afishinman14
FNG
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2022
- Messages
- 57
Been hunting my whole life. But pretty much whitetail/stand hunting here in TX.
Finally venturing out and going on an elk hunt this year with my dad before he can’t partake on such a trip.
Going with an outfitter in MT, last week of rifle Nov 15-20.
This might be my only rifle elk hunt. I’m a pretty dedicated Bowhunter and will probably only target them with a bow after this hunt (my dad doesn’t bow hunt).
I have read TONS of threads on here. Great information. But want to share my specific scenario and get some recommendations:
Need to be able to stay warm for this late season rifle hunt. Will be with an outfitter. Private land. Nice lodge. Can wash clothes every night. Dry boots, etc. Will drive in through some roads on the ranches. Then hike up to glass. Probably a few miles a day. But don’t expect 10-20 miles a day.
But… in the future I will be grabbing the bow. And possibly backpack camping/hunting in warmer weather (compared to late season)
So my biggest debate is if I go with Merino or Synthetic base layers. I know Merino can feel warm when wet, I just don’t want that drooping, heavy shirt feeling when wet. I lean towards synthetic but also know they can get ripe. Don’t care for the sake of the elk (they smell you anyway), but just don’t prefer to stink for a week.
For pants I’m think FL Corrugate Foundry. I like that I can vent them and they have tall sizes. (Need a 35” or 36” inseam typically). Do I need a mid layer on my legs? Winter MT?
For my top, I’ll have a base layer, mid layer (maybe a grid fleece?) and an decent DWR jacket like the KUIU guide. May buy an Eddie Bauer puffy to pack. Any other advice?
I have plenty of lighter weight pants already. And am assuming I can just rock a base layer and maybe a hoody for bow season.
Do y’all wear base layer leggings even in warm weather? Why not just a pair of light pants?
Pretty straight on boots. Eyeing the Crispi Nevada.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Finally venturing out and going on an elk hunt this year with my dad before he can’t partake on such a trip.
Going with an outfitter in MT, last week of rifle Nov 15-20.
This might be my only rifle elk hunt. I’m a pretty dedicated Bowhunter and will probably only target them with a bow after this hunt (my dad doesn’t bow hunt).
I have read TONS of threads on here. Great information. But want to share my specific scenario and get some recommendations:
Need to be able to stay warm for this late season rifle hunt. Will be with an outfitter. Private land. Nice lodge. Can wash clothes every night. Dry boots, etc. Will drive in through some roads on the ranches. Then hike up to glass. Probably a few miles a day. But don’t expect 10-20 miles a day.
But… in the future I will be grabbing the bow. And possibly backpack camping/hunting in warmer weather (compared to late season)
So my biggest debate is if I go with Merino or Synthetic base layers. I know Merino can feel warm when wet, I just don’t want that drooping, heavy shirt feeling when wet. I lean towards synthetic but also know they can get ripe. Don’t care for the sake of the elk (they smell you anyway), but just don’t prefer to stink for a week.
For pants I’m think FL Corrugate Foundry. I like that I can vent them and they have tall sizes. (Need a 35” or 36” inseam typically). Do I need a mid layer on my legs? Winter MT?
For my top, I’ll have a base layer, mid layer (maybe a grid fleece?) and an decent DWR jacket like the KUIU guide. May buy an Eddie Bauer puffy to pack. Any other advice?
I have plenty of lighter weight pants already. And am assuming I can just rock a base layer and maybe a hoody for bow season.
Do y’all wear base layer leggings even in warm weather? Why not just a pair of light pants?
Pretty straight on boots. Eyeing the Crispi Nevada.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk