jimmer.13
Well-Known Member
Nope never been stalking with the fella. Have you? Interested to know what he consistently does wrong.Have you seen him stalking deer?
And he then has the cheek to tell anyone else on how to go about it.
Nope never been stalking with the fella. Have you? Interested to know what he consistently does wrong.Have you seen him stalking deer?
And he then has the cheek to tell anyone else on how to go about it.
Have a look for yourself.Nope never been stalking with the fella. Have you? Interested to know what he consistently does wrong.
Here's just 1 for you.Nope never been stalking with the fella. Have you? Interested to know what he consistently does wrong.
Here's just 1 for you.
Would you want a guy like that trying to tell you, or even worse folks with far more experience how to go about deer stalking?So he missed one cleanly then snagged his bolt and had a flap then dropped a hind with no issue.
Skipped through to the shooting parts so not really listening to the narrative but all mistakes I’ve seen plenty of times with clients. Yep and I’ve missed had a dead man’s click and lost a beast or two down to poor shot placement. Do it enough ….it happens….. not ideal but it does.
So the bloke films his mistakes and owns up, seen your man Steve Rinnella on meat eater do the same, either lost an Elk or a moose can’t quite remember. Filmed it to explain what can go wrong and show a bit of honesty and integrity. Nothing wrong with that.
I’m dying to meet a stalker who’s never fcuked up a shot. Well one who is honest……
Have you ever missed, fluffed a shot and lost a beast?Would you want a guy like that trying to tell you, or even worse folks with far more experience how to go about deer stalking?
He missed 2 deer. Not 1!
What he should have done is make sure the next deer he tries to shoot is at a far closer range for his skill set, and also at the very least go and check zero on his rifle.
His guide although obviously under a bit of pressure to come up with the goods for the days video should also have suggested both of the above.
Generally true in many aspects of professional lifeIt was only a matter of time someone came up with the idea of higher level of qualification. Too many organisations with too many training staff relying on running courses as their source of income.
Level 4 is on the horizon…
As far as I can see, the level 3 and 4 qualifications are not directly related to LANTRA or the DMC. This is a stand alone qualification which allows you to assess a variety of courses.Correction to my post above. Level 3 assessors are overseen by a level 4 qualified verifier, apparently:
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I got back from Wicklow at the weekend as was out with Irish Safaris on a Sika trip. Now i am no expert and I havent shot thousands of deer but I missed a Sika stag at a reduced range. Learnt from it, moved on and ended up with 8 deer from 6 outings.So he missed one cleanly then snagged his bolt and had a flap then dropped a hind with no issue.
Skipped through to the shooting parts so not really listening to the narrative but all mistakes I’ve seen plenty of times with clients. Yep and I’ve missed had a dead man’s click and lost a beast or two down to poor shot placement. Do it enough ….it happens….. not ideal but it does.
So the bloke films his mistakes and owns up, seen your man Steve Rinnella on meat eater do the same, either lost an Elk or a moose can’t quite remember. Filmed it to explain what can go wrong and show a bit of honesty and integrity. Nothing wrong with that.
I’m dying to meet a stalker who’s never fcuked up a shot. Well one who is honest……
Ahhh the assessor who is being judged by level four assessor, now I bet you several pound notes that if I took one of the assessor assessors deer stalking and rolled over half a dozen red deer and told them there you go me old cocker crack on, they wouldn’t even know one in the red deer from the other to be brutally honest, it’s just icon!Correction to my post above. Level 3 assessors are overseen by a level 4 qualified verifier, apparently:
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Tony, I can’t see this being any competition for the BDS/Lantra Deer Management Course which is actually a learning course, this new thing is different, it is simply a vehicle for consolidating CPD. A cynical person might say that you could achieve the same thing by getting a ring binder from Amazon and saving yourself £748.I have crossed swords with Peter Jones on other products the H&S academy has offered in the past but what I will say most of the things that are on offer are very good.
Take the PDS 1 v DMQ 1 they are not trying to reinvent the wheel, he come's across very well on film its easy to follow, make no mistake they like everybody or organisation is in it to make money, at the end of the day stalkers and hunters vote with there feet and many people I meet have done PDS 1
I would imagine there new deer management DMC3 course is to compete with the BDS deer management course which is a Lantra qualification which I did complete and pass when it was the old five day course,
So is there a market for a higher level of qualification than DMQ 2/PDS 2?
We all know some stalkers who have DMQ 2 and not shot that many deer but on the other hand there are many who cull 100's per year so I guess this DMC3 might will the gap.
again people will vote with there feet.
Exactly that! People spend too much time worrying about paperwork, rather than shooting, It's just putting more barriers in the way, in the meantime the UK deer population is increasing. The best way to get experienced is to go out Shooting them with someone who has done it for years, I done my DSC1 and I didn't learn anything that the guy who I went out with hadn't already taught me.The only way to get practical experience is shoot deer!
No **** pot ****ish course can replace experience.
Well I shot shed loads before my first DSC1 course with it confirming a lot of people should have checked their kit before they went lolWith all these courses .
How many more stalkers would we loose and how many working class folks would be able to afford all the cost.
More deer running wild for the toffs.