- Joined
- Feb 20, 2022
- Messages
- 37
Maybe this is blasphemy, but has anyone ever look at the fjallraven singi 28? very similar to shape charge in design but little more subtle and bot less money, I've had good luck with fjallraven clothing.
Walk me through how you are running this, sounds like something I need in my lifeI'm probably in the minority here but I like to run super lean when Whitetail Public land hunting here in the Southeast. I run a Kuiu Venture 1800, it does not have the meat shelf/external frame but holds my platform, gear and sticks on outside perfect to my profile so I don't snag anything on way in, as for meat hauling the downside if i'm deep is I have to debone qtrs to pack out, but I carry a trash bag to put my gamebags inside of.
Curious how far from your vehicle and what kind of terrain you hunt? I live in NJ and unless I am super close to the truck I am from now on gutting and packing on my MR Terraframe like I have on 3 of my last 4 deer, It is way easier and faster than dragging it either on it's own, in a sled or in a cart.I bought a Stryker XL and was going to go that route. I really like the pack but not digging using a full frame for whitetails. Where I hunt I can get my deer out with a sled cart or ATV. Im not packing any deer out. Im liking the idea of the shape charge
I agree. I’ll never drag a whitetail again unless it’s very close to where I can get my truck or quad. I started packing out my whitetails last year. I killed one in Maine where I ended up being just over 2 miles from my truck so I hunted out of my frame pack on that hunt. Where I normally hunt in NJ or PA, I’ll leave my frame pack in the truck and go back and get it.Curious how far from your vehicle and what kind of terrain you hunt? I live in NJ and unless I am super close to the truck I am from now on gutting and packing on my MR Terraframe like I have on 3 of my last 4 deer, It is way easier and faster than dragging it either on it's own, in a sled or in a cart.
I'm probably in the minority here but I like to run super lean when Whitetail Public land hunting here in the Southeast. I run a Kuiu Venture 1800, it does not have the meat shelf/external frame but holds my platform, gear and sticks on outside perfect to my profile so I don't snag anything on way in, as for meat hauling the downside if i'm deep is I have to debone qtrs to pack out, but I carry a trash bag to put my gamebags inside of.
I use the same pack for saddle hunting and it works very well. I dont carry much gear either and can strap the platform and stick or sticks to the outside of the pack. A kill gets field quartered and put in game bags then in a trash bag inside the pack for the hike out. With the 1800 I can get up to a 120-130# live weight deer in the pack. A bigger deer would require strapping a meat bag on the outside and carrying the platform. They also have a the same pack in a 2300 version.Walk me through how you are running this, sounds like something I need in my life
That is so fricken cool. Do you ever wish your pack was the 2300?
There is a roughly 110# doe in the pack, mission platform and stick on the outside.
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A question I have pondered plenty. I keep coming back to no for the answer though. Reason being, a nice size doe quartered and in the bag with my other gear is about all I want in that pack. It is fine for a couple miles but it also is not a frame pack and will not handle bigger weight like a frame. For a deer bigger than will go in that pack, prolly gonna want to make a couple lighter trips anyway even if you had that extra 500 inches.That is so fricken cool. Do you ever wish your pack was the 2300?
I have never packed a deer, but carry almost all of them just slung over my shoulders. This seems much smarter... great, now I need another pack....I’m a fan of the popups this is a 18. The army base I hunt the deer have to come out whole so no quartering.
Your saying there is a 110# deer in that mostly empty looking backpack?...
There is a roughly 110# doe in the pack, mission platform and stick on the outside.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Boned out, yes.Your saying there is a 110# deer in that mostly empty looking backpack?...
Here in Wisconsin we are required to take it all out of the fieldHonest question, and im not being facetious. Why waste the effort to pack out all that hide, hair, and bone that youre just gonna throw out. One or 2 game bags and you could debone it all right there and fit it into one load, and thats getting every scrap of meat. Personally i wont drag a deer over 300 yards or so anymore. Theres absolutely no reason to, learn to butcher on the ground and get the right tools.
Honest question, and im not being facetious. Why waste the effort to pack out all that hide, hair, and bone that youre just gonna throw out. One or 2 game bags and you could debone it all right there and fit it into one load, and thats getting every scrap of meat. Personally i wont drag a deer over 300 yards or so anymore. Theres absolutely no reason to, learn to butcher on the ground and get the right tools.
I think it has multiple reasons. CWD, poaching, concentrated hunting on public land and having hides and whatnot every where. Now we have huge dumpsters that are lined with plastic for carcass disposal, in theory it would help slow the spread. In regards to CWD there are a lot of unknowns, misinformation and emotions in every conversation I have heard about it.Because of CWD? Wouldn't that spread it faster, possibly taking contaminated remains to new areas spreading CWD further?? Im beginning to think much like other invasive and "reintroduced" species that they seem to not manage whatsoever but help, this is all intentional to destroy what little natural resources we have left in America
Honest question, and im not being facetious. Why waste the effort to pack out all that hide, hair, and bone that youre just gonna throw out. One or 2 game bags and you could debone it all right there and fit it into one load, and thats getting every scrap of meat. Personally i wont drag a deer over 300 yards or so anymore. Theres absolutely no reason to, learn to butcher on the ground and get the right tools.