Cootmeurer
Well-Known Member
Haha
But now that you mention it - I’ve only shot reds on the peat moors or in/adjacent to conifer plantings
Haha
Exactly the same - managed 10 years as an infanteer where targets were the same colour as the background if they were doing it right! I find deer against green hard but not undoable, however thermal and higher power binos once I've spotted have been transformational.....funnily enough infantrymen all have personal thermal on their helmets now.I have the same problem,it is difficult to explain to others that you cannot see what they are viewing.Very frustrating.Thermal spotter has been a game changer.
Just as annoying as not being able to see a blood trail is being unable to tell when a thermal battery with red and green indicator lights is fully chargedYes. Red green colour blind. impossible to blood trail, and I strongly suspect that it hinders me spotting live deer, especially summer coat Roe. My wife always sees deer before I do.
Isn't it the other way round? Cones are for light detection, rods are for colourFrom a technical aspect, is colour blindness in humans caused by a lack of cones in the retina, and if so is the balance made up with more rods, which would lend itself to more heightened low light vision?
jezzo this must be a nightmareI've learned to work with it. I'm not completely colour blind but partially. Spotting a deer led on a woodland floor is virtually impossible. When out with mates, 99% of the time they will spot a deer before me.
I still get decent sport out of it. I tend to find an area where deer activity is high and wait for them - movement is dead easy to spot. I use thermal if I really need to get the job done but I prefer not to.
Funnily enough......many years ago when I was young and daft, I went to Biggin Hill for a selection weekend for potential Pilot training. One of the other willing volunteers was a chap who already had a private Pilot's licence and we thought he would be a shoe in for the RAF.My military career was stopped when I was tested,
Yeah, it can be! I think it's why I never made the grade that some of the real pro stalkers can manage. Don't get me wrong I can hold my own for stalk success against most hobbyists, but I'll never be the guy that goes out and gets it done virtually every time. I'm ok with that, I still love my time in the woods and fields. I've shot enough deer to be sick of venison!jezzo this must be a nightmare