Another thought for you is an Inreach and a portable battery bank. Then you'd have GPS, have power for the phone and a back-up way of getting help or just sending a text home so no one worries.
I would like to get one of those, but they're just too darn expensive for me right now.
I just checked my local Walmart, and they actually have the Garmin 78s on sale for only $198. Cabelas has the same one listed at $429. I damn near bought it on the spot, still might get it after work... I'm a sucker for a good deal, and this deal seems very good...
Handheld GPS units are going extinct unless you can text through them by satellite too like a Garnin Inreach (formerly Delorme). Phones are as good of GPS as a GPS is, often better as the map apps are superior to the GPS manufacturers’. So good in fact the app ForeFlight is approved for aviation navigation. Forget AAs, that’s excess weight and inefficient use of it, just get a charging system for your phone- lithium backup batt, folding solar panel too if you wanna fill an itch for gear.
Rangefinder hands down. It’s a critical piece of kit, you already own an excellent GPS.
Thats an interesting take on it. I always thought of my phone as a less-than-ideal GPS, as its not waterproof, it can't take AA batteries, and of the APPs I've tried none of them are terribly good. One of the big things my phone does poorly is compass direction. Last time I got "lost" (I could have just followed the river to where it meets the lake, which the road runs beside, then follow the road back to the truck so I wasn't completely lost or anything) I had to pull out my normal compass to figure out which direction I was headed, so now my hands were full with my phone in one hand and the compass in the other...
However, as you point out, my phone IS a GPS, whereas it is NOT a rangefinder. I was going to buy a cheaper rangefinder (CT has a Wildgames Innovation Halo 750 for $180) but I figured this is a good time to adhere to the buy-once-cry-once mentality, as the Nikon Prostaff 7i should get me plenty of use without feeling like I need to upgrade right away, plus its waterproof, ect. whereas the cheaper one is only water resistant.
A good GPS can save your life in the right circumstances, and will save you time and energy in many circumstances. Rangefinder not so much.
I carry a map and compass, and hunt in areas where landforms create a relatively easy way to find civilization again (Head towards, or away from the lake/river/whatever and you'll cross a FSR)
I rather have a gps if i had to choose. Rather be able to wander around deep off the trail than be able to range but i personally carry both.
I range a tree around 600yds with the 7i few years back, plenty for where i go.
Well thats it, I plan to get both eventually. The question is which to get first....
Oh decisions decisions...