Do I take too much stuff with me?

JMikeyH

Well-Known Member
Every time I'm packing my things to go out stalking it seems to take an age to gather everything I take and get out the door. What do you guys take with you when you go besides the obvious?
The usual stuff I take:
  1. Rifle
  2. Ammo + wallet to hold spare rounds
  3. Binos
  4. Rangefinder
  5. Sticks
  6. Jacket/Waterproof
  7. Camo gloves
  8. Hat
  9. Knife
  10. Saw
  11. Waistpack filled with:
    • Latex gloves
    • Hand cleaning bits and bobs like wipes/sanitiser
    • S Hooks
    • First Aid kit with bandages, tourniquets etc
    • Small fold up targets in case scope takes a knock
    • Staple gun for fixing said targets to a stick if needed
    • Water
    • Small snack like a Snickers
    • Sandwich bags for heart/kidneys/liver
  12. Roe Sack
  13. Flexible carcass tray left in the car
And probably a couple of other minor bits and pieces I'm forgetting. Is it too much? What do you lot take?
 
Every time I'm packing my things to go out stalking it seems to take an age to gather everything I take and get out the door. What do you guys take with you when you go besides the obvious?
The usual stuff I take:
  1. Rifle
  2. Ammo + wallet to hold spare rounds
  3. Binos
  4. Rangefinder
  5. Sticks
  6. Jacket/Waterproof
  7. Camo gloves
  8. Hat
  9. Knife
  10. Saw
  11. Waistpack filled with:
    • Latex gloves
    • Hand cleaning bits and bobs like wipes/sanitiser
    • S Hooks
    • First Aid kit with bandages, tourniquets etc
    • Small fold up targets in case scope takes a knock
    • Staple gun for fixing said targets to a stick if needed
    • Water
    • Small snack like a Snickers
    • Sandwich bags for heart/kidneys/liver
  12. Roe Sack
  13. Flexible carcass tray left in the car
And probably a couple of other minor bits and pieces I'm forgetting. Is it too much? What do you lot take?
I take roughly what you take, except I leave targets etc in car. A mobile phone is also essential as long as there is a signal. In Scotland ,off the beaten track with no phone signal, I take a satellite phone and GPS.
 
I take most of that but stashed in the roe sack, mostly in the pockets where it all lives. (I don’t bother with a saw, just go up through the side of the breastbone with a knife). Plus a couple of very large food grade heavy duty plastic sacks. Usually I leave the roe sack somewhere handy and stalk fairly minimally. If I get something I’ll go and get the roe sack, gralloch and put the beast in one of the plastic bags, then pop it in the sack and we’re off home.
 
  • Like
Reactions: TH4
My stalking backpack is always packed and sitting by the back door, so I just have to add sandwiches and flask, pick it up and go. That way it takes no time to get ready at all!
During the fallow season my sticks, carcass tray and extra gralloching stuff (eg, spare knife, winch, etc) always stay in the vehicle, so no chance of forgetting those.
Knife is always on my belt anyway. Ammo goes in trouser pocket the night before.
Only thing that I actually have to remember as I leave the house is the rifle.

I will do an inventory of what's in the backpack at some point.
 
Hi. I take similar, with the exception of;
Target/stapler. - how many time have you used it?
Ranger finder. - I take it when I go Walking and I practice estimating then verifying the range to ad hock things. (My good lady has got quite good too). Then when I'm out Stalking, I feel confident to estimate range sufficiently, to get on target without the faff.
M.
 
I have a small ruck sack that holds my essentials in one place, pick up and go! Not forgetting rifle, bolt, sound mod,binoculars. The following are on my shooting belt, knife,saw and ammo wallet. are all in the ruck sack to start with.
Flask if needed?
BC.
 
  • Like
Reactions: VSS
Every time I'm packing my things to go out stalking it seems to take an age to gather everything I take and get out the door. What do you guys take with you when you go besides the obvious?
The usual stuff I take:
  1. Rifle
  2. Ammo + wallet to hold spare rounds
  3. Binos
  4. Rangefinder
  5. Sticks
  6. Jacket/Waterproof
  7. Camo gloves
  8. Hat
  9. Knife
  10. Saw
  11. Waistpack filled with:
    • Latex gloves
    • Hand cleaning bits and bobs like wipes/sanitiser
    • S Hooks
    • First Aid kit with bandages, tourniquets etc
    • Small fold up targets in case scope takes a knock
    • Staple gun for fixing said targets to a stick if needed
    • Water
    • Small snack like a Snickers
    • Sandwich bags for heart/kidneys/liver
  12. Roe Sack
  13. Flexible carcass tray left in the car
And probably a couple of other minor bits and pieces I'm forgetting. Is it too much? What do you lot take?

Why do you take so much?

Tim.243
 
Why do you take so much (ammunition)?
.

On my first week on the Sika many years ago up in Sutherland

I drove 666 miles (I kid you not) door-to-door. I took 100 rounds of ammunition. Well it would be bad form to run out wouldn't it.
I was out - stalking hard - twice a day for five days. Ten stalks in all.

I drove 666 miles back home - with 98 rounds of ammunition...
 
Last edited:
.

On my first week on the Sika many years ago up in Sutherland

I drove 666 miles (I kid you not) door-to-door. I took 100 rounds of ammunition. Well it would be bad form to run out wouldn't it.
I was out - stalking hard - twice a day for five days. Ten stalks in all.

I drove 666 miles back home with 98 rounds of ammunition...
Ha ha! Reminds me of my first attempt at getting a fox when I'd just got my first centrefire rifle, 243. Got into position, fox appeared right on cue, and all my ammo (and I mean ALL of it - I didn't leave any at home!) was still in the cardboard box I had bought it in! So there followed a bit of a silly scene as the fox strolled down one side of the hedge and I crept along the other side while trying to get the box out of my bag, open it, extract a few rounds, close box and return to bag, load rifle etc. Fox was long gone by the time I'd sorted myself out.
Now I just take 6 rounds. 5 to fill the mag and one over for emergencies.
 
.

On my first week on the Sika many years ago up in Sutherland

I drove 666 miles (I kid you not) door-to-door. I took 100 rounds of ammunition. Well it would be bad form to run out wouldn't it.
I was out - stalking hard - twice a day for five days. Ten stalks in all.

I drove 666 miles back home - with 98 rounds of ammunition...
Zeroing went well then ! :)
 
Ok you mention hat, gloves coat.
What about boots, socks, trousers?

Forget the clothing you wear what you wear

Rangefinder - unless you’re new to the ground then you should know where the beast are likely to be, the ranges to certain reference point and best directions to shoot safely at. So they stay at home

S hooks - why?

Paper target and staple gun better left in the car.
I’d rather take a bit of a hike rather than disturb likely cull beast in the middle of the ground.

Saw - why? By the time you’ve cut a branch back the deer will have heard or seen the movement and beat a hasty retreat. Leave gardening for a time when you’re not stalking
 
I've got a couple of small s-hooks that fit in a jacket pocket - ideal for suspended gralloch on roe or munties - straight onto a suitable branch with no faffing. Otherwise, if it doesn't fit in my pockets I don't take it. It'd be different on the hill but I'm not usually far from the pickup anyway (in relative terms).
 
Ok you mention hat, gloves coat.
What about boots, socks, trousers?

Forget the clothing you wear what you wear

Rangefinder - unless you’re new to the ground then you should know where the beast are likely to be, the ranges to certain reference point and best directions to shoot safely at. So they stay at home

S hooks - why?

Paper target and staple gun better left in the car.
I’d rather take a bit of a hike rather than disturb likely cull beast in the middle of the ground.

Saw - why? By the time you’ve cut a branch back the deer will have heard or seen the movement and beat a hasty retreat. Leave gardening for a time when you’re not stalking
Hat/gloves/coat is extra clothing that I might not wear 😂 Rangefinder is for a bit of extra confidence in taking a shot, S hooks is for hanging for a gralloch, and I should've specified that the saw is for sternum/pelvis not for pruning back branches :P
 
Think I could manage alright without the stuff you crossed out, I feel like latex gloves and a first aid kit is prudent though! Especially with that scary post about blood being a method of transmission for some horrible new tick disease that's appeared in Europe (thread called Tick Tock Boom earlier today on it)

This time of year (late nights) I have my dinner before I go, so bog roll is high on the list as I might well need a dump at some point...

British Army NBC Suit Olive Green -CBRN Suit MK4-NATO @10.00 quid
 
Back
Top