The OP was literally asking about what people do to not
lay a rifle down on the ground when at a glassing spot. Not throw, toss, beat, or any other straw-man exaggeration that people have brought up to act like letting a rifle touch the ground is abuse- literally set a rifle beside him to glass.
So this is a serious question for people on this thread. Since laying a rifle on the ground is “abuse” and you don’t abuse your equipment or gear which is why you don’t let your rifle touch the ground- how do you set your pack down when hunting? Is your pack not equipment or a tool? You’ve already stated that a rifle is a tool and you should take care of your tools and not abuse them, and letting a rifle touch dirt, snow, rocks is abuse; so does that not follow that letting a pack touch dirt, snow, or rocks is also abusing that equipment? Do carry a stand that you assemble before you take your pack off so it never touches the ground? Or maybe a tarp in your pocket that you can lay down to set the pack on. But then, isn’t the tarp itself “equipment”?
Cary that farther- clothing is “gear”, and since you don’t want to abuse “gear” do you not ever sit on the ground wearing your pants? What about taking a knee while kneeling? This can be carried logically to everything- what about your boots, they are gear correct? Do we not let the sole touch the ground? If touching dirt is abuse, then how do you justify that?
Read the OP’s post, then read the comments. It’s about setting a rifle beside you while glassing. Here’s me abusing a brand new rifle yesterday while glassing. I wonder how much I reduced its lifespan?
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