Free: Contests & Raffles.
Cut its throat to bleed it out
Don’t ever hunt alone.
Never pass on the first day what you are willing to take on the last. Dumbest thing ever.
I’m a hunter education instructor now but when I was a brand new hunter(not required to take hunter Ed because of my age) I was told to always hunt with a full magazine, one in the chamber and the safety off because I was going to have to shoot quick and shoot a lot.I share this story with every class I teach and advise them to have the magazine full, chamber empty and safety on. If there isn’t time to load chamber and flip the safety off it probably isn’t the best shot.
Quote from: Rainier10 on October 18, 2022, 02:18:33 PMI’m a hunter education instructor now but when I was a brand new hunter(not required to take hunter Ed because of my age) I was told to always hunt with a full magazine, one in the chamber and the safety off because I was going to have to shoot quick and shoot a lot.I share this story with every class I teach and advise them to have the magazine full, chamber empty and safety on. If there isn’t time to load chamber and flip the safety off it probably isn’t the best shot.I'll compromise with you - I always, always hunt with the chamber loaded, safety on. Racking a round is relatively loud, and when hunting close quarters in dark timber I want the advantage. I can snap off the safety in the amount of time it takes me to get the gun shouldered if I need to (grouse and waterfowl jump shooting skill there), so that's not an issue. But leaving the chamber empty seems like a mistake.
Quote from: Skillet on October 18, 2022, 03:59:21 PMQuote from: Rainier10 on October 18, 2022, 02:18:33 PMI’m a hunter education instructor now but when I was a brand new hunter(not required to take hunter Ed because of my age) I was told to always hunt with a full magazine, one in the chamber and the safety off because I was going to have to shoot quick and shoot a lot.I share this story with every class I teach and advise them to have the magazine full, chamber empty and safety on. If there isn’t time to load chamber and flip the safety off it probably isn’t the best shot.I'll compromise with you - I always, always hunt with the chamber loaded, safety on. Racking a round is relatively loud, and when hunting close quarters in dark timber I want the advantage. I can snap off the safety in the amount of time it takes me to get the gun shouldered if I need to (grouse and waterfowl jump shooting skill there), so that's not an issue. But leaving the chamber empty seems like a mistake. Empty chamber will bite you in the end.
Quote from: buckfvr on October 18, 2022, 04:10:40 PMQuote from: Skillet on October 18, 2022, 03:59:21 PMQuote from: Rainier10 on October 18, 2022, 02:18:33 PMI’m a hunter education instructor now but when I was a brand new hunter(not required to take hunter Ed because of my age) I was told to always hunt with a full magazine, one in the chamber and the safety off because I was going to have to shoot quick and shoot a lot.I share this story with every class I teach and advise them to have the magazine full, chamber empty and safety on. If there isn’t time to load chamber and flip the safety off it probably isn’t the best shot.I'll compromise with you - I always, always hunt with the chamber loaded, safety on. Racking a round is relatively loud, and when hunting close quarters in dark timber I want the advantage. I can snap off the safety in the amount of time it takes me to get the gun shouldered if I need to (grouse and waterfowl jump shooting skill there), so that's not an issue. But leaving the chamber empty seems like a mistake. Empty chamber will bite you in the end.I guess I am a bird hunter at heart so I have never understood the empty chamber policy. I know more than a couple of people who have lost perfectly good opportunities because of it. Point it in a safe direction, finger off the trigger and safety on.
Hang the deer in your garage for a week to let the meat age.... Might be the thing to do when temps are in the 30s and 40s, but definitely not during most of our seasons here in WA (definitely the #1 way to make your venison taste bad)
Quote from: KP-Skagit on October 18, 2022, 04:24:18 PMQuote from: buckfvr on October 18, 2022, 04:10:40 PMQuote from: Skillet on October 18, 2022, 03:59:21 PMQuote from: Rainier10 on October 18, 2022, 02:18:33 PMI’m a hunter education instructor now but when I was a brand new hunter(not required to take hunter Ed because of my age) I was told to always hunt with a full magazine, one in the chamber and the safety off because I was going to have to shoot quick and shoot a lot.I share this story with every class I teach and advise them to have the magazine full, chamber empty and safety on. If there isn’t time to load chamber and flip the safety off it probably isn’t the best shot.I'll compromise with you - I always, always hunt with the chamber loaded, safety on. Racking a round is relatively loud, and when hunting close quarters in dark timber I want the advantage. I can snap off the safety in the amount of time it takes me to get the gun shouldered if I need to (grouse and waterfowl jump shooting skill there), so that's not an issue. But leaving the chamber empty seems like a mistake. Empty chamber will bite you in the end.I guess I am a bird hunter at heart so I have never understood the empty chamber policy. I know more than a couple of people who have lost perfectly good opportunities because of it. Point it in a safe direction, finger off the trigger and safety on. My personal experience was in Alaskan brush bear hunting with a buddy. We were working our way through thick brush with a chambered round in my rifle, safety on. Somewhere along the way brush clicked safety off and the hit the trigger. At the time I was ducking down and in front so round fired over my head and forward. Had my buddy been leading I hate to imagine how that would have ended.Every hunter can make their own decision on what’s best for them. I doubt any hunter will argue that an empty chamber is safer than a chambered round and at hunter education we are trying to promote safety more than speed of getting a shot off.
My personal experience was in Alaskan brush bear hunting with a buddy. We were working our way through thick brush with a chambered round in my rifle, safety on. Somewhere along the way brush clicked safety off and the hit the trigger. At the time I was ducking down and in front so round fired over my head and forward. Had my buddy been leading I hate to imagine how that would have ended.
Every hunter can make their own decision on what’s best for them. I doubt any hunter will argue that an empty chamber is safer than a chambered round and at hunter education we are trying to promote safety more than speed of getting a shot off.
Quote from: Rainier10 on October 18, 2022, 04:53:33 PMMy personal experience was in Alaskan brush bear hunting with a buddy. We were working our way through thick brush with a chambered round in my rifle, safety on. Somewhere along the way brush clicked safety off and the hit the trigger. At the time I was ducking down and in front so round fired over my head and forward. Had my buddy been leading I hate to imagine how that would have ended.Fair enough. Experiences like that definitely fire-form a guy's perspective, and no judgement here for err'ing on the safe side.Quote from: Rainier10 on October 18, 2022, 04:53:33 PMEvery hunter can make their own decision on what’s best for them. I doubt any hunter will argue that an empty chamber is safer than a chambered round and at hunter education we are trying to promote safety more than speed of getting a shot off.I believe you meant that you doubt any hunter will argue that a loaded chamber is safer than an empty chamber, correct?If so - this is true, I will agree. In the context of teaching a group of newbies with wildly different backgrounds, I see why you'd say that. For perspective, I would also offer that not hunting at all is much safer than hunting with an empty chamber. Getting out of bed in the morning is rife with peril as well. One just has to make the decision to take some risk in life - the question is, just how much risk are we willing to take to achieve an end? If you were sitting with a group of seasoned hunters around a campfire up on the mountain, however, would you offer the same advice re: hunting with an empty chamber?
Quote from: Rainier10 on October 18, 2022, 04:53:33 PMQuote from: KP-Skagit on October 18, 2022, 04:24:18 PMQuote from: buckfvr on October 18, 2022, 04:10:40 PMQuote from: Skillet on October 18, 2022, 03:59:21 PMQuote from: Rainier10 on October 18, 2022, 02:18:33 PMI’m a hunter education instructor now but when I was a brand new hunter(not required to take hunter Ed because of my age) I was told to always hunt with a full magazine, one in the chamber and the safety off because I was going to have to shoot quick and shoot a lot.I share this story with every class I teach and advise them to have the magazine full, chamber empty and safety on. If there isn’t time to load chamber and flip the safety off it probably isn’t the best shot.I'll compromise with you - I always, always hunt with the chamber loaded, safety on. Racking a round is relatively loud, and when hunting close quarters in dark timber I want the advantage. I can snap off the safety in the amount of time it takes me to get the gun shouldered if I need to (grouse and waterfowl jump shooting skill there), so that's not an issue. But leaving the chamber empty seems like a mistake. Empty chamber will bite you in the end.I guess I am a bird hunter at heart so I have never understood the empty chamber policy. I know more than a couple of people who have lost perfectly good opportunities because of it. Point it in a safe direction, finger off the trigger and safety on. My personal experience was in Alaskan brush bear hunting with a buddy. We were working our way through thick brush with a chambered round in my rifle, safety on. Somewhere along the way brush clicked safety off and the hit the trigger. At the time I was ducking down and in front so round fired over my head and forward. Had my buddy been leading I hate to imagine how that would have ended.Every hunter can make their own decision on what’s best for them. I doubt any hunter will argue that an empty chamber is safer than a chambered round and at hunter education we are trying to promote safety more than speed of getting a shot off.I do it both ways, depending on the situation. Most of the time, my chamber (and everyone I hunt with) is kept empty. The only time I load my rifle is on the final stalk when I know I'll be in front of anyone hunting with me. I'll also load the chamber if I'm hunting timber or walking through brush ALONE, and I may jump a deer or elk. That is with the rifle in my hand, just like if I was bird hunting with my shotgun.I used to always carry with a loaded chamber, and thankfully I've always kept my rifle pointed safely. A few years back, I had an accidental discharge while the rifle was laying between my son and me while we were sitting and glassing. It was laying on my backpack and I reached over to grab something without looking and accidentally hit the trigger. The rifle fired and I was sick to my stomach most of the day. Thank God I had that rifle pointed in a safe direction. After that, I made it a rule that everyone I hunt with carries an empty chamber unless they are getting ready to take a shot.
Soapbox...Get a doe tag.... dont take away opportunity, let the youth shoot a doe...its for the children . DUMB DUMB and more DUMB. Then come on Huntwa and complain (I can't see a deer, there are no bucks). Same with Ewe tags. How F'in dumb. You want numbers, stop shooting the baby makers. Either sex hunts are only needed when there is a surplus of animals. I would love to find a place in the West that has too many animals. And Oh, the kid needs to kill a doe to be interested in hunting.....I think I proved that wrong some 50 deer ago.
I get that those of you that have been on Huntwa for 10 plus years and have hunted for 30 plus years hunt with a round in the chamber all the time or when in thick woods or when approaching an animal. My comment was for a brand new hunter on day in the woods with a fire arm hunting with a round in the chamber safety off is not the best advice in my opinion.I doubt any of you 30 plus year veterans would feel comfortable with a bunch of first time hunters in your area walking around trying to find their first deer with a round in the chamber, itchy trigger finger wanting to succeed with safety off. I sure wouldn't. I think it is terrible advice for a newbie hunter.
Quote from: Rainier10 on October 19, 2022, 08:55:24 AMI get that those of you that have been on Huntwa for 10 plus years and have hunted for 30 plus years hunt with a round in the chamber all the time or when in thick woods or when approaching an animal. My comment was for a brand new hunter on day in the woods with a fire arm hunting with a round in the chamber safety off is not the best advice in my opinion.I doubt any of you 30 plus year veterans would feel comfortable with a bunch of first time hunters in your area walking around trying to find their first deer with a round in the chamber, itchy trigger finger wanting to succeed with safety off. I sure wouldn't. I think it is terrible advice for a newbie hunter.Do you advise not having a round in the chamber hunting ducks, grouse, pheasants?
Safety should always be on until just before you pull the trigger. I don't think anyone has ever said to hunt with the safety off.