block them down on trails and catch them regardless of how they are feeling. It's a different world here in farm country. They really can go just about anywhere and I've caught them in locations most cat guys wouldn't even look twice here.
I pulled up some of my beaver pics from just this last winter. This beaver was hung on a tree in cat territory where I had tracks and have had cats on cameras in the past. It didn't take long for the coyotes to find it. They just didn't seem to care for a while. The dates are correct.
![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2019/04/full-26912-7548-beav.jpg)
Two weeks after finding it he returned to urinate on it.
![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2019/04/full-26912-7549-beav_4.jpg)
Interestingly, the coons came right out after it. I've always had luck on coons with castor. This just kind of backs that up.