Experience teaches like nothing else can, so what did you learn about your gear from actual hunting this season? List the season and conditions if they're relevant!
Montana, November, Deer/Elk/Waterfowl. Temps ranged from 10-60 degrees. No deep snow.
After 5 years I finally got to put my Kifaru to the test on an elk packout. The Reckoning and duplex frame handled 100 lbs superbly, although my legs can't handle uphill under such a heavy load. The only issue I encountered was a bit of numbness in my leg if I didn't take rests frequently enough. Need to investigate whether that is a belt issue, a pack adjustment issue, or just part of the territory when hauling heavy loads.
I need a window mount for my spotting scope. November is late enough that it makes sense to glass from the road before putting in a 3-4 mile hike up a snowy drainage. My mule deer was spotted from the road in the evening and I made a big hike the next morning to find him. Weird to be road hunting as it were, but with migrating animals, it made more sense than blasting deep into drainages every day.
Starbucks Via can be dumped straight onto your tongue and washed down with water from the drink bladder in desperate situations!
Jolly Ranchers will keep you from feeling parched when you're running short on water with a mile still to go to get elk meat to the truck.
10 gauges with Briley chokes are murder on geese at 40-50 yards. Thanks Grandpa for letting me borrow your goose gun!
My layering system is getting close to complete. I need a deep winter puffy, a mad bomber hat or something similar, some ski goggles, and some puffy pants still.
Hearing protection rocks! I committed to always putting in ear plugs before pulling the trigger and it worked fabulously. I used a neck band style by howard leight for rifle hunting, and a pair of active protection over ear muffs (Impact sport?) for bird hunting. Best decision of the year, and I didn't miss any shot opps due to the ear plugs.
Montana, November, Deer/Elk/Waterfowl. Temps ranged from 10-60 degrees. No deep snow.
After 5 years I finally got to put my Kifaru to the test on an elk packout. The Reckoning and duplex frame handled 100 lbs superbly, although my legs can't handle uphill under such a heavy load. The only issue I encountered was a bit of numbness in my leg if I didn't take rests frequently enough. Need to investigate whether that is a belt issue, a pack adjustment issue, or just part of the territory when hauling heavy loads.
I need a window mount for my spotting scope. November is late enough that it makes sense to glass from the road before putting in a 3-4 mile hike up a snowy drainage. My mule deer was spotted from the road in the evening and I made a big hike the next morning to find him. Weird to be road hunting as it were, but with migrating animals, it made more sense than blasting deep into drainages every day.
Starbucks Via can be dumped straight onto your tongue and washed down with water from the drink bladder in desperate situations!
Jolly Ranchers will keep you from feeling parched when you're running short on water with a mile still to go to get elk meat to the truck.
10 gauges with Briley chokes are murder on geese at 40-50 yards. Thanks Grandpa for letting me borrow your goose gun!
My layering system is getting close to complete. I need a deep winter puffy, a mad bomber hat or something similar, some ski goggles, and some puffy pants still.
Hearing protection rocks! I committed to always putting in ear plugs before pulling the trigger and it worked fabulously. I used a neck band style by howard leight for rifle hunting, and a pair of active protection over ear muffs (Impact sport?) for bird hunting. Best decision of the year, and I didn't miss any shot opps due to the ear plugs.