What’s Your Most Reliable Piece of Hunting Gear?

Honestly it seems like almost all of my gear has been pretty unreliable regardless of price point and alleged quality.

Montana Black Gold slider. Un reliable and fragile.

Kenetreks. Heal seams blown out on both boots, soles worn down to slicks in 2 seasons.

Zoleo. Unreliable, sometimes takes hours to transmit messages.

Seek Unaweep 4800. Needed constant adjustment never fit correctly. (I ditched it and got a K4 last year)

Kuiu Guide Jacket. Love it but the draw string broke the first time I used it.

Havalon Piranta. Blades break and slip out of the knife.

Trekking poles. I break them every year.

Kenetrek gaitors. Broke 2 pairs in one season.

Maven binos. Eye cups always coming loose.

AGC Bino harness. Always came loose and sloppy.

I have since upgraded a lot of this stuff but only have 1 season on alot of it.


So far my Exo K4 has worked flawless.

FHF Bino harness stays put.

OR Crocadile Gaitors. Bombproof.

My cheap $69 Amazon Manfroto knock off tripod has been chugging along for 8 years.

Steripen. Just works.

Cheap $12 Amazon iso butane stove with the orange ignitor lasted me 6 seasons of hard use before my Pard lost it. I replaced it with the same one.

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That K4 will never do you wrong.They last a lifetime.
 
My MSR dragonfly with a repair kit, I’ve had partners rely on it when their canister stoves wouldn’t work in the cold…little bit heavier but worth the piece of mind on backcountry trips

And my Nalgene bottles…never had one fail, unlike bladders
 
Marsupial bino harness by a lot. I wear that thing all fall and spring then it lives in my truck and gets sun baked. It’s sweat soaked and fading color but no holes, tears, rips or issues.
 
I love Zamberlans and have several pair still hanging around. But 13 years old?

At least share which model.
Their discontinued Dakota's. That was why I bought them, clearance price and last pair of 13's.....$89 on Amazon. Stock photo from online. My boots are wearing real thin on tread. They made the same boots in a 10" model, I bought a pair of those too after getting this pair. But I much prefer the 6-7" high boots, especially for bow season.
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Cabelas heavy duty bibs and parka. Had them about 20 years and I have hunted in snow, rain, wind, cold, and ice fished with it. Ripped the bibs on some barbed wire and just did a quick sew myself with no further tearing. Still warm, material is holding up and no issues on the seams. This of course was before the Bass Pro takeover when their brand went downhill
 
My MSR dragonfly with a repair kit, I’ve had partners rely on it when their canister stoves wouldn’t work in the cold…little bit heavier but worth the piece of mind on backcountry trips

And my Nalgene bottles…never had one fail, unlike bladders
Have to agree, and maybe I’ve just had good luck, but my MSR stove just keeps on going when others have gone through multiple of other brands on the same time span.
 
Well, if I look at what my backcountry gear looked like in this old 1990 picture compared to more recent years about 1/4 of the stuff is the same - the survivors were well vetted back then and have survived fads, marketing bs, changes in personal taste, and some were traded out for other models and returned to the more reliable version. I don’t consider a fragile product a good idea for hunting gear, regardless of how much weight it saves.

- Forschner boning knife and ultra light Gerber folder.
- Nalgene bottles.
- Remington 700 7 mag, fixed scope.
- MSR Whisperlite white gas stove.
- Military surplus match holder.
- Medium size compass with mirror.
- Asolo boots.
- Military poly pro long johns and 1/4 zip top.
- Pategonia fleece jackets.
- Knit wool fingerless gloves, basic heavy wool socks.
- Fleece beenie.
- Elk inc cow call.
- Leica compact 7x binos for timber hunting.
 

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