grassassin
FNG
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2024
Here in the thick woods of the hills and hollers of the Ozarks, 95 percent of hunters don't walk more than a quarter of a mile from their truck to their tree stand where they will remain stationary for the rest of the hunt. Yet I see rifles getting lighter and lighter with carbon fiber wrapped barrels and skeletonized magnesium folding chassis.
My deer hunting buddy is obsessed with shaving weight off his rifle, or rather buying a newer lighter rifle every season. Nine different guns and corresponding optics over the past 10 years I estimate has cost him nearly $30,000.That is taking into account the fact that he sells off last year's ultralight rifle when buying this year's newest superduper ultra-extreme lightweight deer slayer, recouping at least some of the cost. Still, 30 grand is a chunk of change.
I suspect he has actually spent a lot more, which he seems to confirm. He is now looking at the gun magazines and watching reviews on You Tube, ramping up to again "upgrade" sometime before fall. Now, if all this makes him happy then great but he doesn't enjoy the process of setting up a new rig every single year. Rather, he ends up stressing himself to get everything put together and dialed in before the first day of the season. Without much time behind his new rig he fumbles around with it when a big buck shows up and ends up missing or wounding them.
Meanwhile, I've used the same 18+ lb. set up which has served me well for the past 8 or 9 years.
My deer hunting buddy is obsessed with shaving weight off his rifle, or rather buying a newer lighter rifle every season. Nine different guns and corresponding optics over the past 10 years I estimate has cost him nearly $30,000.That is taking into account the fact that he sells off last year's ultralight rifle when buying this year's newest superduper ultra-extreme lightweight deer slayer, recouping at least some of the cost. Still, 30 grand is a chunk of change.
I suspect he has actually spent a lot more, which he seems to confirm. He is now looking at the gun magazines and watching reviews on You Tube, ramping up to again "upgrade" sometime before fall. Now, if all this makes him happy then great but he doesn't enjoy the process of setting up a new rig every single year. Rather, he ends up stressing himself to get everything put together and dialed in before the first day of the season. Without much time behind his new rig he fumbles around with it when a big buck shows up and ends up missing or wounding them.
Meanwhile, I've used the same 18+ lb. set up which has served me well for the past 8 or 9 years.