AI & Trail Cameras
How Trail Pro Intel's AI reads your trail-camera dumps — bulk upload, 50+ species tagging, antler-class scoring, and activity heatmaps.
Trail Pro Intel reads your trail-cam dumps so you don't have to scrub through 800 photos of swaying branches and one raccoon. Drop in a full SD card, and the AI tags every frame — species, count, and a confidence score — in about the time it takes to grab a coffee. The more of your cameras it sees, the sharper it gets on the deer you actually care about.
01Bulk upload from your card
Open Gallery and tap Upload. Pull in a whole card at once — hundreds of images — or shoot straight from your phone. Uploads run in the background and keep going even if you lock the screen. Tagging runs on a monthly AI credit allowance — the free plan includes a set number of tags each month, and Pro raises it to 15 credits a month for heavy card pulls. If a card is mostly empty triggers, you can review the batch and skip the junk before it processes.
02What the AI tags
Every processed photo gets:
- Species — 50+ tagged automatically, from whitetail and turkey to hogs, bear, and predators.
- Count — how many animals are in the frame.
- Antler class — a rough score on bucks so you can sort shooters from young deer at a glance.
- Individual buck recognition — the AI links the same buck across different photos and cameras, so you follow one deer's pattern instead of guessing whether it's the same one.
03Confidence scores, and fixing tags
Each tag carries a confidence score — how sure the model is about the call. High-confidence tags are usually dead-on; low ones are worth a second look. Tap any photo to correct the species or count in a couple of seconds. Every correction trains the system on your cameras, your lighting, and your deer — so accuracy climbs as the season goes.
04Reading the patterns
Once your photos are in, the app ranks activity by camera, time of day, and weather. Advanced analytics and heatmaps — on Pro — show which setup is actually producing and when, so you stop burning a stand on a hunch and hunt the data instead. Pair it with your Field Notes and the picture gets sharper still.
05What to read next
- Field Notes & Gear — tie camera data to your sits and stands.
- Solunar Calendar — line up your hot cameras with peak movement windows.
- Map & Weather — understand why the deer move where they do.
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