Geetar
FNG
- Joined
- May 5, 2019
Probably so. Looks funny to me but hey if it works I’ll quit caring how it looks.Don’t kid yourself, Vias is one of the best at blending in in the mountains.
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Probably so. Looks funny to me but hey if it works I’ll quit caring how it looks.Don’t kid yourself, Vias is one of the best at blending in in the mountains.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Don’t kid yourself, Vias is one of the best at blending in in the mountains.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Wow it does blend in good! My only experience with it was from shopping online and seeing against a white background but it from these pics I can see it looks and works great in a real situation. Pardon my ignorant comment earlier.
Thanks for the advice. There is definitely a mental advantage when wearing the right stuff. You have to have skills too and that is more important but if you bring you skills and combine that with the right gear success levels do come up. At least it seems that way.The only sheep I’ve hunted are Aoudad and mouflon in TX, so take all this with a grain of salt...
I wouldn’t let the clothing brand trip you up. It can certainly be done without the top brand names in hunting clothing.
BUT.... if you have the funds, you won’t be sorry about investing in the premium duds. There is a reason companies Like Sitka and Kuiu have such loyal, fanatic customers - and its way more than the “look” of the camo.
I’m a big Sitka fan myself but I can tell you that the clothing is designed for hunting activities. The pockets are where you want them to be, the layers are exactly right, and the systems work. Feeling comfortable and feeling confident is a HUGE part of being successful. We all know that the mental game is the toughest part about hunting, but few want to really acknowledge how things like clothing impact that - either positively or negatively.
Maybe I’m alone in this, but I tend to think about it this way: Each piece of (core) gear in your kit either adds to or detracts from your confidence level. I am only talking about the mental aspect here. For example-If you’ve Upgraded your optics to the level required for sheep hunting, then even when the hunting is really slow you are going to expect to see sheep. That makes you glass better and longer b/c you have confidence in your gear. You won’t get frustrated from wondering if you can’t find sheep b/c they really aren’t there or b/c of your “good enough” optics just aren’t cutting it.
Conversely, If you are Still carrying around that old backpack from academy sports, and in the back of your head you know you need to upgrade, then when that hunt gets tough on day 5 you will not be thinking about anything else besides how it’s the pack that’s holding you back from your full potential. While It may not actually hurt your shoulders anymore than a $1000 one would, once your mind starts going there it gets hard to pull it back on track.
I am not trying to say that you have to have the very best gear to be successful, or that the gear makes the hunter, yada yada... lots and lots of folks get it done without the best.
But, At the end of the day, If you aren’t comfortable and confident you are eventually going to talk yourself into coming down off that mtn early, and that makes for a really long ride home.
For me the clothing is as important of a mental aspect in that regard as my weapon. What did Snyder say one time? something like “if putting on those $200 pants makes you feel like a bad-ass hunter, then you ARE a bad-ass hunter!”
Eventually, if you are serious about this stuff, you are going to end up investing in the stuff anyway. Almost everyone does. If you need to put $ towards other gear this year then by all means work on you optics or sleep system, etc. But, if the money isn’t really holding you back, I feel like diving in on the clothing can enhance your overall experience.
You can’t cheat the mountain
The only sheep I’ve hunted are Aoudad and mouflon in TX, so take all this with a grain of salt...
I wouldn’t let the clothing brand trip you up. It can certainly be done without the top brand names in hunting clothing.
BUT.... if you have the funds, you won’t be sorry about investing in the premium duds. There is a reason companies Like Sitka and Kuiu have such loyal, fanatic customers - and its way more than the “look” of the camo.
I’m a big Sitka fan myself but I can tell you that the clothing is designed for hunting activities. The pockets are where you want them to be, the layers are exactly right, and the systems work. Feeling comfortable and feeling confident is a HUGE part of being successful. We all know that the mental game is the toughest part about hunting, but few want to really acknowledge how things like clothing impact that - either positively or negatively.
Maybe I’m alone in this, but I tend to think about it this way: Each piece of (core) gear in your kit either adds to or detracts from your confidence level. I am only talking about the mental aspect here. For example-If you’ve Upgraded your optics to the level required for sheep hunting, then even when the hunting is really slow you are going to expect to see sheep. That makes you glass better and longer b/c you have confidence in your gear. You won’t get frustrated from wondering if you can’t find sheep b/c they really aren’t there or b/c of your “good enough” optics just aren’t cutting it.
Conversely, If you are Still carrying around that old backpack from academy sports, and in the back of your head you know you need to upgrade, then when that hunt gets tough on day 5 you will not be thinking about anything else besides how it’s the pack that’s holding you back from your full potential. While It may not actually hurt your shoulders anymore than a $1000 one would, once your mind starts going there it gets hard to pull it back on track.
I am not trying to say that you have to have the very best gear to be successful, or that the gear makes the hunter, yada yada... lots and lots of folks get it done without the best.
But, At the end of the day, If you aren’t comfortable and confident you are eventually going to talk yourself into coming down off that mtn early, and that makes for a really long ride home.
For me the clothing is as important of a mental aspect in that regard as my weapon. What did Snyder say one time? something like “if putting on those $200 pants makes you feel like a bad-ass hunter, then you ARE a bad-ass hunter!”
Eventually, if you are serious about this stuff, you are going to end up investing in the stuff anyway. Almost everyone does. If you need to put $ towards other gear this year then by all means work on you optics or sleep system, etc. But, if the money isn’t really holding you back, I feel like diving in on the clothing can enhance your overall experience.
You can’t cheat the mountain
Great pics! Also back before sheep hunts were pretty much once in a lifetime events because of cost and difficulty having to draw tags
Not in Alaska. A sheep hunt can be an annual event, and for as little as the cost of a tank of gas, in some cases. Hell, the tags are even free, and once you hit 60, so are the licenses.
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hmmm, no camo and no scopes....
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?????? hip boots and maybe a carhart coat??? nawww.... must be photoshopped!!
Either that or the sheep of old were blind....
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Bib overalls??? The guy must have had these 3 rams just walk into camp....
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Same with this guy...
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Alaska seems better everytime I learn something about it like this. I live in lower 48 so I’d have to move there but it might be worth it.Not in Alaska. A sheep hunt can be an annual event, and for as little as the cost of a tank of gas, in some cases. Hell, the tags are even free, and once you hit 60, so are the licenses.
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Can't speak to sheep, but First Lite Merino is the most comfortable next to skin wool that I have found.
Kuiu Verde is awesome looking the VIAS looks like something you wear sheep hunting on the moon lol