Scipio
Well-Known Member
I do agree with a lot of this gear down, skill up approach, however there are certain limitations to it, for example with regards to night hunting, which i might venture into soon, as boar are hunted frequently at night in some areas.I am with @Norfolk Deer Search. If you can’t find shootable deer with the naked eye, or a decent pair of binoculars you are either
1) blind
2) lacking the skills and knowledge to find deer
3) too impatient to find deer
If its too dark to see a deer with good glass its too dark to take a safe shot.
It takes time to learn how to spot wildlife. It’s a skill that you need to learn. With a digital optic you will never learn this essential skill.
It takes time a practice. Best is just to be patient and from one spot pick apart the landscape in front of you. Don’t look for deer, look for the flick of an ear or a tail. If you can’t see anything wait a five minutes and then scan again. Chances are deer will have moved.
And then move and repeat.
Always be on the lookout for sign of deer - hoof prints, trails, lying up spots,rubbings etc. Put these in the memory bank. They tell you where deer like to be. Next time look in these spots before you blunder into them.
If you don’t have your own ground, there are plenty of publicly accessible nature reserves etc etc. just take a pair of binoculars and go catch and release stalking.
Digital Optics Manufacturers are spending a huge amount of money on promoting their products. You can easily send £2 or £3,000 on digital kit that will be out of date and obsolete with a few weeks.
£3,000 at £100 an outing buys an awful lot of guided stalking where you will learn far more than any digital optic will teach you.
But a good principle, i think, before buying to much of one thing or the other, (especially if one is inclined to often buy mainly based on theory and the internet), is to talk to sensible hunters that seems to know what they're doing and have good mind sets and listen to them about what gear might be good to have. Then, if possible, lend some at first and find out about your own preferences when in the field. After a bit you quite quickly pick up an idea of what might be necessary to have, what might be nice and what might be smart to avoid.
But yes, in general i am for the notion of being pretty conservative about getting more gear than truly necessary, and instead skill up in terms of the hunting craft, like knowing your beasts, knowing terrain and manouvering, being able to spot and approach, knowing your rifle and what you need for ethical kills, knowing how to treat the dead beast with respect and skill and preserve its value as food.
