I am in the market for a game cart, I just visited a Cabelas in Louisville last weekend and was able to put my hands on their game cart. I also visited the Bass Pro in Clarksville and was able to look at their models, anyone have any experience with the Cabelas game cart, I am leaning that way but just not sure. Any help or advice would be helpful. Thanks in advance. P.S. I have used the "sleds" in the past and would like to go to a "wheeled cart"
I have the Magnum model with the 20" wheels and it does a great job. I use it for hauling gear and game into and out of the woods.
It looks pretty good. I have an aluminum one with solid wheels and it can still be cumbersome at times. I shot a button buck and it worked perfect.
However, I killed a really big buck during shotgun this year. It was actually easier to drag him than use my cart. His butt was so big it was rubbing against the wheels making it hard to roll the cart! I'm not sure what he weighed, but it was well over 200 lbs. Maybe in the 270-290 pound range. He was a 13 point STUD!
Long story short, it made my job easier on smaller deer and didn't work well on a REALLY big buck.
Bought one of the 70.00 deals on ****. Solid wheels so no locust thorn worries. First deer we drug out along a corn field it paid for itself-- we Han a long drag/ pull. Got to the truck and when I went to pick the cart up both wheels fell off. The sticks and weeds had plucked the cheap wire pins out, but easy fix once home was to install cotter pins. Only draw back is the smell of those rubber tires--running them through some dog poop would actually improve the smell-- otherwise best 70.00 I ever spent!
I have one of the mag haulers from Cabela's. I've had it for quite a few years, and can't say enough good things about it.
I ordered it after killing a med sized black bear at camp, and spending most of the next day dragging it out by myself. The next bear I shot went on the hauler, and what a difference.
I've used it to get more than a couple deer out of the woods, hauling firewood, and a bunch of other things too.
The one I have is very well made, and has held up great over the time I've had it.
I've found it to be helpful to tie the legs of whatever critter you're giving a ride, up out of the way, or they always seem to end up in the spokes, and If you balance the weight over the axle, there's no added strain trying to hold the handle up, or pushing it down while you use it.
Mine is the model with the single wheels on each side, by the way. I thought about getting the dual wheeled model, but there hasn't been a time so far, that I wished I had the extra wheels.
Bob
Gee, Doesn't anyone just grab ahold & start dragging anymore...??? :rolleyes:
What about the shield cabelas sells for the spokes? Anyone use those or find it even necessary?
QuoteOriginally posted by woodchucker:
Gee, Doesn't anyone just grab ahold & start dragging anymore...??? :rolleyes:
That's part of the reason my body's in the shape It's in now, lol. I take every advantage I can get these days. ;)
Bob
QuoteOriginally posted by Kenny Henderson:
What about the shield cabelas sells for the spokes? Anyone use those or find it even necessary?
I mentioned legs/feet getting in the spokes at times, and a branch will too, now and then. The shields would probably be a help, but even without them, the cart is a HUGE plus IMO.
Bob
I use the Aluminum Ameristep Non-Typical. Folds up into a backpack- 22" x 22" x 4". < 20#. Canted wheels for stability. Takes up no space. I have hauled out a number of 220# field dressed deer with it. Very impressed for a cart.
On another note- which many whitetail guys just don't seem to consider: I can quarter out a whitetail with a gutless method in 20 minutes. I carry out all the meat lashed to my portable tree stand on my back. Sure makes things easy.
Dan in KS
I have a fold up one cabelas( wife was fearing I would drop dead dragging ta big 1)
Dead sled is better IMO. Uneven ground, logs and mud can make a cart harder than dragging.
Quartering is a good call...
I've had mixed results with mine. The wheels are not slanted, so tipping is a problem. The bed is flat, so it can be difficult to keep the load centered. If I'm using it on a logging road or flat surface, it works great. Over rocks, or uneven terrain, it's a nightmare.
Mine will tip on steep side hills when cutting too much across the slope. Taking any slope at an angle eliminates this and having a piece of parachute cord tied on the top of the strap that goes over the deer with someone adding a little resistance to the up hill side can keep it from tipping most of the time.
The cabelas mag hauler would be my choice. Had one for about ten years. I don't know why you ever want to go without. A friend of mine did an easy cobble job for a hitch behind his atv. They also work great just to lay the deer on to hose them out.