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Trail cams that send pix to phone/email

Even if you have wireless Internet access in that area?

Seems like that would work but not commonly the case...if you watch the commercial with the real tree guys it's like they have 5 stands and they check to see where deer are currently so they know where to hunt but still a lot of money to take that chance...seems like in some cases if you had a bad connection it would send delayed and do no good but I guess it's all in what your using it for.
 
Here is info on one from Spypoint. This one is $399 at Cabela's. Info was copy and pasted from Cabela's site.

[h=3]Spypoint® Live Cellular 5MP Camera[/h]


    • Alerts whenever new photos are taken
    • Control camera operation from home
    • 48 infrared LEDs for nighttime illumination
    • Integrated 3.5" viewing screen
    • 5MP photos and up to 90-second video
Mount your camera, turn it on, and do the rest from your computer or smartphone at home via an online connection. Quickly view photos from anywhere at your myspypoint.com account. The camera communicates with you whenever necessary – sending alerts when new photos have been taken, if the batteries are low, even if the camera gets bumped or moved. An integrated 3.5" viewing screen allows you to check camera status and view photos. The camera takes high-quality, 5MP color photos or up to 90-second videos during the day and black-and-white at night. 48 infrared LEDs deliver excellent nighttime visibility. Adjustable for time-lapse mode or multishot mode where up to six photos are taken per detection. Distance detection is adjustable from 5' to 50'. Requires up to 32GB SD/SDHC card(not included) and a SIM card in cellular mode (Truphone SIM card included). Can be powered by eight AA batteries (not included) or rechargeable battery pack and solar panels (not included). Includes camera, installation strap, USB and video cables.
 
The flash at night is infra-red. On most standard trail camera's the night flash is somewhat noticeable because the LED's will flash red for a second, but if you aren't looking at the camera you wouldn't notice. Most camera manufacturers now offer "black-out" models that are supposed to make the flash completely unnoticeable, but these have a tendency to cause night pictures to appear grainy.
 
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