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New Hunter - Bare Minimum Necessary Gear
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<blockquote data-quote="younggun308" data-source="post: 5534686" data-attributes="member: 4042"><p>Definitely wear as few layers as possible on the walk in. You'll warm up from the walking alone even if you're shivering when you step out of the car. Then, whether you put on several layers or primarily one mega-layer (a parka + bibs), you're good to go waiting to ambush a deer.</p><p></p><p>The only thing is, if you will be stalking through the woods at all, having multiple lighter, removable layers is superior. In some conditions, like windy days or light sleet, this approach is the ticket. If the deer won't move, you need to go to them instead of waiting on them to come to you, and the weather is giving you sound + visual cover. Sneaking up on bedded deer is how I killed my biggest buck—he was bedded under some mountain laurels when it was gusting 20mph.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="younggun308, post: 5534686, member: 4042"] Definitely wear as few layers as possible on the walk in. You’ll warm up from the walking alone even if you’re shivering when you step out of the car. Then, whether you put on several layers or primarily one mega-layer (a parka + bibs), you’re good to go waiting to ambush a deer. The only thing is, if you will be stalking through the woods at all, having multiple lighter, removable layers is superior. In some conditions, like windy days or light sleet, this approach is the ticket. If the deer won’t move, you need to go to them instead of waiting on them to come to you, and the weather is giving you sound + visual cover. Sneaking up on bedded deer is how I killed my biggest buck—he was bedded under some mountain laurels when it was gusting 20mph. [/QUOTE]
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New Hunter - Bare Minimum Necessary Gear
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