As a retired ornithologist, avid birder, and long time hunter, I cannot stress enough how important quality glass is.
If you are hunting out west, as I do, you are often hunting in poor weather and low light conditions and cheaper binos simply will not resolve game well enough. Hardly better than the naked eye.
I see a LOT of hunters that dont even use binos and I cant understand how they could be successful. I suppose if you cover enough miles you will eventually stumble across a deer in the open under 50 yards.
Virtually all of my deer are found at extended ranges and then the game of closing distance begins and although I hunted with what I would now consider mediocre binos of german manufacture for quite a number of years (still better than most on offer these days), I have settled on high quality ones now and I will never look back.
I can comfortably spend many times more time behind my glass than folks I hunt alongside simply because my binos have among the best image quality and resolution of any I have used and I have used literally dozens of styles and brands over the years both professionally and otherwise.
If you hunt in broad daylight in fair weather for large game that stand out against a backdrop then any old pair of magnifying lenses will do.
But if you hunt black tail deer in wet, coastal climates with rain, fog, and extended twilight hours then my advice would be to get the best glass you can afford. Just like you would with a rifle optic.
In the last 5 years I know for certain that I have taken more and better deer than I would have otherwise were it not for quality Austrian glass.
If you are hunting out west, as I do, you are often hunting in poor weather and low light conditions and cheaper binos simply will not resolve game well enough. Hardly better than the naked eye.
I see a LOT of hunters that dont even use binos and I cant understand how they could be successful. I suppose if you cover enough miles you will eventually stumble across a deer in the open under 50 yards.
Virtually all of my deer are found at extended ranges and then the game of closing distance begins and although I hunted with what I would now consider mediocre binos of german manufacture for quite a number of years (still better than most on offer these days), I have settled on high quality ones now and I will never look back.
I can comfortably spend many times more time behind my glass than folks I hunt alongside simply because my binos have among the best image quality and resolution of any I have used and I have used literally dozens of styles and brands over the years both professionally and otherwise.
If you hunt in broad daylight in fair weather for large game that stand out against a backdrop then any old pair of magnifying lenses will do.
But if you hunt black tail deer in wet, coastal climates with rain, fog, and extended twilight hours then my advice would be to get the best glass you can afford. Just like you would with a rifle optic.
In the last 5 years I know for certain that I have taken more and better deer than I would have otherwise were it not for quality Austrian glass.