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                      Light Colour vs Animal Vision 
                    
Deer, kangaroos, and other game animals can see green light, but it blends naturally with foliage and appears less alarming than harsh white beams. To hunters, green appears much brighter, offering excellent contrast for spotting movement at a distance.
🦌 Deer (fallow, red, chital)
🦘 Kangaroos & wallabies
🐇 Rabbits
Why it works:
Animals perceive green as a natural tone within their environment, so it doesn’t trigger the same flight response as bright white light. Meanwhile, the human eye sees green more vividly, making it ideal for scanning open paddocks or identifying targets further out.
                      Light Colour vs Animal Vision 
                    
Why use red:
Most nocturnal animals, including pigs, foxes, and rabbits, can’t see red wavelengths the same way humans can. To them, red light appears dull or invisible, allowing hunters to move unnoticed while preserving their own night vision.
🐗 Feral pigs
🦊 Foxes
🐇 Rabbits & hares
Why it works:
Because red falls outside the visual spectrum of many pests, it causes minimal disturbance compared to brighter colours. It lets hunters spot eye reflections without alerting targets, making it ideal for stealth and close to mid-range night work.




 
 
      				       
      				      
 
 
      				      
 

 
 
      				      
 
 
      				      
 
 
      				      
 

 

 

 

 


