Free: Contests & Raffles.
with a lot of pre scouting I find spots that I can glass into or onto a old decommissioned rds or alder groves from a distance and when I get close and into the area I go slug slow so slow and quiet that your legs actually get sore . I look for ears tines backlines a lot of the time if you play the wind and with rain you can get so close on them that if they do stand they still don't know exactly where you are . Areas like this I prefer the open sight 30x30 for quick shots .
Quote from: JakeLand on November 13, 2017, 05:45:50 PMwith a lot of pre scouting I find spots that I can glass into or onto a old decommissioned rds or alder groves from a distance and when I get close and into the area I go slug slow so slow and quiet that your legs actually get sore . I look for ears tines backlines a lot of the time if you play the wind and with rain you can get so close on them that if they do stand they still don't know exactly where you are . Areas like this I prefer the open sight 30x30 for quick shots .Hmmmm! I'm gonna try that tactic. LolSent from my SM-G892A using Tapatalk
Nice shot Sky - I'm very familiar with that "gotcha" look on her face. Cool pic - it has a whole story going on in there.Thanks Jakeland. Even when going slow, slug slow, sooner or later one of those alder branches lying on the forest floor, invisible to the eye and hidden under last years grass growth fools my foot and I alert the entire forest of my presence. With too little cover to hide my human form, I'm surely busted next time I move. Done it a thousand times it seems. I'll keep working on my technique. BTW - That's one hell of an enormous rub on that big alder. (and one long barrel on that rifle).