Must have gear for beginner

unfazed

FNG
Joined
Dec 7, 2024
Messages
20
Aside from lots of range time, what gear is a must have? I’m just gearing up for next season as a beginner hunter. I have my rifle, scope, knife, bino’s, and rangefinder. I plan to grab some shooting sticks, base and outterlayers, a pack, aswell as some quality boots. Anything else you’d recommend? I don’t plan to hunt multiple days just yet.

Located in Southern Utah, will be after Deer & Elk.
 

NealS02

FNG
Joined
Dec 22, 2022
Messages
70
Prioritize the best optics you can afford, quality boots, and an accurate (not necessarily expensive) rifle. You have a good list started out though.
 

Bugger

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jul 24, 2024
Messages
158
Tripod is a must. Makes glassing 10x more effective and is super stable to use for kneeling/sitting shots above the brush.
 

Taudisio

WKR
Joined
Jan 20, 2023
Messages
1,105
Location
Oregon
In order of importance, tag for the species you are hunting, knowledge of regulations and area you can hunt with that tag, a weapon (rangefinder is a must if you are bow hunting), sharp knife (knowledge of how to gut a deer if you’re solo, how to quarter an elk), boots, pack, game bags, binos, food and water, optional accessories are after this like camo. Little extra conveniences here and there, but I hunted for 20+ years and was more successful than most just using the above list. When I take a new hunter out, they better have the above list. Anything else they bring is on them.
I would highly recommend you have an experienced person go with you on an elk hunt. Killing your first deer will teach you a lot, and you could do this by yourself. An elk is a lot to move, and you will be wasteful if you are trying to move one by yourself without prior knowledge of how to gut/quarter and cool the meat.
 
Joined
Oct 29, 2021
Messages
50
Location
Willow, Alaska
Take care of your feet first. Nothing else will matter if you're dealing with blisters or other soreness from cheap boots. Lots of places to cut corners, but footwear is not one of them.
 

TaperPin

WKR
Joined
Jul 12, 2023
Messages
3,494
Aside from lots of range time, what gear is a must have? I’m just gearing up for next season as a beginner hunter. I have my rifle, scope, knife, bino’s, and rangefinder. I plan to grab some shooting sticks, base and outterlayers, a pack, aswell as some quality boots. Anything else you’d recommend? I don’t plan to hunt multiple days just yet.

Located in Southern Utah, will be after Deer & Elk.
I only laugh at this because I’ve been with a couple of new guys that forgot to pack half a roll of TP. Lol

Over time you’ll find the comfort items that work best for you. I really like to have a little square foam pad to sit on - if the ground is wet or cold it keeps your butt warm and dry, and it’s more comfortable when sitting on a rock.

A really warm fleece beenie is also a must have - pulled down over the eyes I can lean back on a pack and take a nap any time of year. It is also a life saver if you ever get caught out over night.

I don’t do well if food runs out so I’ve always keep an emergency stash that isn’t normally eaten of a couple ramen noodle packs to eat dry and half a dozen packets of instant oatmeal to eat dry, but it could be anything that holds up to not being eaten right away and has calories. These two things never sound good unless I’m hungry.

I give one of these cow calls to everyone in the family - not to call elk with, but to stop a walking elk, deer, or antelope. It works so well I’m amazed every hunter doesn’t have one on their binocular strap - keep it handy and over time it becomes second nature to slip it in your mouth. Blow it just barely loud enough to hear and a walking animal will pause for a second or two. It will get a bedded buck to stand up, or sometimes get a stationary animal to turn for better angle. I’ve been a couple hundred yards from a mulie running full speed away from whatever was chasing it - at 70 yards blowing it stopped the deer in its tracks for a second.

The Elk Inc model is durable nylon with a rubber band for the reed - with a new reed every few years it will last for decades.

During the rut when spikes are kicked out of the herd it’s really fun to mess with them with these calls. Blow it just loud enough to hear and wait until it goes back to doing what it was doing, then blow it again - each time he will get more excited and some times they’ll run right at you. lol

IMG_0151.jpeg

I’d also recommend keeping your daypack packed all the time, even if it means duplicating some items. If it’s always packed and ready to go fewer things will be forgotten and what works well for hunting is also good for fishing and hiking in the off season. As we speak, if someone called and wanted to go shoot coyotes, pick up the pack, rifle, and head to subway for a sandwich.

A little 1/4” wide X 36” long micro tape measure can be a good learning tool. When you see animals actually make tracks in soft dirt or snow, measuring them will eventually give you a very good idea of the age. Old deer and elk often have big feet, and some individuals can be identified by an unusually large track. I also measure bear tracks on trails to give an idea of how many are there - one trail had 7 different bears using it, something that would have missed if they hadn’t been measured carefully.
 

rootacres

WKR
Joined
Jan 5, 2018
Messages
1,111
Invest in ONX if you haven't already. Get a lightweight compass.

Get good boots and a good pack. Packs can be found used on here for fair prices. Buy the boots new, break them into your feet. Buy once, cry once, plan on keeping them a long time. Hurting your feet and/or your back will make for a rough hunt. Other than that, you have a solid base, go hunt and have fun. Fine tune what worked, what didnt, take notes while hunting. Ive have a hunt list saved on my phone. It's fluid and has evolved over nearly a decade. Aside from medical and SHTF stuff, I use everything I bring on most hunts now.
 

180ls1

WKR
Joined
Apr 19, 2020
Messages
1,199
Before you commit to shooting sticks, grab Cascade carbon trekking poles and a Wiser Quick Stix adapter. Then your poles will work as poles, shooting sticks and something to glass off a well.
 

prm

WKR
Joined
Mar 31, 2017
Messages
2,304
Location
No. VA
A good compass and two headlamps.

Pack

Layering system (as opposed to just buying individual pieces that that may compliment each other.)
 
Joined
Mar 31, 2019
Messages
3,891
Location
Weiser, ID
OP, we're all gear junkies here and you'll get a bunch of recommendations for awesome stuff that isn't absolutely required. Just go enjoy it and upgrade as needed.
 

rootacres

WKR
Joined
Jan 5, 2018
Messages
1,111
Tripod is a must. Makes glassing 10x more effective and is super stable to use for kneeling/sitting shots above the brush.

^^^ also what they said. You will miss animals without a tripod that you would have otherwise found. These too can be found fairly priced on here. Buy a used quality tripod off here over a cheap Chinese knockoff. I broke my first tripod on my first diy western big game hunt.
 
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