Free: Contests & Raffles.
Check you compass early and often.Last year, I shot an antelope about 10 minutes before legal close of the day. Got it dressed, quartered and loaded on the game cart and took off in the direction I knew the truck to be. Every few minutes hit the horizon with my flashlight expecting to see the truck reflectors.Then, I pulled my compass out of my pocket and was headed 180 degrees from the truck. I stood there trying to make the needle go the right direction before I remembered the "trust your compass" rule. Yep, 180 in the wrong direction and I was convinced the compass was wrong until I saw the truck.
Wow thanks for all the stories guys, guess just pack a headlamp and flashlight and man up! Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
The mantra “it’s electronic – it can fail” gets a little overdone. I have friends who won’t use a GPS because “they’re electronic and can fail”. So…do you use a sundial rather than a watch? Do you tow an extra vehicle in case your truck dies 10 miles from the highway? Do you not take a flashlight?Can batteries die? Solution: carry an extra set. Can a GPS break? Yes. I’ve never had it happen, but it can. If I’m going into a life and death situation, I’ll probably take two. They weigh 7 ounces each.I take a compass, and know how to use it. But compasses can fail, break, and get lost also.I think most people don’t like GPS units because they don’t know how to use them.
So if you are being trailed/flanked by wolves, what is the play? Stand and resist the prey test?
I like the Lady Gaga idea, everything within ear shot would head for the next canyon over.
I've never tried it, but I've heard that if you wear a WDFW badge and tell the wolves you're there to count them, they will silently disappear.
I think knowing the ground is paramount. I don't have a gps, map and compass though.So if you are being trailed/flanked by wolves, what is the play? Stand and resist the prey test?I like the Lady Gaga idea, everything within ear shot would head for the next canyon over.Al