Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: Antlershed on April 27, 2019, 09:50:21 PMQuote from: SuperX on April 27, 2019, 09:07:48 PMQuote from: Antlershed on April 27, 2019, 08:18:31 PMQuote from: Bigshooter on April 27, 2019, 07:56:24 PMQuote from: SuperX on April 27, 2019, 04:28:41 PM no cell service functionality is pretty broken when it breaks.Garmin GPS and a chip and you never have to worry about it.Just save the maps before you head over there. I see no reason to carry a handheld GPS anymore. saving the maps is only a part of it, when you're off the grid you don't have a base map, last season I ended up having to drive to signal just to get google maps to load so I could see where I was. Not to mention the super slow acquisition time when you make a waypoint. Not realizing I had to stand still until the signal was accurate enough, I created waypoints I later found were hundreds of yards from where I was when I created it. Don't get me wrong, good product for private/public... just not a GPS replacement. Now I use both.When you save the maps to your phone, you absolutely have a base map. You have to go into your OnX and select “Off Grid”. I used my phone and pre-saved maps in Idaho last year with zero issues, including savings waypoints and making tracks. Tbob- sorry for the slight derailment. I don’t have any advice to offer, as this is my first year headed to MT as well.Sorry, did all that, the base map is your saved map, if you want to see anything outside that when you're off grid, you have no base map.
Quote from: SuperX on April 27, 2019, 09:07:48 PMQuote from: Antlershed on April 27, 2019, 08:18:31 PMQuote from: Bigshooter on April 27, 2019, 07:56:24 PMQuote from: SuperX on April 27, 2019, 04:28:41 PM no cell service functionality is pretty broken when it breaks.Garmin GPS and a chip and you never have to worry about it.Just save the maps before you head over there. I see no reason to carry a handheld GPS anymore. saving the maps is only a part of it, when you're off the grid you don't have a base map, last season I ended up having to drive to signal just to get google maps to load so I could see where I was. Not to mention the super slow acquisition time when you make a waypoint. Not realizing I had to stand still until the signal was accurate enough, I created waypoints I later found were hundreds of yards from where I was when I created it. Don't get me wrong, good product for private/public... just not a GPS replacement. Now I use both.When you save the maps to your phone, you absolutely have a base map. You have to go into your OnX and select “Off Grid”. I used my phone and pre-saved maps in Idaho last year with zero issues, including savings waypoints and making tracks. Tbob- sorry for the slight derailment. I don’t have any advice to offer, as this is my first year headed to MT as well.
Quote from: Antlershed on April 27, 2019, 08:18:31 PMQuote from: Bigshooter on April 27, 2019, 07:56:24 PMQuote from: SuperX on April 27, 2019, 04:28:41 PM no cell service functionality is pretty broken when it breaks.Garmin GPS and a chip and you never have to worry about it.Just save the maps before you head over there. I see no reason to carry a handheld GPS anymore. saving the maps is only a part of it, when you're off the grid you don't have a base map, last season I ended up having to drive to signal just to get google maps to load so I could see where I was. Not to mention the super slow acquisition time when you make a waypoint. Not realizing I had to stand still until the signal was accurate enough, I created waypoints I later found were hundreds of yards from where I was when I created it. Don't get me wrong, good product for private/public... just not a GPS replacement. Now I use both.
Quote from: Bigshooter on April 27, 2019, 07:56:24 PMQuote from: SuperX on April 27, 2019, 04:28:41 PM no cell service functionality is pretty broken when it breaks.Garmin GPS and a chip and you never have to worry about it.Just save the maps before you head over there. I see no reason to carry a handheld GPS anymore.
Quote from: SuperX on April 27, 2019, 04:28:41 PM no cell service functionality is pretty broken when it breaks.Garmin GPS and a chip and you never have to worry about it.
no cell service functionality is pretty broken when it breaks.
Quote from: SuperX on April 27, 2019, 10:41:41 PMQuote from: Antlershed on April 27, 2019, 09:50:21 PMQuote from: SuperX on April 27, 2019, 09:07:48 PMQuote from: Antlershed on April 27, 2019, 08:18:31 PMQuote from: Bigshooter on April 27, 2019, 07:56:24 PMQuote from: SuperX on April 27, 2019, 04:28:41 PM no cell service functionality is pretty broken when it breaks.Garmin GPS and a chip and you never have to worry about it.Just save the maps before you head over there. I see no reason to carry a handheld GPS anymore. saving the maps is only a part of it, when you're off the grid you don't have a base map, last season I ended up having to drive to signal just to get google maps to load so I could see where I was. Not to mention the super slow acquisition time when you make a waypoint. Not realizing I had to stand still until the signal was accurate enough, I created waypoints I later found were hundreds of yards from where I was when I created it. Don't get me wrong, good product for private/public... just not a GPS replacement. Now I use both.When you save the maps to your phone, you absolutely have a base map. You have to go into your OnX and select “Off Grid”. I used my phone and pre-saved maps in Idaho last year with zero issues, including savings waypoints and making tracks. Tbob- sorry for the slight derailment. I don’t have any advice to offer, as this is my first year headed to MT as well.Sorry, did all that, the base map is your saved map, if you want to see anything outside that when you're off grid, you have no base map.But you can save as many maps as you want, so yeah, you do need to plan ahead and save anything where you think you might end up going before having service again.
Sorry I got going and forgot to answer your question. We usually like to go over as late as possible. You do have more of a chance of bad road conditions between Seattle and there. But once you’re there snow is better than the rain they may getting in early October. The mud they have over there is no joke. We have been out a couple days that we have seen no other trucks because we were the only ones dumb enough to be out there. You almost need to have plans on where you want to hunt. Then plans on where you may have to hunt if the roads go to crap. Although I do have friends that go opening week because they think a lot of the deer are going to be shot before mid November and they do get decent bucks. But I can hunt mule deer in Washington in October. Nothing compares the hunting mule deer in the snow when they are in full rut.
We have had service most places with Verizon and T-Mobile, But if you have AT&T you’re out of luck by the time you hit CentralMontana the whole east side is it dead spot. So if you know exactly where you want to go and there’s no chance of changing plans on the fly then the Phone app would work, but once you’re out there and not seeing game you’re stuck with what you’ve downloaded. Just save yourself the headache and get a GPS. We use the Garmin rhino 650. It shows all property boundaries and who owns it. We have the Montana on X chip . you would really be surprised how many areas you can hunt that look 100% private driving by them. Or slivers of land that allow access to large blocks that appear landlocked. You can also download Birdseye views from Google earth at home for the areas you were going to be hunting, although the basic contour maps work pretty well too if you know what you’re looking at. I love this particular model because we are able to send our locations and even text messages back and forth between our party not having to worry about cell service. No more guessing where the heck your buddy has that big buck down, or where you left yours to go get your pack for that matter. If I hadn’t of marked mine in Montana last year there’s no way we would’ve found it or found the only way down the cliff when we got back to it with pack boards in the dark.
Whitetail or mule deer?