- Banned
- #21
Newtosavage
WKR
Yea, this is something I don't do at all when I'm alone. My wife made me promise to be careful, and I hear her voice every time I get close to the edge of a ravine or consider crossing a slope with loose shale or ice, etc. That, combined with back surgery a few years ago has really made me more aware of the hazards I used to bring on to myself. It's just not worth it. Good words of warning there for sure.I almost always hunt alone. I prefer it. Can do anything I want, go down any trail, get up any hillside, follow any hunch, etc. But I often get crazy...climb steep stuff I shouldn't be climbing alone. Stepped on leaves hiding/covering slick rock once in a drainage and started to slide / free fall down toward a 75 foot drop off. No brakes existed. Got ahold of the last tree there right before I would have hurled over the edge to my end. Many times I have slid/ fallen and cut myself or torn clothes . (So now I bring bandages and a mini sewing kit.) And in the steep/thick stuff had my watch ripped off, canteens ripped off, sunglasses ripped off, my pocket ripped open and phone fell out (had to reclimb to retreive), had my. 44 magnum sidearm ripped off (had to retrace several hundred yards for that.) Point is injury is your biggest enemy alone and steep or thick invites injury. Just be smarter than me and safer.
Hard to enjoy the memories of a great hunt when you're dead.