Evan, I've noticed your tagline since Rokslide started and been meaning to ask you about it.
"The greatest hunter is the one who knows his own limitations!"
For what it means to me, I can't agree more. In this day and age of climb further, hunt harder, spend the most on gear, your statement stands in contrast.
As I've gotten older, I've learned to accept my limitations (money, physical limits, ability to move slow) and try to plan my hunts with them in mind instead of hoping they go away.
Example, when I was 25, I'd spot a buck 4 miles away and tear after him like my arse was on fire. Almost every time they got away either because I couldn't physically get to them or moved to fast and spooked them. I now try to contemplate things more, sometimes not even going after them that day. When it works out, I'm able to approach the buck more mentally & physically ready for what may happen. More often I've got the drop on them and went home smiling.
Or I'd plan hunts that turned out to be so expensive that they left a bitter taste in my mouth, especially when I was unsuccesful, which most of the time I am.
I don't know what exactly you mean by your tagline, but that is what it means to me. Thanks for that nugget of wisdom. What does it mean to you?
"The greatest hunter is the one who knows his own limitations!"
For what it means to me, I can't agree more. In this day and age of climb further, hunt harder, spend the most on gear, your statement stands in contrast.
As I've gotten older, I've learned to accept my limitations (money, physical limits, ability to move slow) and try to plan my hunts with them in mind instead of hoping they go away.
Example, when I was 25, I'd spot a buck 4 miles away and tear after him like my arse was on fire. Almost every time they got away either because I couldn't physically get to them or moved to fast and spooked them. I now try to contemplate things more, sometimes not even going after them that day. When it works out, I'm able to approach the buck more mentally & physically ready for what may happen. More often I've got the drop on them and went home smiling.
Or I'd plan hunts that turned out to be so expensive that they left a bitter taste in my mouth, especially when I was unsuccesful, which most of the time I am.
I don't know what exactly you mean by your tagline, but that is what it means to me. Thanks for that nugget of wisdom. What does it mean to you?