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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Surpmil
You mean younger than them?
Good time to be in the woods - the ticks are dead or laying low.
Everything about this says practical, well thought-out, economical and devoid of "hardware-vanity".
Bicycles worked in a lot more places than the Ho-Chi-Min trail too. We have all sorts of e-bikes now, but is anyone building an "off-grid, off-road" variety? Of course weight is the perpetual problem I know: who wants to drag all that hardware around when pedalling?
Have run-flat tires for bikes arrived yet?
What's the rifle leaning against the tree?
And you're using a down mummy bag and moisture migrates through that you find?
Hello Surp! The rifle I picked up about 12 years ago at Doc's Gun Barn in Pocatello. We were hunting in the Centennial Mountains in SE ID that year and there wee some long-shot situations so I broke down and bought a 7 mag. This one was built by a Pocatello gunsmith on a Kar 98 action and is extremely accurate. Mostly though I use the Krag
because I like it so much. This year Paul brought his .35 Whelen along, so I used that in a couple open-country situations. It only weighs 7-some, scope and all, lighter than my iron-sighted Krag.
My bags were a 0f-rated marmot polyester fill mummy bag, a Slumberjack 10-pounder and for a pad under me an old flannel and poly camping bag. I gave Paul the Slumberjack 'cause he was shivering like nobody's business. I have interlocking foam floor squares I put down on the tent floor, so that is another layer of insulation, but it doesn't let moisture pass ... the old bag I use as a pad gets loaded with condensate but the oisture never gets to me inside the mummy.
FWIW I'm 75 and Paul is 72 and we hunt on foot.
jn
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Thank You to jon_norstog For This Useful Post:
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01-09-2021 09:45 PM
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