Good on you for passing up that doe at 400 yards. Off hand at that distance would be incredibly challenging even for a great marksman.
The rangefinder is nice, but probably not necessary for most of your hunting with a gun. Bow maybe. Its a good skill to have to be able to judge distances off hand and using a rangefinder for a bit might help you with that.
You can never bring enough guns. I forget his name but one of the fellows on here brought up enough guns for every day in the week. But they each have their slight advantages and a rifle vs. shotgun would cover two huge gaps.
I've found that over the years, nothing has ruined more hunts for me than being uncomfortable. If its cold or rainy or both and I'm freezing my butt off, or my hands have seized up, I'm going in. If my tree stand is uncomfortable and I'm fidgeting or my back starts to hurt, I'm going in. I've had many hunts tossed away to those basic problems, and its started to really add up.
Years ago when I tried hunting out of a tree stand for the first time it was one of those cheaper ones with just the butt pad and you had to use the tree trunk as a back support. I couldn't handle that for more than a couple hours otherwise my lower back would start to hurt. Did that for a couple of seasons until last year when I got a tree stand with a nice seat with a back and can now put some serious hours in during good weather.
Same thing used to happen when it rained, hunting jacket would get damp and then it would slowly seep through and chill you to the bone. A "cheap" pair of goretex gloves and paclite jacket and bottoms and problem is solved for good.
For some reason this year my legs are getting cold faster and my current lightly insulated bibs weren't up to the task for even a 0C day as the wind blew through them like a screen door. Mind you I usually don't hunt many days at that temperature in a stand but will be this year. I've upgraded my bibs and have a new set I got on a killer sale on the way with 180g thinsulate that should be up to the task (knock on wood). My hunting jacket at the moment should be OK too because I can layer up fairly well underneath it.
So hopefully after a while of doing this I can just keep taking out the kinks, but it takes a lot of time and money. Something most new hunters don't have the luxury of. You'll definitely make some changes for next year, and the next, and the next. You'll just keep adjusting your equipment to the way you hunt the most and eventually get the right stuff.
Best of luck next year.
The rangefinder is nice, but probably not necessary for most of your hunting with a gun. Bow maybe. Its a good skill to have to be able to judge distances off hand and using a rangefinder for a bit might help you with that.
You can never bring enough guns. I forget his name but one of the fellows on here brought up enough guns for every day in the week. But they each have their slight advantages and a rifle vs. shotgun would cover two huge gaps.
I've found that over the years, nothing has ruined more hunts for me than being uncomfortable. If its cold or rainy or both and I'm freezing my butt off, or my hands have seized up, I'm going in. If my tree stand is uncomfortable and I'm fidgeting or my back starts to hurt, I'm going in. I've had many hunts tossed away to those basic problems, and its started to really add up.
Years ago when I tried hunting out of a tree stand for the first time it was one of those cheaper ones with just the butt pad and you had to use the tree trunk as a back support. I couldn't handle that for more than a couple hours otherwise my lower back would start to hurt. Did that for a couple of seasons until last year when I got a tree stand with a nice seat with a back and can now put some serious hours in during good weather.
Same thing used to happen when it rained, hunting jacket would get damp and then it would slowly seep through and chill you to the bone. A "cheap" pair of goretex gloves and paclite jacket and bottoms and problem is solved for good.
For some reason this year my legs are getting cold faster and my current lightly insulated bibs weren't up to the task for even a 0C day as the wind blew through them like a screen door. Mind you I usually don't hunt many days at that temperature in a stand but will be this year. I've upgraded my bibs and have a new set I got on a killer sale on the way with 180g thinsulate that should be up to the task (knock on wood). My hunting jacket at the moment should be OK too because I can layer up fairly well underneath it.
So hopefully after a while of doing this I can just keep taking out the kinks, but it takes a lot of time and money. Something most new hunters don't have the luxury of. You'll definitely make some changes for next year, and the next, and the next. You'll just keep adjusting your equipment to the way you hunt the most and eventually get the right stuff.
Best of luck next year.


















































