@rugerman. NZ Road Code, hours of darkness: 1/2 hour after sunset to 1/2 hour before sunrise the following day or at any other time you cannot clearly see a person or object at a distance of 100 meters.
@rugerman. NZ Road Code, hours of darkness: 1/2 hour after sunset to 1/2 hour before sunrise the following day or at any other time you cannot clearly see a person or object at a distance of 100 meters.
Oh sweet, I knew these cataracts would pay off one day
On one of my NZ exploration missions about 3 years ago, I ended up in a well known pub on the eastern flanks of the Catlins. Saturday night, All Blacks vs Aussie, big pig hunting competition had finished that arvo. Lots of fairly hammered local lads & lasses all dressed up in their best camo and Swannies.
After the final whistle, I was invited out to go spotlighting. Eh? Where? In such-and-such a block. But that’s public land, says I. And you’re shitfaced.
Yeah so what. And off they went.
I went and spent the night out the back of the pub. Caught up with the same bunch the next morning at the pig weigh in, they were looking pretty rank and hungover. Good pigs though, lots of real big ginger boars. And a two utes with trays full of deer...
Just...say...the...word
If you can read the almanac then the green light is on.
An itch ... is ... a desire to scratch
This rule is really so you can identify your firing zone. People tend to forget this one.
It's all fun and games till Darthvader comes along
I respect your beliefs but don't impose them on me.
That would be my take. You could still identify a target with very little light. Especially with good optics. But how far past it can you see and what's beyond it? Have you already seen the firing zone before light started fading or do you have no idea what your shooting towards.
Cheers for the replies guys, yeah was just wondering. Sounds like if you can still cearly see the deer and identify it then you are sweet. Looks like 30 mins after the sunset on the internet its pretty much dark anyway.
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