Originally posted by Eric Krewson:
I tent to agree with Rob with out the punching out someone.
Bottom line everyones hunting terrain varies. People up north don't understand how someone could get lost in fairly level open public land.
Where I live we have seas of privet, most thickets impossible to walk through, immature Pine plantations with with hundreds of acres of head high black berry bushes that are impenetrable, deep hollows dropping off from the pine planted ridge tops with 50ft rock cliffs and few places to transverse from top to bottom.
A GPS or topo would be useless in this type of terrain. You have to find or blaze a tail and stick with it exactly, no room for error.
Thank you Eric. There is such a vast difference in the terrain & fauna between North & South. We don't have mountains or high points to use as navigation or triangulation points. When you're in a thicket that's so closed in you can barely see the sky & you can't see much more than 5yds in any direction with a flashlight (often much, much less than that) reflective tape or cat's eyes are invaluable.
As Eric says, when you're walking to & from a stand in this kind of land, you need to follow an
exact path in & out. Confuse one identical White Oak for another identical White Oak to make your 90º right turn & you can miss your stand & get turned round very, very easily.
We get precious few hunting days & I'm not prepared to waste a single one by not being able to find my tree & blundering around for hours.
Hunting down here is nothing like deer hunting in the northern or western States where you're hunting big timber with little understory or open crop fields. We're used to hunting big lumps of very scrubby, head height brush that you simply cannot see through to navigate.
Oh & Steve in Canton, anyone of the many folks from Trad Gang I've hunted with or hung out with over the years knows I'm not a threat making guy. I'm very easy going & do not make threats at all. That said, I'm not a little guy, I'm a Veteran & worked as a Bouncer before I moved here. If someone maliciously & intentionally tries to get me lost in the woods, there will be a very physical conversation takes place.
There are very few trails for us to follow down here. A good game trail would be a rabbit path. Try following that at 3 in the morning with a climbing stand on your back, bow in one hand, flashlight in the other while it's 90º & you're being eaten alive by mosquitos.