Something to think about.
Through the process of marketing, we are lead ot believe that one camo is better than another, that this design is superior to another, or that a name brand is better than a generic.
I believe that there is too much focus on what to wear than there is on the actual hunting. What is this, a beauty contest? Sometimes what appeals to out eyes does not work well in the woods. What we see and what the animal sees are two COMPLETELY different things. This is why I always thought it was funny that companies advertise by having a man sit in the woods to show how he "blends in" to his or her surroundings. There are much more important things that looking at that pic does tell you and that's how badly does that hunter smell, how much was he moving and where the wind is blowing.
That said, here is a great example. We hunt with one guy who has given up on most camo. He is setting quite an example. He wears under armor and brown sweat suit and that's all he ever hunts in. He is a great hunter and is very successful too. First time I saw him, I thought he was crazy. Surely he has his gear at the top of the mountain, where he was planning on getting dressed. He does very little for scent control too. Comes back and tells us what he saw that day or with a nice deer.
If camo was so important, why does he get so "lucky"? I am sitting here in full, top of the line camo that I washed in scent killer detergent, took a shower with scent killer soap, have all of my earth scent colognes splashed on and I haven't seen a deer all week.
I stopped buying all of that high dollar stuff and snapped back into reality, or atleast, the animal's reality. I soon realized that camo sells because of how great humans think it looks. I now most of my camo at Wal-Mart in the discount section. I don't normall support Wal-Mart, when when I can buy a T shirt for $3-5 at Wal Mart instead of $15 a pop at Gander Mountain, I just refuse to pay the difference.
I actually think that Wal-Mart's cheap camo is better suited for most of Pa's area to begin with. Why do we need all that green in camo when all of the leaves are dead or we are sitting in the middle of a corn field?
So, point I am trying to make is what type of camo to get shouldn't take priority over buying a nicer scope or gun, or slacking on buying the better bag that will keep your stuff dry or boots that are more comfortable and water proof. Spend that money on more necssary things.
Best advice I can give is stay away from blue and learn how to hunt better. That will pay for itself and is priceless.
Through the process of marketing, we are lead ot believe that one camo is better than another, that this design is superior to another, or that a name brand is better than a generic.
I believe that there is too much focus on what to wear than there is on the actual hunting. What is this, a beauty contest? Sometimes what appeals to out eyes does not work well in the woods. What we see and what the animal sees are two COMPLETELY different things. This is why I always thought it was funny that companies advertise by having a man sit in the woods to show how he "blends in" to his or her surroundings. There are much more important things that looking at that pic does tell you and that's how badly does that hunter smell, how much was he moving and where the wind is blowing.
That said, here is a great example. We hunt with one guy who has given up on most camo. He is setting quite an example. He wears under armor and brown sweat suit and that's all he ever hunts in. He is a great hunter and is very successful too. First time I saw him, I thought he was crazy. Surely he has his gear at the top of the mountain, where he was planning on getting dressed. He does very little for scent control too. Comes back and tells us what he saw that day or with a nice deer.
If camo was so important, why does he get so "lucky"? I am sitting here in full, top of the line camo that I washed in scent killer detergent, took a shower with scent killer soap, have all of my earth scent colognes splashed on and I haven't seen a deer all week.
I stopped buying all of that high dollar stuff and snapped back into reality, or atleast, the animal's reality. I soon realized that camo sells because of how great humans think it looks. I now most of my camo at Wal-Mart in the discount section. I don't normall support Wal-Mart, when when I can buy a T shirt for $3-5 at Wal Mart instead of $15 a pop at Gander Mountain, I just refuse to pay the difference.
I actually think that Wal-Mart's cheap camo is better suited for most of Pa's area to begin with. Why do we need all that green in camo when all of the leaves are dead or we are sitting in the middle of a corn field?
So, point I am trying to make is what type of camo to get shouldn't take priority over buying a nicer scope or gun, or slacking on buying the better bag that will keep your stuff dry or boots that are more comfortable and water proof. Spend that money on more necssary things.
Best advice I can give is stay away from blue and learn how to hunt better. That will pay for itself and is priceless.