JeffRaines
WKR
Yeah I would have to agree with this as well. A set of 10s or even 15s on a tripod would probably be much more beneficial to a lot of people over a dedicated spotter. The guys who are after the biggest animals on the mountains definitely need a spotter and I wouldn't argue that at all... but most regular Joes get too wrapped up in whatever YouTube/hunting show and sees them using the spotting scope and thinks "man I wonder how many animals I've missed" then you get one and realize most of your glassing is done through binos, the spotter comes out to verify if its an animal worth chasing... which, to a great majority of guys means that its legal, which you can tell through the binos most of the time.I bought a spotting scope because all the cool guys had spotting scopes. I hauled it around the mountains for years before I realized it's not something I need to carry for the type of hunting I do.
I'll probably never care too much about antler scores, so glassing usually involved me looking at an elk through binos, then switching to the spotting scope and saying, "Yep, there's that same elk. But a little more magnified".