Don’t regret buying my kuiu pants second hand from here,one of the best hunting investments I’ve ever made.I am a bit of a pack collector though.
Don’t regret buying my kuiu pants second hand from here,one of the best hunting investments I’ve ever made.I am a bit of a pack collector though.
I agree with the above. It's often that you start out buying lower end kit (your young with less disposable income, not sure if you will be into it so don't want to over invest, etc.)
Then you get into it big time, buy next level up gear (plus some well marketed but not necessary extra bits).
Then you start specializing (alpine, LR, bow, etc) or chasing the ultralight gear
Then you seem to come full circle and stick with a simple set of high end gear that works and use your experience/developed skills/brain for the rest.
You end up with a few generations of gear that is sometimes kind of useful, or you lend to mates, or your own kids as they grow up (which I am starting to have happen ).
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Hunting is not a hobby.....its an addiction
My problem is i don't get out enough to wear my gear out. See lots of fancy new stuff I would love to buy but hard to justify the cost.
Partly because I'm so far north any cold weather gear only gets packed on a trip once or twice a year. even they it may not get taken out of the bag.
Saw some real nice close fitting wind proof (shower resistant) insulating outer wear from First Light last year. Was good pushing through matagoury and Tee Tree, Southerly wind and misty crap. etc
Though I would splash out on one but was talked out of it by the Agent and into a cheaper lighter weight version as I would not make enough use of the insulating property's. (good call by the rep)
Z
Im abit of a slut for new gears. Gonna have a look through the stuff I dont use and see if any new hunters would make use of it
Anyone who buys Hunters Element won't have old gear.
Bought a lot of Stoney Creek gear over the years (mainly because it was a good price compared to other brands) but have to say I have had to repair just about every item at some stage. Mostly failing stitching. I am fairly easy on gear and also use a lot of non hunting brands. I have a Fairydown Terra Nova pack that has done a few kms and Fairydown Scorpion sleeping bag I have spent a lot of nights in. They were big investments for me at the time but have paid for themselves many times over.
Experience. What you get just after you needed it.
I like to have the right equipment for the job, so accumulated a few toys, but I'm not fickle and don't change stuff just for the sake of it. I have a 23 year old Goretex jacket which is still going strong, so no need to replace it. Having said that, something that has come on leaps and bounds in the last two decades is cooking gear. The old stuff was heavy and bulky. My new budget cooking gear fits in a 700ml pot and weighs next to nothing.
I think hunting clothing here in NZ is price driven. The retailers and suppliers work on the minimum cost maximum margin ( so the gear is generally quite costly and falls apart). I am on my third Stoney Creek Stowit and my Shooters jacket has all the domes on the front fall off. The US stuff i bloody expensive by the time it arrives here but I have found it (from the 2 jackets and a couple of tops I wear most all the time) seems to last and hold up better (Sitka and Kuiu from personal experience). I think in the US the suppliers work on the Smaller Margins + Less failures = less complaints which if you deal those with really well = more sales system, something which NZ Retailer seem is a very difficult concet to grasp.
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