I realize that I don't take long term wilderness hunts under severe conditions, so that may affect my thinking. However, I see the costs of much of the gear and clothing and think there is a lot more marketing hype than added benefit in much of it. For example, I find surplus military camo to be inexpensive and just as effective (possibly more so) as the latest catalog offerings. A lot of good wool can be bought at next to nothing at thrift stores. That said, my wool from Asbell and La Clair are worth every cent. Good work boots are sufficient for most hunting situations, at least in our generally mild Georgia weather. My ghillie is home made, and it works. Carhartt work pants in green or khaki work well in mild weather, non camo situations. My rain suit is from Cabela's and was not overly costly, but it works well.
I'm not being critical of those guys who feel the need for the top of the line goods, but just coming off an expensive European trip, I realize I don't have funds for a lot of extra stuff. This got me to thinking that it is not necessarily useful to always grab a leading catalog and order things that can be bought more cheaply just up the road from home.
What to you other guys do? So, am I becoming merely thrifty or just chincy? I am not knocking those who do want the best and are willing to pay what it costs, just wondering about the increasing costs of hunting.
Hunting around the house, it really doesn't matter. If your 8 miles back in with the threat of weather, then it choose my gear wisely.
There are a few things I will spend money on such as boots and rain gear. But I agree with the rest of your post.
My clothes are not gear, they are just clothes. :biglaugh:
I never spend any effort on worrying about what others are doing...I find if I focus on what I am doing my energies are far better spent
DDave
Sam,
For some I think it simply adds to their overall hunting pleasure to know their gear is the latest and greatest. Some guys are content with a 1970s bow which will do the job just fine, while others like a new bow every year or two. Same with clothing and other gear. I own Zeiss binocs, but don't think they are actually 5 times better than a pair of $300 ones. Clothing is so personal because it literally reflects personal styles, attitudes and taste. In my case, a far-flung wilderness hunt using ultralight gear doesn't lend itself very well to weighty wools and bulky goods. I look for modern solutions to the problem, as there is little choice when a pilot tells you "this many pounds" and that's it.
There certainly IS market hype, but there is also real benefit in some of today's advanced gear and clothing. The issue is definitely cost, as rain gear (example) can run $600-$800 for a set. Just recently I thought about my $800 down bag, $200 cot and $200 mattress. $1200 for a bed, but I spend fully 1/3 of a wilderness hunt in it and consider it as important as any gear I own. That said, I have a friend who values using surplus gear and saving money every way possible. He will tolerate more in order to spend less, and that's perfectly fine with me too. There really isn't any right or wrong...just right for you and me.
Granted deer are smarter than the majority of the crossbow hunting folks around here, but i just had a guy walk directly at me, to within 10 yards and I was in my costco brown plaid flannel and thrift store green khakis.
Really upped my faith in plaid. I whistled, whistled again, took my hat off and waived to him. (Which was kinda scary, never know what someone will judge movement as)
Think I am going to walmart for some Flo Orange
I am with stickbow, I will always pay for good boots.
I don't think you're cheap. I think you're realistic. Marketing hype is what sells most specialty gear, not it's actual usefulness. Bowhunting, like any other niche market, adds 10-30% to the cost of an item. So do "brand" names. As you say, surplus camo gear is a lot cheaper, and just as good; if you even feel the need for camo (I haven't since Viet Nam).
Ghillie suits, IMHO again, as simply ostentation, unless you're a military scout-sniper intent on assassinating enemy officers and getting away with it. A completely different task than whacking a deer or elk. People have been killing big game, up close and personal, with bows and spears, for 10,000 years or more wearing just the clothes they were walking around in.
Boots are boots are boots, with maybe the exception of LL Bean Pacboots. But even then, you can get a cheap pair of Wellington rubber boots that will do the same thing for a lot less. Wool, is wool is wool, and names like Pendelton or Ashbell don't mean squat if you pick your non-brand-name products carefully (long fibers not short).
Same with raingear. I prefer Frogg Toggs (tm) as they actually breathe and you stay dry inside, not wet from sweat. And they're not as spendy as Big Box names like Cabelas or Bass Pro.
If not in extreme conditions the stuff you mention sounds like my hunting gear. I do have a lot of wool, due to the weather up here. Hey if it works for you that's really all that matters.
Great question and topic. I think Kevin hit the nail right on the head with his response.
I do a mixed bag on expensive and not. Something's are important and others not so much. I quite often refuse to buy stuff simply because of the bs hype associated with it (like under armor).
It does crack me up a bit when you watch hunting vids and shows about hunting for moose, sheep, caribou, griz, etc. The hunter (there for a week) is in 1500 dollar outfit and the guide (out there for a month straight) is in jeans and cotton shirts.
The key is to know your equipment. Its strengths and weaknesses. Then you can use it the way you want.
I would agree with you Kevin. The one thing that gets me is I hate to be wet and/or sweaty. Also, I am VERY hard on gear in general as I'm a bit reckless at times.
I try to buy stuff that will dry quickly and wear for a long time. I have also found that military surplus stuff does just that!
I also love to backpack. In those situations, staying dry is essential, but... military surplus works.
I'm not opposed to expensive gear though. My Badlands pack comes with a lifetime guarantee, and I will expect it to last the rest of my life.
UnderArmor is definitely expensive and over-hyped. That said, their hooded sweatshirt and their hooded jacket that they originally produced have lasted me FOREVER (especially considering the miles they have covered with me)!
I tend to spend the most on the most critical piece of gear. Boots is a big one for me, cold feet have probably brought me back to the house more than anything, I'll spend a little more if it'll keep me in the woods longer. Otherwise I try to buy stuff off-season on sale or thrift shops as mentioned before. I also replace something only when it wears out. Which is usually after the season is over and things are on sale.
Many years ago before " Trad" I used to get Bowhunter Magazine. There was always a cartoon or two about Bowhunters or bow hunting. My favorite was a cartoon showing this some what disheveled guy with a scruff beard and old clothes. But he had the latest and greatest bow all tricked out and the super duper arrows. I looked at it and realized it was me!! Ah, not really, but the way I dressed, whatever is in the closet.
One has to ask themselves if one expensive name brand piece will outlast 3 good no name pieces. they are all pinholed by fires and ripped by barbwire, etc. the same. A friend recently had a Yeti cooler stolen out of his pickup...the parasites are on the rise. We never used to worry about getting ripped off at trailheads. Some high dollar gear dries faster, is lighter, and packs smaller that might matter on some trips. Some of the high dollar goretex stuff is really noisy when cold and some high dollar wool really needs a wind layer...everything is a trade off.
Increased cost of gear is the least of my worries. Where I live, you either need relatives with land or you need to be on a lease in order to have a place to hunt within a reasonable distance. Those costs are high; also, you pretty much need a four-wheeler or beater Jeep of some kind if you are on a lease, or even if you go to the public hunting areas that are still available. Clothes and such seem pretty cheap after you look at those costs.
I will spend my money on good boots for sure. I find Asbell Wool to be well made and very fairly priced. Second hand has never bothered me. Because of my body type, the latest and greatest in clothing seldom works for me, so I don't go there. With that said, to each his own. Do what you want and can afford, and feel good about what you do. Have fun and enjoy yourself and the friends you make along the way. After all, isn't that what traditional archery is all about? :campfire:
I might add that if a person gets one item at reasonable cost then you may have enough left for a second item for another purpose. I can afford some gear but refused to pay the price. Never questioned the price for other gear though. New truck prices make me sick but a custom bow reflects a mastercraftmans talents and makes it easy for me. Emotional decisions I know.
There is a lot of marketing hype in hunting clothing - systems, etc. but there are new clothing lines that do meet a need for me, especially when hunting in mountains.
As I age, staying comfortable, dry and warm or (cool as the case may be) is much more important to me than it was thirty years ago. And granted, I would have never spent the money back then as there were other more pressing needs.
Are they worth the cost ? To me what I bought for a week in the Mtns was worth it, to me. And I will get good use out of them as I hunt locally for deer. Only you can decide if they are worth it to you.
Totally agree I posted about this many moons ago each to his or her own but if I'm dropping 350 for a jacket and 280 for pants I'm crazy for not buying tires for the truck turning clothing into gear yea right
I always used military surplus and good will finds. Mist times that's fine but I have been slowly buying better gear and am very happy with it.
I want to stay warm and dry. I bought merino wool long johns top and bottom. Not cheap but the best I've found as far as warmth. I also picked up some cabelas wooltimate gear with wind shear. Not real cheap but incredibly warm.
For rain gear I use rivers west. Amazing stuff.
I was never as comfortable on stand in cold or rainy weather as I am now and I have half the bulk of all those layers I wore. Most years I hunt every week day morning, all day Saturdays and Sunday mornings for 3 months. To me it was some of the best money I ever spent. I'd rather buy an old Bear for less than $200 if I want to save money somewhere.
This came up before a bit about wool clothing on a previous thread. I was not a hi-tech thinking guy (did not have the $$ either!) However- after planning and doing an AK trip last year I was sold. When you have ONE pair of pants for 10-15 days in the bush and they MUST work, your life depends on them, they must be able to dry without a fire, they must be lightwt. . . Clothing choices become serious.
This new stuff seems high $$, but I see guys driving a $30K truck while unwilling to spend $500 on hunting clothes where your comfort and life depend on it.
For typical local hunting as most of us do, I do not see the need for hi-tech expensive gear. Honestly- I sort of cringe/frustrated when I see these young guys thinking they need a $1500 bow, tractors-foodplots-cameras, ozonics, and $500 hunting clothes all to harvest a whitetail. The shows and media that promote all of this then close with "take a kid hunting." What kid can afford all of that? Wish we could help/educate them a little.
For you local hunting, your cheaper, surplus, etc clothes are just find.
My 2C
Dan in KS
Different hunts demand different gear. If I am still hunting through a stand of pine close to home then I agree with the poster who claimed "boots are boots are boots". However when gearing up to chase goats for a day (mountain, not prairie) or a week long pursuit of sheep, or a all day hike into caribou country before even thinking about actually hunting the animal, than boots are not boots are not boots! A 40 dollar pair of department store trail hikers or your favourite pair of wellingtons ain't gonna cut it.
I am super happy in pendeltons or wool rich plaid shirts, in fact I prefer them to any new fangled camo pattern. That said I will spend all I can afford on boots, optics, a quality pack and a good sleep system. I have been through the pain of the 100 dollar internal frame pack. The first time I set foot up the sheep mountain with my mysery ranch erased any trace of buyers remorse. I don't trade up in gear every year to stay current, I buy what is comfortable and what works. If I am relatively pain free and have a sound sleep each night back at camp, I am happy, happy!
White cotton long underwear used to be the traditional and cheap underwear of choice. I recall seeing tons of it on sale every October. Times do change for the better.
:thumbsup:
The OP did say he was not talking about long wilderness hunts and he has a good point. If that was what I was doing 100% of the time, expensive clothing may not be worth it- as long as you can stay comfortable in it.
I should add that I do shop good will stores as well. When my granddaughter asked to go bow hunting with me last fall, we made a trip to the Salvation Army and found a nice brown tone plaid shirt for her to wear over her jacket.
One day in the hills with my cheap stuff on (well except for my Winona vest that is about 25 years old:
(http://i222.photobucket.com/albums/dd43/MnFn/09misc040.jpg) (http://s222.photobucket.com/user/MnFn/media/09misc040.jpg.html)
I think the actual camo patterns are the hype, plaid and solid colors work just as well.
A pair of sitka 90 perecnt pants and a pair of good will khakis will work, but one is like a Cadillac and the other a pinto.
It all depends on your needs and desire.
I own and wear both, just depends on what I am doing, a day hunt close to home, or a 2 week rut hunt out of state where a washer is not available.
But I am a fan of cheap and old.
I've tried to justify the cost of a Sitka or Kuiu outfit.
Just couldn't do it...not even if I won the lottery.
I've been giving a lot of my old camo to kids and relatives who are just starting, and going back to wool plaids.
Kevin said it right...if the high tech, high dollar stuff makes you feel good, do it.
For most local hunts, it isn't necessary, but if you were in the wilds for a long time, and limited to what you could carry, maybe there is a reason.
Even for hunts around home it simply makes a difference where you live and what type of hunting you do. In my normal life I wear a lot of good will wool stuff I find. The same when I'm still hunting or the weather isn't really cold. I just never found clothes that worked well for sitting in a stand for hours when the temps are single digits or even mid teens without having so many layers I looked like the stay puffed marshmallow man..... Until I bought some higher end gear.
If I always still hunted, never hunted in real cold or only hunted a day or 2 a week, I would probably have a hard time laying out the $$
Buying gear comes down to your personal hunting. A lot of gear is over hyped, but some gear is worth every penny to the people using it in its intended capacity.
My philosophy is to buy (or make) what I need for my personal hunting, and to be a good steward of the resources God has given me. Sometimes big ticket items fit into the equation, other times they don't.
I can tell you one purchase that was the best I ever made for hunting whitetails.
I get cold easy, and have had the wind run me out of the tree.
Sitka stratus with wind stopper solved that problem, I can wear half the clothes I use to and stay in the tree or ground longer.
Is was not cheap, but worth it.
you know the old saying if it works why not. i am cheap i trade for stuff i make stuff buy cheap stuff but hey it works. :thumbsup:
I buy leather purses at yard sales to make finger tabs. my "side" quiver is a thrift store bow quiver with a 72" leather boot lace tied to both ends. I do own a custom recurve, but most of my gear comes from yard sales, thrift stores or my own limited craft skills.
QuoteOriginally posted by damascusdave:
I never spend any effort on worrying about what others are doing...I find if I focus on what I am doing my energies are far better spent
DDave
THIS^^^
Like many other posters said here, I have a hodge=podge of gear. A lot of my clothing has come from the Goodwill, but I do try to but the best boots that I can afford ($150 is a lot for me to spend, so I save up). My camo I've bought a piece at a time, usually when I find it on sale.