Taking the thermal monocular out of its box and removing the lens caps, I turned it on and put it to my eye. I looked out of the kitchen window into the dark morning, expecting to pick a rabbit or other critter out in the garden. To my surprise, all I saw was my own mundane reflection staring back at me. I suppose I’d never really thought about it before, but I didn’t ever consider that the reflection in a glass window would have a heat signature, yet here was the new ZEISS DTI 6/20 picking it up. I’d never seen that in a thermal before; I was impressed.
Wanting to put the machine to the test in a more trying environment than my kitchen, I called up my friend Harry Coups, the agent at Grimsthorpe Castle just up the road.
Grimsthorpe has a deer problem. For the past few years, they have shot over 400 fallow deer annually and are still not even touching the sides. In a recent thermal drone count of the Greater Lincolnshire area, they came out streaks ahead of anywhere else, counting over 1,500 fallow on a single drone pass. Alongside their abundant fallow deer, there’s a herd of 300 reds, and more muntjac than you could point a thermal monocular at. A trip to Grimsthorpe with my new toy was definitely the answer.
When I let the dogs out at 4am, they looked at me with a begrudging glare. It was heaving with rain, lashing down in great globules. While I knew we’d all be grateful for the rain in time, it was unfortunate for my Grimsthorpe outing. Despite this, I chucked the dogs in the boot of the car, put the windscreen wipers on full power and set off on the half-hour drive north to meet Harry.
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