Str8shooter
WKR
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2014
- Messages
- 469
My .02 on effective glassing is get lasik if you wear glasses.... then alpha glass....beg borrow or steal them and get them on a tripod before first light at a high knob youve scouted first with either google earth or on foot (be careful about timbered knobs, they might look like dominating viewing points, but if the forest is dense, no bueno). First scan meadows, openings, avy shoots, grassy benches and other high traffic zones and return every 5 or so minutes throughout the glassing process. Ill spend an hour or so in a spot and after checking high probability areas for movement, whole animals, white butts, etc, I grid along areas amenable to spotting game (ie not tree tops or scree fields) and let the eyes move in the bino, it takes patience and concentration to actively look within and among vegetation in your sight window and to keep a picture in your minds eye of animal parts /textures/colors and critically, the relative size of animal parts at each viewing distance. This is what has taken several years of glassing to develop a skill for and you can help yourself by calibrating local vegetation size by you (ie the sage brush here is 3.5 ft tall, mule deer shoulder height should be roughly on par with the height of sage on that face 700 yds away in the binos). After a good look, start over and after 2 or 3 scans or an hour move 50 to 100yds (depending on the terrain), as subtle angle changes can open up new and significant views. As has been said above, once you spot an animal, study its color, texture, shape and the way light is absorbed/reflected differently on that animal versus the surrounding environment. And try and "refind" that animal, coming in from a different angle. It seems almost always after you get your sight picture established on a animal at distance, other animals stand out like a sore thumb and its really a joy to get that subtle sight picture set, and watch the landscape come alive with animals. This is why the first person to get eyes on game, typically finds the next animals before anyone else, their sight picture is calibrated. The key is to find the subtle difference at that time of day, in that particular landscape that lets your brain go into a predatory mode of prey recognition. Sometimes it's lighter colored vertical legs of a mule deer in a mostly green brushy basin that pops, or the dull rough yellow tan hide of a wapiti that has a slight difference from the texture of the tan of the late season grass its standing in. Always key in on movement, and always evaluate the landscape geometry for high percentage areas.