B_Reynolds_AK
WKR
For those that enjoy the Hunt Backcountry Podcast, here is the latest in The Experience Project series. It is an episode that I got on and chatted with Steve and Mark last week.
Enjoy!
Enjoy!
The ones with Form, Scott Johnston and Jon Pynch are some of my favorites in recent times.Just realized I haven't listened to this one or the one before it. Gotta make sure I have my headphones tomorrow. Be a good listen to while I walk watching for how thick chips go down on a road.
That’s a great question.Another great podcast. Would love to hear you on some more!
In regards to asking questions about hunting/backpacking, you said something along the lines of asking questions to people who are a step above you rather than an expert because you might not understand fully what the expert is saying (brief summary). I’ve heard this exact saying in other realms but hadn’t thought of it in terms of hunting. I’m curious what questions you found yourself asking someone else, or yourself, when you were early on in your sheep hunting journey?
@B_Reynolds_AK
An example I see at time is experts who simply can't brake something down simple enough for a novice to understand.
Or, trying to be too complete and causing information overload.
Those two can go together, simplifying something to the point it is only half correct feels odd, but fully correct often only matters at the experts level (does someone shooting 500 yards on an animal need to understand Coriolis effect or even spin drift).
Or, forgetting to teach steps when multiple things are done at once because they have forgotten what it is like to lack the mental bandwidth because it is consumed by tasks that occur below conscious awareness for the experienced person. For example, driving a stick I rarely notice the clutch or shifting gears, it just happens, so no mental bandwidth is expended on what is quite intimidating for a new driver.
I didn’t have to set anything in particular on the BRF, as it automatically measures DA. I just had to come to a more thorough understanding of it. When looking at any app, it’s easy to just punch in 5,000 ft if that is what your GPS or Topo states, but you should really be entering your DA, determined by a chart or a device such as a kestrel. The BR4 continues to impress and has been working great for me.In your podcast, you mentioned the different altitudes. Which one did you set your br4 to to match the revic app or vice-versa
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Great assessment. That is my experience as well.@B_Reynolds_AK @Marbles
Definitely makes sense. I feel it a lot reading the rifle content on here. For me, I’ve noticed it the most with gear and animal behavior. You hear guys using a tipi/stove and another with just a tarp and don’t understand it. Once those same people describe their use case scenarios it makes sense and it can try to be applied.
Then you hear hunt scenarios and don’t quite understand it until you run into that situation in the field and it just clicks. I think combining the person with the info describing their thought process and being in the field helps that information, that once felt useless, really sink in. For me, hearing it or reading it keeps it in the back of my mind somewhere for when I cross a situation and then I’m reminded and can refer back
Cool episode, good perspective on the holistic look at “success” when it comes to hunting. Thinking about the way we think is an undervalued practice for most, great philosophical dialogue in thereFor those that enjoy the Hunt Backcountry Podcast, here is the latest in The Experience Project series. It is an episode that I got on and chatted with Steve and Mark last week.
Enjoy!