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There are a ton of "What's in your pack" type threads in the backcountry hunting forum board. Lots and lots of invaluable advice and gear suggestions. Best suggestion I have is buy the best gear you can afford. If you're not careful, you'll spend a crap ton of $$ on stuff you don't need or won't use. Even then, you'll end up buying stuff you wont use.
Quote from: jackelope on November 19, 2018, 11:35:29 AMThere are a ton of "What's in your pack" type threads in the backcountry hunting forum board. Lots and lots of invaluable advice and gear suggestions. Best suggestion I have is buy the best gear you can afford. If you're not careful, you'll spend a crap ton of $$ on stuff you don't need or won't use. Even then, you'll end up buying stuff you wont use. Buy once/cry once!I can't tell you how much stuff I've sold on the classifieds because I bought it before really researching to see what I needed.Like KFHunter said.. Start with boots and work your way from there. It's hard to push gear selection without knowing what/where you're hunting, but maybe figure out what your big priorities are and start asking for specifics on that?
I think it’d help to know what season and area you are hunting in to make suggestions. East side, west side, rifle (I think you said that), early, late, out of state?You’ll need different gear for rifle hunting the west side of the olympics for elk where it might rain four inches in a day compared to early archery in the blues, or late rifle in Montana.
Figure out your key items first.Boots, Pack, Sleeping Bag, Sleeping Mat, Tent. From there, it's all accessories that only you can decided what is needed and not needed. Any sleeping bag worth it's money will be EN rated, which provides a much more true and accurate temperature rating. For men this is the "limit" rating on the bag and takes into account that you will be wearing medium weight long underwear, socks, and a warm hat. For your sleeping mat, go somewhere such as REI who has a wide variety of mats and decide what baffle style you like best and pick the packed size/weight/price your comfortable with carrying. Any good sleeping mat will also have an R-Value (just like the insulation in your house).