DVDs
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Re: DVDs
Rev44 wrote:Where to get DVDs? Kinda new to the site. Not sure which ones are the new ones. Thanks appreciate it
Order at www.Stealthoutdoors.com till we get the site back up...
- funderburk
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Re: DVDs
You won’t regret getting them, man! It’s like going to grad school. Buckle up!
“I’ve always believed that the mind is the best weapon.” John Rambo
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Re: DVDs
hoyt31786 wrote:On a recent podcast heard Dan say making a Big Woods dvd. Do we know when this will be out for order Dan?
Sometime this summer... The store is back open now.
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Re: DVDs
Rev44 wrote:What's better for Midwest hunting. Hill country or farmland?
Both... If your just getting one look at your terrain, if its hilly get hill bedding, if its more flat get farm land
- greenhorndave
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Re: DVDs
As a regular joe, I found value in both.
Farm goes into really good detail with the ways properties lay out, access, etc. Hill does as well, but the extra attention to thermals and military crests, etc., stands out. While the features in your terrain might be different, the farm I hunt has some hill features that the hill DVD helped give me a better sense on where to scout and set up.
It’s not true hill country in one of the places I hunt, but the pricipals applied, such as finding bedding on the top 1/3 of what would be an ant hill in hill country, but one of the bigger hills around in the farm area that had a ridge quality to it. Hill DVD helped me dial in which wind would be the prevalent one when that bed would be used, as I don’t think it was primary bedding.
Don’t worry about possible repetition either. There might be some overlap, but I found it useful to hammer the concepts through my thick skull. Also, any added cost for buying two DVDs is pretty inexpensive when it helps you hone in areas so much faster. Assuming a $5/hr rate for scouting time, it’ll pay for itself probably on the first or second scout.
Farm goes into really good detail with the ways properties lay out, access, etc. Hill does as well, but the extra attention to thermals and military crests, etc., stands out. While the features in your terrain might be different, the farm I hunt has some hill features that the hill DVD helped give me a better sense on where to scout and set up.
It’s not true hill country in one of the places I hunt, but the pricipals applied, such as finding bedding on the top 1/3 of what would be an ant hill in hill country, but one of the bigger hills around in the farm area that had a ridge quality to it. Hill DVD helped me dial in which wind would be the prevalent one when that bed would be used, as I don’t think it was primary bedding.
Don’t worry about possible repetition either. There might be some overlap, but I found it useful to hammer the concepts through my thick skull. Also, any added cost for buying two DVDs is pretty inexpensive when it helps you hone in areas so much faster. Assuming a $5/hr rate for scouting time, it’ll pay for itself probably on the first or second scout.
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Sometimes when things get tough, weird or both, you just need to remember this...
https://youtu.be/d4tSE2w53ts
Sometimes when things get tough, weird or both, you just need to remember this...
https://youtu.be/d4tSE2w53ts
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