Love how we're evolving

So I went to ChatGPT and asked it to craft a forum post that will fit in with Rokslide.com

👀👀
We’re doomed


Title: Seeking Advice: New Western Hunt Setup – Boots, Pack, and Layering System Feedback Wanted

Hey everyone,
I’m getting my gear dialed for next season and could really use some insight from folks with more miles under their boots than me.

I’ve mostly hunted whitetails back East, but I’m transitioning into more western hunts—CO or WY for mule deer/elk. I’m building a setup focused on staying mobile, glassing a lot, and being able to pack meat if I get lucky (that’s the plan anyway).

Current Gear List / Considering:

  • Boots: Leaning Crispi Nevada or Kenetrek Mountain Extreme. Wide feet. I’d like something stiff enough for sidehilling but not a full mountaineering boot.
  • Pack: Looking hard at the Kifaru Duplex or Stone Glacier Xcurve. Curious how they ride under real meat-in-the-bag load vs. just day gear.
  • Layering: Thinking First Lite kit (Wick > Furnace > Uncompahgre) or Sitka Core/Jetstream system. Early mornings I run cold, but I sweat easy hiking uphill.
Questions:

  1. If you’ve run both Crispi and Kenetrek, which handled steep terrain better long term?
  2. Real talk: How brutal is the learning curve packing out an elk if you’ve never done it before?
  3. Are Stone Glacier and Kifaru both “buy once, cry once” or is that just marketing?
  4. Anyone pack ultra light AND still feel confident for late-season temps?
Not trying to start brand wars—just want to make smart purchases instead of stacking a gear closet of “almost right” stuff.

Any input is appreciated. Gear failures in the backcountry don’t sound like something I want to learn the hard way.

Thanks in advance—looking forward to hearing what’s worked for you guys.


If you'd like, I can adjust it to:

  • sound like a newer hunter or a seasoned one
  • include a recent hunt story to feel more personal
  • ask about rifles/calibers, optics, boots, tents, etc.
  • match a regional hunt (Idaho, Colorado, Montana, Alaska)
Want a version that includes a short intro story or harvest photo description to make it feel more authentic?
 
So I went to ChatGPT and asked it to craft a forum post that will fit in with Rokslide.com

👀👀
We’re doomed


Title: Seeking Advice: New Western Hunt Setup – Boots, Pack, and Layering System Feedback Wanted

Hey everyone,
I’m getting my gear dialed for next season and could really use some insight from folks with more miles under their boots than me.

I’ve mostly hunted whitetails back East, but I’m transitioning into more western hunts—CO or WY for mule deer/elk. I’m building a setup focused on staying mobile, glassing a lot, and being able to pack meat if I get lucky (that’s the plan anyway).

Current Gear List / Considering:

  • Boots: Leaning Crispi Nevada or Kenetrek Mountain Extreme. Wide feet. I’d like something stiff enough for sidehilling but not a full mountaineering boot.
  • Pack: Looking hard at the Kifaru Duplex or Stone Glacier Xcurve. Curious how they ride under real meat-in-the-bag load vs. just day gear.
  • Layering: Thinking First Lite kit (Wick > Furnace > Uncompahgre) or Sitka Core/Jetstream system. Early mornings I run cold, but I sweat easy hiking uphill.
Questions:

  1. If you’ve run both Crispi and Kenetrek, which handled steep terrain better long term?
  2. Real talk: How brutal is the learning curve packing out an elk if you’ve never done it before?
  3. Are Stone Glacier and Kifaru both “buy once, cry once” or is that just marketing?
  4. Anyone pack ultra light AND still feel confident for late-season temps?
Not trying to start brand wars—just want to make smart purchases instead of stacking a gear closet of “almost right” stuff.

Any input is appreciated. Gear failures in the backcountry don’t sound like something I want to learn the hard way.

Thanks in advance—looking forward to hearing what’s worked for you guys.


If you'd like, I can adjust it to:

  • sound like a newer hunter or a seasoned one
  • include a recent hunt story to feel more personal
  • ask about rifles/calibers, optics, boots, tents, etc.
  • match a regional hunt (Idaho, Colorado, Montana, Alaska)
Want a version that includes a short intro story or harvest photo description to make it feel more authentic?

Quit educating the coyotes...
 
So I went to ChatGPT and asked it to craft a forum post that will fit in with Rokslide.com


We’re doomed


Title: Seeking Advice: New Western Hunt Setup – Boots, Pack, and Layering System Feedback Wanted

Hey everyone,
I’m getting my gear dialed for next season and could really use some insight from folks with more miles under their boots than me.

I’ve mostly hunted whitetails back East, but I’m transitioning into more western hunts—CO or WY for mule deer/elk. I’m building a setup focused on staying mobile, glassing a lot, and being able to pack meat if I get lucky (that’s the plan anyway).

Current Gear List / Considering:

  • Boots: Leaning Crispi Nevada or Kenetrek Mountain Extreme. Wide feet. I’d like something stiff enough for sidehilling but not a full mountaineering boot.
  • Pack: Looking hard at the Kifaru Duplex or Stone Glacier Xcurve. Curious how they ride under real meat-in-the-bag load vs. just day gear.
  • Layering: Thinking First Lite kit (Wick > Furnace > Uncompahgre) or Sitka Core/Jetstream system. Early mornings I run cold, but I sweat easy hiking uphill.
Questions:

  1. If you’ve run both Crispi and Kenetrek, which handled steep terrain better long term?
  2. Real talk: How brutal is the learning curve packing out an elk if you’ve never done it before?
  3. Are Stone Glacier and Kifaru both “buy once, cry once” or is that just marketing?
  4. Anyone pack ultra light AND still feel confident for late-season temps?
Not trying to start brand wars—just want to make smart purchases instead of stacking a gear closet of “almost right” stuff.

Any input is appreciated. Gear failures in the backcountry don’t sound like something I want to learn the hard way.

Thanks in advance—looking forward to hearing what’s worked for you guys.


If you'd like, I can adjust it to:

  • sound like a newer hunter or a seasoned one
  • include a recent hunt story to feel more personal
  • ask about rifles/calibers, optics, boots, tents, etc.
  • match a regional hunt (Idaho, Colorado, Montana, Alaska)
Want a version that includes a short intro story or harvest photo description to make it feel more authentic?

No hunter in their right mind would use the word transitioning. Scam identified.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
So I went to ChatGPT and asked it to craft a forum post that will fit in with Rokslide.com

👀👀
We’re doomed


Title: Seeking Advice: New Western Hunt Setup – Boots, Pack, and Layering System Feedback Wanted

Hey everyone,
I’m getting my gear dialed for next season and could really use some insight from folks with more miles under their boots than me.

I’ve mostly hunted whitetails back East, but I’m transitioning into more western hunts—CO or WY for mule deer/elk. I’m building a setup focused on staying mobile, glassing a lot, and being able to pack meat if I get lucky (that’s the plan anyway).

Current Gear List / Considering:

  • Boots: Leaning Crispi Nevada or Kenetrek Mountain Extreme. Wide feet. I’d like something stiff enough for sidehilling but not a full mountaineering boot.
  • Pack: Looking hard at the Kifaru Duplex or Stone Glacier Xcurve. Curious how they ride under real meat-in-the-bag load vs. just day gear.
  • Layering: Thinking First Lite kit (Wick > Furnace > Uncompahgre) or Sitka Core/Jetstream system. Early mornings I run cold, but I sweat easy hiking uphill.
Questions:

  1. If you’ve run both Crispi and Kenetrek, which handled steep terrain better long term?
  2. Real talk: How brutal is the learning curve packing out an elk if you’ve never done it before?
  3. Are Stone Glacier and Kifaru both “buy once, cry once” or is that just marketing?
  4. Anyone pack ultra light AND still feel confident for late-season temps?
Not trying to start brand wars—just want to make smart purchases instead of stacking a gear closet of “almost right” stuff.

Any input is appreciated. Gear failures in the backcountry don’t sound like something I want to learn the hard way.

Thanks in advance—looking forward to hearing what’s worked for you guys.


If you'd like, I can adjust it to:

  • sound like a newer hunter or a seasoned one
  • include a recent hunt story to feel more personal
  • ask about rifles/calibers, optics, boots, tents, etc.
  • match a regional hunt (Idaho, Colorado, Montana, Alaska)
Want a version that includes a short intro story or harvest photo description to make it feel more authentic?

This is why we need multi-level encryption. Asking the hotdog sandwhich question may have worked this time but we will need more and more inside jokes in the future.
 
Chat GPT responses.

Is a taco a sandwich?

Short answer: it depends on how you define “sandwich.” 🌮🥪

Here are the main viewpoints:

🍞 Traditional definition​

A sandwich is food between two slices of bread.

  • Tacos usually use one folded tortilla, not two separate slices.
    ➡️ By this definition, a taco is not a sandwich.

📚 Broad culinary definition​

A sandwich is any filling enclosed by a starch (bread, roll, flatbread, etc.).

  • Tortillas are flatbreads.
  • The filling is enclosed.
    ➡️ By this definition, a taco could be a sandwich.

🌮 Cultural & practical view​

Tacos are part of Mexican cuisine with their own history, rules, and identity.

  • No one orders tacos at a sandwich shop.
    ➡️ Culturally, a taco is a taco, not a sandwich.

🧠 Fun taxonomy take​

  • Sandwich = category
  • Taco = subcategory?
  • Or maybe they’re cousins, like wraps and gyros.
Final verdict:

  • Culturally: No
  • Technically: Maybe
  • Emotionally: Definitely not
If you want, I can also explain where hot dogs, burritos, or quesadillas fall in this debate 😄
 
Does chili contain beans?

It depends on who you ask and what kind of chili 🌶️

🏛️ Traditional Texas chili​

  • No beans. Ever.
  • Classic chili con carne in Texas is just meat, chilies, spices, maybe tomatoes.
  • Beans are considered a later addition (and sometimes controversial).

🌎 Common modern versions​

  • Yes, often contains beans (kidney, pinto, black).
  • Especially common outside Texas and in home cooking.
  • Beans add texture, protein, and make the dish more filling.

🥗 Vegetarian / vegan chili​

  • Beans are essential.
  • Usually the main protein source.

✅ Bottom line​

  • Chili doesn’t have to contain beans.
  • Some styles never do, many usually do.
So:
Chili may contain beans — unless it’s Texas-style, where the answer is a firm no.
 
No hunter in their right mind would use the word transitioning. Scam identified.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Well, maybe in "their" right mind he would, but not in "his" right mind.

But what I'm really worried about is the posters who run bino harnesses and whatnot.

Those are the accounts that we need to investigate. Seems to me that if you are an English speaker who can't distinguish between what you use, what you wear, and what you "run," you might be a bot that needs rooting out.


 
Well, maybe in "their" right mind he would, but not in "his" right mind.

But what I'm really worried about is the posters who run bino harnesses and whatnot.

Those are the accounts that we need to investigate. Seems to me that if you are an English speaker who can't distinguish between what you use, what you wear, and what you "run," you might be a bot that needs rooting out.
Wait, so are you saying we ask potential scammers what gear they "run" and wait for weird answers? Or are you saying that members who say they "run" some piece of gear are suspicious? Because that's a pretty common RS saying to "run" something whether you say it or not.
 
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