Took a mate out hunting. He had a PLB on his waist. Went into a prick of a gorge. Shot a stag. Hauled it out. At the truck exhausted he complained he had lost it. He went back the next day with a friend to find it . Have shot 11 stags with him now. He never takes it anymore. LOL.
TwinNeedle do excellent gps pouches with a solid clip and elastic. Super reliable
Reason to wear in front is so that it is "in reach" excuse the pun. Never forget the story about tge hunter a few years ago who took a tumble in the Kawekas - and trapped could'nt reach his comms device inside his pack
Short answer, being wary or "feeling vulnerable" is good, that's your instinct watching out for you and maybe gently tapping the warning gong to alert you.
I do 99% of my hunting alone and whilst I've yet to get into what I feel is really grunty country, some of the routes I've taken have raised the odd eyebrow. We all have individual levels of acceptable risk and I surely push mine on occasion, not heroically but I feel it's the only way to increase/improve my skill set and confidence/resilience. Staying in my comfort zone will only get me more of the same!
For me preparation and awareness is fairly critical (even on day missions, I've gear to spend the night out if I get bushed.) Checking weather forecast and having the gear and food to wait out a storm or swollen river if I need to. That being said, you can only prepare for so much the rest you just have to deal with as it presents itself, common sense and mental agility and resilience will get you out of the shit 99.9% of the time, for the remainder thats what the PLB is for and I never go bush without it.
expect nothing, appreciate everything - and there's ALWAYS something to appreciate
Have hunted by myself mostly forever. In the days when meat was part of my living and I had a young family I taught myself to make good decisions under stressful conditions. I learned to be calm. Part of that was when to call it a day and biv on the spot with a deer rather than carry on in the dark and risk an accident. If you are relaxed in the trees and go with it rather than fight it you will be a lot safer.
Im not as relaxed now and do get a bit anxious at times while hunting and it is beginning to erode my enjoyment a bit. Mainly while traversing new country coming home in the dark.
Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing, and right-doing, there is a field. I will meet you there.
- Rumi
"You'll never find a rainbow if you're looking down" Charlie Chaplin
I too get a wee bit anxious at times. Especially on a couple of blocks in the Blueis.
I’m not a superstitious person, but there have been a couple of occasions when I’ve been really freaked out for no reason I could fathom.
One particular occasion kept me out of the bush for months
I think you found your inbuilt warning system alerted you and you acknowledged the situation with careful thought. As long as you listen to your instincts, that gut feeling of danger, you should be fine. Sounds like you have it all in hand and go forth & enjoy the next ridge.
Good reading other hunters views on the subject. Some enjoy the company of others on the hill and others seek solidarity, its whatever makes you tick. For me the knowledge of having a PLB at hand adds a feeling of backup security, but I never push my own boundaries just because I have it, that would be arrogance and I'd be a fool.
thats an interesting one when we trialled new hunters in Forest Service and DOC there was a high attrition rate with new young hunters - biggest reason they left - could not handle being out all day on their own - well try this to maybe relax you a little more if you can mid day make a phone call if you have reception just talk to someone for a few minutes - and stop often look at map GPS reasure youself you relly know whre you are all may help just relax one
Anxiety is a bitch, everyone has it to some degree but its learning how to manage it, that's the hard bit. I suffer from it, like @Tahr commented and it can take a bit of enjoyment away. Probably a whole topic on it's own...
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