Free: Contests & Raffles.
Those equating trailcams to litter. stick a beer bottle on a branch....afterall it must have had a use and it isnt your property. A wilderness area isnt supposed to be cluttered with marking tape. Has anyone heard of no trace. Yowzhers. Ill stop before .........If you are uncomfortable about where you are going, Id suggest GPS, but for the life of me I wouldnt depend on it. Basic woodsman skills need to be learned before adventuring beyond ones skill level. Its smart to know your limitations. Mother nature is not forgiving.
Quote from: boneaddict on May 23, 2019, 08:44:27 AMThose equating trailcams to litter. stick a beer bottle on a branch....afterall it must have had a use and it isnt your property. A wilderness area isnt supposed to be cluttered with marking tape. Has anyone heard of no trace. Yowzhers. Ill stop before .........If you are uncomfortable about where you are going, Id suggest GPS, but for the life of me I wouldnt depend on it. Basic woodsman skills need to be learned before adventuring beyond ones skill level. Its smart to know your limitations. Mother nature is not forgiving. beat me to it Doug
I think you should start with smaller ventures. If you know how to use a map & compass, there's no need to be leaving tape all over the woods. Orienteering with a map & compass is pretty easy & enjoyable once you learn how, and REI offers free or low cost classes on it. If I cant see landmarks, I use a gps to show where I am & a bearing to where I want to be, then I plot it on the compass & start trekking.
Fishing reel with as much line it can hold. Tie one pice to a tree by the truck and open the bail. Walk until you are out. Reel yourself back to the truck. I am joking but I bet it has been done My suggestion is to pick a route you want to take, a hunting loop, and walk it a few times with tape before season starts, make some blazes on trees, kick some dirt, top some small undergrowth and it gives you some reference points. Kicking through rotten logs is a good marker. Remove tape.
Quote from: haugenna on May 23, 2019, 12:42:06 PMFishing reel with as much line it can hold. Tie one pice to a tree by the truck and open the bail. Walk until you are out. Reel yourself back to the truck. I am joking but I bet it has been done My suggestion is to pick a route you want to take, a hunting loop, and walk it a few times with tape before season starts, make some blazes on trees, kick some dirt, top some small undergrowth and it gives you some reference points. Kicking through rotten logs is a good marker. Remove tape.Hey that's something, kicking a hole in a rotten log. How about that.
Quote from: follow maggie on May 23, 2019, 12:15:40 PMI think you should start with smaller ventures. If you know how to use a map & compass, there's no need to be leaving tape all over the woods. Orienteering with a map & compass is pretty easy & enjoyable once you learn how, and REI offers free or low cost classes on it. If I cant see landmarks, I use a gps to show where I am & a bearing to where I want to be, then I plot it on the compass & start trekking. I've found that a compass does not help me find the exact beginning and turns to the passable route that allowed me to find my way over a dangerous and wooded rocky pass. For me, setting a small cairn at the end of the safe route that got me into a basin helps me find the safe way back out of it. Knowing that the safe pass that doesn't lead to a steep scree or a cliff is to the east doesn't help me. How do you use the compass to solve these kinds of problems?