Jigmasterflex
FNG
I’m planning to replace whitetail hunting in my home state of Wisconsin with an annual trip west for mule deer/wt. I will be hunting with a rifle. My focus would be mulies, the idea of a giant bodied deer is really appealing to me. I’m planning on hunting Montana and something else for alternate years most likely being Kansas. I’ll be putting in for points for this coming fall and using one last season here as a practice run to learn to bone out a critter in the field, wear and use a pack and binoculars and camp in my truck. I plan on going mid to late November in Montana and December in Kansas.
Transportation/camping- I plan on sleeping in the back of my Tahoe for 4-5 days or until I’m tagged out (hopefully) on my first trips out of state. First goes will be pretty spartan but after I figure out the hunting end a little I’ll work on comfort for future trips. I’ve done a lot of these trips fishing and hunting around my state, they’re uncomfortable and living on peanut butter, water and sardines is pretty lame but it makes moving around easy and keeps cost down. I don’t own a four wheeler but have access to one, I would rather do everything on foot if possible for simplicity but don’t want to put myself at a huge disadvantage. At least in Montana I plan on being in the southeastern part of the state if that makes a difference.
pack- I have nothing, kept reducing what I brought into the woods to just a compass, knife, water bottle, some mule tape, 5 extra shells and my rifle. I’d like to stay close to that if possible but have something to pack meat out. Was looking at either just a basic freighter frame that I’d hike back to and grab if I shot something or maybe spending a little more for something I could wear the whole time with a dry bag to throw all my bulky outer layers in to keep from sweating them up. I’ve never packed out an animal, is there something specific I should have for game bags?
optics- I’ve never owned binoculars or glassed with them, never had a rangefinder either. I would like to keep cost down if possible. Being a flatland hunter I’d imagine I’ll have a tougher time gauging distance over tougher terrain and a rangefinder could be helpful. Are there decent lower cost options (under $300) that could be useful back home bowhunting?
boots/clothes- my equipment is a few decades back technology wise but it works great for what I currently do, I’m not sure how it will do out of the trees and into the wind and open ground. I have an outfitter brown Columbia wool jacket and bibs that I love, a couple woolrich wool red plaid parkas, a Cabelas pack vest and a pair of danner vital 800 gram boots. I do have a ton of wool and polypropylene under layers/socks. I’m not a stranger to really cold weather but we don’t have the wind here
rifle/scope- I have a howa 22” barreled .308 with a 3-9x40 Nikon. I’ve killed a metric shit ton of deer with this rifle and I’m extremely comfortable with it. Should be the no brainer to take out somewhere new but it’s ugly, and boring. I don’t even like using it but I’ll carry something else for a couple days with no luck grab the howa and be hanging deer that night, has some serious mojo to it. I shoot 180 grain soft points here and it anchors everything on the spot but causes a lot more meat loss than I’d like if I clip the shoulder. Would probably use Hornady 150 grain SST super performance if they shoot alright in my rifle.
I also have a .257 Roberts 24” barreled Mauser with a 3-9x40 leupold that is gorgeous. I helped my grandpa pick it out almost 20 years ago and now that he’s passed away I have it. I’ve just refinished the stock and plan on pillar bedding it. 117 grain hornady super performance ammo almost matches the 150 grain super performance in .308 on paper so there’s not much of an advantage I can see to it. I thought about having it rechambered to 25-06 but I think I’d be better suited to spend that money on a basic reloading kit.
Any help I can get is really appreciated. I’m new to Using internet forums so I tried to make this a little easier to read than my last post but I’m sure it’s still a friggen novel.
Transportation/camping- I plan on sleeping in the back of my Tahoe for 4-5 days or until I’m tagged out (hopefully) on my first trips out of state. First goes will be pretty spartan but after I figure out the hunting end a little I’ll work on comfort for future trips. I’ve done a lot of these trips fishing and hunting around my state, they’re uncomfortable and living on peanut butter, water and sardines is pretty lame but it makes moving around easy and keeps cost down. I don’t own a four wheeler but have access to one, I would rather do everything on foot if possible for simplicity but don’t want to put myself at a huge disadvantage. At least in Montana I plan on being in the southeastern part of the state if that makes a difference.
pack- I have nothing, kept reducing what I brought into the woods to just a compass, knife, water bottle, some mule tape, 5 extra shells and my rifle. I’d like to stay close to that if possible but have something to pack meat out. Was looking at either just a basic freighter frame that I’d hike back to and grab if I shot something or maybe spending a little more for something I could wear the whole time with a dry bag to throw all my bulky outer layers in to keep from sweating them up. I’ve never packed out an animal, is there something specific I should have for game bags?
optics- I’ve never owned binoculars or glassed with them, never had a rangefinder either. I would like to keep cost down if possible. Being a flatland hunter I’d imagine I’ll have a tougher time gauging distance over tougher terrain and a rangefinder could be helpful. Are there decent lower cost options (under $300) that could be useful back home bowhunting?
boots/clothes- my equipment is a few decades back technology wise but it works great for what I currently do, I’m not sure how it will do out of the trees and into the wind and open ground. I have an outfitter brown Columbia wool jacket and bibs that I love, a couple woolrich wool red plaid parkas, a Cabelas pack vest and a pair of danner vital 800 gram boots. I do have a ton of wool and polypropylene under layers/socks. I’m not a stranger to really cold weather but we don’t have the wind here
rifle/scope- I have a howa 22” barreled .308 with a 3-9x40 Nikon. I’ve killed a metric shit ton of deer with this rifle and I’m extremely comfortable with it. Should be the no brainer to take out somewhere new but it’s ugly, and boring. I don’t even like using it but I’ll carry something else for a couple days with no luck grab the howa and be hanging deer that night, has some serious mojo to it. I shoot 180 grain soft points here and it anchors everything on the spot but causes a lot more meat loss than I’d like if I clip the shoulder. Would probably use Hornady 150 grain SST super performance if they shoot alright in my rifle.
I also have a .257 Roberts 24” barreled Mauser with a 3-9x40 leupold that is gorgeous. I helped my grandpa pick it out almost 20 years ago and now that he’s passed away I have it. I’ve just refinished the stock and plan on pillar bedding it. 117 grain hornady super performance ammo almost matches the 150 grain super performance in .308 on paper so there’s not much of an advantage I can see to it. I thought about having it rechambered to 25-06 but I think I’d be better suited to spend that money on a basic reloading kit.
Any help I can get is really appreciated. I’m new to Using internet forums so I tried to make this a little easier to read than my last post but I’m sure it’s still a friggen novel.