Yeah, that's the hard part ... finding an experienced hunting partner, especially in a non-firearm/hunting friendly states like Massachusetts where I live
Yeah, it’s hard to get into in Canada, too.. I just passed the courses. Now I’m waiting on the criminal record check n shit.. I’ve always really enjoyed fishing and the learning curve that came with eating the game, so I’m ready for this next step.. Good luck to all. And don’t mind this clowny liberal heckling, they’re the same all over the globe. Cheers, boys!
Thank you guys! I just got interested in hunting after moving to a place with lots of deer. Bought a 308 and got it sighted at 100 yards. This video is the first I watched!👍
My experienced hunting partner passed away when I was a little girl.. It’s just me and my mom, all my brothers moved away and my boyfriend is a gamer not an outdoors men. It’s just me myself and I. ❤
@@chriswright517 I think both are good. If your main goal is hunting and that’s all you want it for, I’d go with a bolt gun (ruger American or savage axis are good starting places). Semi autos are probably more fun for target shooting though and could be used for defense in this crazy world but a few states are more restrictive on if you can use them for hunting. If you want a semi auto I’d check out the Ruger SFR in 308. That gun is light like a regular AR-15 but shoots 308 like an AR-10. Sweet gun.
It's nice to know people at work who hunt. I've heard this time and time again: one needs to know people in order to hunt. Knowing folks: that's the key to succeeding at just about anything. Needing people, now ain't that a pity! In certain parts of America, there is a higher concentration of hunters than in other parts. It's like a fraternity or a community. Hunting is very much a culture in certain localities. I think there are more hunters the farther one moves away from metropolitan areas. I tend to think the hunting culture is mainly in rural areas of the nation and the South. The South tends to preserve many old hunting traditions including the use of hounds to push deer.
This is the hurdle I'm stuck at. Being from NYC, the only thing I've successfully hunted is squirrel in the backyard, and that makes me the most experienced hunter I know. The last thing is want is to be alone in some rural state and get caught wandering around on the wrong property while carrying guns, or come home with lime disease because I was in some tick infested bushes without the right protection. It would be nice to know someone who's been around the block a few times.
Finding public land in the east is hard but getting easier in some states as they buy more land for hunting use. But getting started hunting can be daunting. I find people are most intimidated by the post kill phase where they have no idea how to gut or clean wild game. I find extreme value in talking to land owners and asking permission to hunt their property
As a beginner adult hunter ... absolutely. Field dressing so as not to waste the meat in general or get in trouble with CO's/Wardens or get yourself sick by not dressing fast enough or perforating the bowels etc
This is the #1 issue for me. Gear? Easy. Information on how to do it? Learned. How to field-dress a deer? I think I could do it. Where to go?......not an Einstein's fart of an idea.
@@CLove511 I suggest getting on a app called ONX hunt if you dont know it or use it already. Then go around and find nice looking land you feel you would want to hunt and see who owns it. Itll tell you where they live, or the tax address at least, and you can knock on their door and ask to hunt.
A note about buying venison: because it's illegal to sell wild game (except for fish), venison you buy in a grocery store comes from a deer farm/ranch.
Awesome job guys, I enjoy these type of videos, some guys are equipment snobs and try to talk beginners into thousands of dollars of equipment. Y'all did great explaining how to START buying your gear. No point buying all the latest stuff and finding out you hate the woods lol. Totally agree on the camo, people tend to forget camo is a pretty recent thing guys hunted for decades in flannel
I live about an hour from public hunting land. And a lot of people know about it. Opening day (Saturday of the first weekend in November) and the first few days of Thanksgiving weekend are a keystone kops episode. Especially with some guys who hunt by driving. 4 or 5 guys, one is the shooter, and the others stomp through the woods talking walkie talkies. Cheapest way to get into hunting, get a Thompson Center Compass II (mine has a factory trigger at 2 lbs 7.7 ounces and shoots an average of .5 MOA) for a little more than 400 clams, put on whatever scope you want, go and get some deer meat. Deer can see what you see but with some color blindness. Red and Orange look like gray. Blue shows up kind of bright. But whatever you wear, if it confuses your eyes, it will confuse theirs, too. Also, always hunt from downwind of the deer. If you get upwind, they will smell your soap, shampoo, your no scent detergent and your scent hider product. Don't be afraid to put on aftershave if it smells a little flowery. You know what is in the woods? Flowers, among other things.
Awesome video. My nephew's got me so excited about hunting. I'm trying to learn all that I can about hunting. Thank you so much for taking the time to make this video.
You guys really nailed it on the head. My advice for any new or aspiring hunters is that you really don't need a multi thousand dollar rifle. Those are great for long range precision but a $500 Ruger American will work perfectly, I've used them for years. Spend the extra money to get in trigger time and improve your marksmanship. Turn off all your technology and get into the woods, pay attention and don't rush anything. These videos are great but like you said you'll gain a much deeper understanding if you experience it firsthand, I wish everyone the best of luck this season!
@Xololoko It really depends on the situation. I would recommend something versatile that's cheap to shoot and easy to find like .308 I personally use a 6.5CM simply because my rifle weighs under 6lbs and it's a lot easier on the shoulder. Both rounds are phenomenal within about 300 yards on medium/large game.
Never had a person teach me or show me the ropes. Come from a poor family so even owning a rifle was unlikely so it's definitely overwhelming when first getting into it myself.
Aren't deer basically color blind ? They can distinguish medium color greens and lighter colored blues. Outside of that I don't believe they can distinguish the difference between other colors except daytime and nighttime
You gents dropped some damn good knowledge here. Goes to show people can learn from the young. Im going on my first hunt here in 2 weeks and everything in this video is pure gold. Only thing i cant follow is finding a partner to guide me. No one available so im just gonna be figuring it out on my own. still looking forward to it, and even if i dont land anything ill still have a morning in the woods and thats good enough for me.
I just recently moved to an area where I don't have private land so this year I hunted the National Forrest in my area but I spent weeks finding an area that wasn't hunted and saw a lot of sign and a bear the first day lol and I'm in VA too!
I am so thankful for channels like this. At 37 i decided i want to get a permit. Also getting into fishing. But all the outdoorsmen in my lofe, dad, gramps, uncles, all died, or became unable to go outdoors when i was young. So i never was taught. I can butcher and skin. But field dress? Tracking? Nope, lost on that.
This is great. Thank you guys for the solid information. For people who are a little uneasy or squeamish on field dressing here’s something that can help- finds somewhere you can buy slaughtered but not butchered animals. In some cities you can find viveras or live poultry shops in immigrant neighborhoods that provide this service. Chickens are a great place to start because they’re small and the basic anatomy isn’t all that different from other game. Rabbits are what I would try next. Learn their anatomy and get comfortable breaking them down. That way when you’re faced with a larger animal you’re comfortable and more relaxed- you’ll be more confident with the knife and less likely to spoil your game or accidentally cut yourself.
I'm an outdoorsman at heart, but I live in suburbs near DC now. I've wanted to hunt since I was a kid, but my family were anglers on the Chesapeake, no one hunted. I went last season during the last few days of rifle season with my bow to GW National Forest and found myself the only guy on the VA side in that area - I didn't harvest a deer that trip, but I found a main corridor halfway up a ridge with rubs EVERYWHERE and such heavy deer traffic visible in the snow it was like a spider web. I haven't been back yet, but I plan to get there this season. Got myself a climbing stand and if I can't get a shot with my bow I have a rifle this time lol If anyone around the Shenandoah Valley area reads this and wants a hunting buddy, hmu in the replies edit: wanna say: much respect for being such humble and honest young men - straight forward experience-earned advice and honesty is rare in us younger generations, keep up the grind, homie! Brings me hope for the future despite the bs the news pushes edit 2: oh, damn, yall are in VA too? I'm up north
Great video! I'm getting into hunting because I want to move away from all the gmo foods. If I save money it will be over time. I eat simple anyway. Deer, wild hog and growing my own fish and vegetables should get me to where I want to go
I work with an guy that is probably pushing 70 and has hunted religiously since he was a little kid. You'd never think it when you meet him, just an old hippy with a killer mustache haha, but this guy travels all over the East Coast for deer hunting and bags multiple every year. He spends most of his "off time" scouting and keeps me on speed dial in case he needs help dragging one out. Definitely gonna see if he'd mentor me as I'm finally about to get started in it.
Hardest part for me is finding land, also you can make your own bow. Like my ancestors. Granted it would take a while to dry the sinew and properly construct a powerful, accurate bow. But modern bows are more powerful, efficient, and cheap.
@@MrDeanmfitz yes. I live in Oklahoma. In the Chickasaw Nation. As a part of our cultural education, we get opportunities to make blow darts, bows and arrows, atlatl, deer skin moccasins and clothing, how to make jewelry and weave baskets, etc. So yeah I've made my own recurve bow. I designed it after the Hun type of war bow. 150lb draw weight
ive always been interested in hunting because of my friends dad but my family wouldnt let me go with him now that im in my 20's and living on my own away from family id love to get into it.
I'll be honest with you guys with all these supply chain issues and the government f****** around with our food and formula I've decided to take my exceptional marksmanship skills and try to apply them to hunting. Like I said I've never shot anything before first time I went skeet shooting I got 23 out of 25 which I would say is pretty good. And that was the first time I shot that 12 gauge at a skeet shooting range. I shot a frying pan from 50 ft away 9 out of 10 times with slugs. I'm deadly with a crossbow. But a lot of people probably are. I just want to be able to feed my family in case the s*** hits a fan.
I use my 6.5 creedmoor for everything except bear. That requires the attention of my .444. Weird calibers? I think not. I bought a savage 110 6.5 creed for 700 and ammo for 40 dollars a box at cabelas
My state doesn’t allow shouldered cartridges so all the best deer cartridges are out the window and we have to go with all the fancy straight wall stuff they’re coming out with just for us to hunt with something other than slugs and handgun magnums.
Elliot I am completely new to hunting especially deer never been to the backcountry or country on foot and I wanna know where do you park your truck if your on public land, how do you know where to go off the main roads?, and how far away should you be from your truck when hunting for deer 6miles out?
You have to spend time in the woods before season starts to know good spot. A lot of times there are pull offs where people can park and walk into public land. Distance away from your truck doesn’t matter a ton.
@mattc6015 Shit, in Canada, you can't even carry a handgun for any purpose other than transporting it to and from a gun range (it's illegal to hunt anything with a handgun), and you have to apply for an authorization to transport (ATT), which shouldn't be hard to get once you have your RPAL, but it's just another hoop to jump through for something you can only shoot on a range anyway.
Here in Indiana we are limited to shotgun and straight wall cartridges. I just dropped $800 bucks on a Winchester xpr chambered in 350 legend. It's a great firearm and the 350L was designed for deer hunting it's a great round with minimal kick
Had a call years ago when I was a cop to a near-by wooded public land. Hunter thought someone near them was a deer or something, and shot. Shot him with a .308. He was DOA.
Do you know what the legal outcome of that, and prison sentence was? Voluntary manslaughter, or did he get a second degree murder? That's frightening... I guess if anything, it highlights the importance of blaze orange. Even when I hike, I try to have some orange on me, due to my fear of negligent, trigger-happy dumb-dumbs in the woods during season.
@@awkwardme5375 He got involuntary second degree manslaughter. He ended up with a 1 year in prison which HE WANTED. He was offered a plea deal to get just probation and turned it down. He WANTED prison time for killing someone. He had to pay a few thousand in fines and lost a wrongful death civil suit. He definitely didn't do it out of malice. He tried to save the guy, tried to drag him out of the woods to get him help faster but just couldn't drag him the whole way, already tried to administer aid, it was a horrible accident. I feel terrible for the dead mans family. But I'm very glad the hunter took full accountability even when he really could have skirted by. That is VERY rare to see.
If you're in a straight wall jacket state then check out 350 legend. If you're hunting white tail then the 150 gr winchester deer season xp is your best bet. If youre shooting bear or boar then a 180gn bonded round is great.
I just bought a Savage model 110 at Cabela's in Pa. It came with a Vortex scope and a threaded barrel with a thread protector. My cost was $819.00 which isn't bad !!
I’m wanting to go hunt public in Florida Problem is i’m pretty sure it’s mostly marsh land with some dry islands peppered in I don’t want to get attacked by gators or water moccasins 😂 Any suggestions? South FL near Loxahatchee, Holey Land, Big Cypress
I just recently purchased a 12 guage ro hopefully do some dove hunting soon and maybe some other game bird. I know nothing about hunting and it would be a new hobby for me. I have no friends or relatives that hunt ans will most likely be doing it all alone. I just don't know where to start.
How in the heck did you get that rifle for $300 and what kind of rifle and optics do you recommend? I've been saving up for a Remington ADL or SPS and was going to look at Vortex optics since I get a discount through work. Do you or does anyone have any sources that they can vouch for that is a good quality sight and rifle for a lower cost?
CA I reckon? Same here. We're about to move out after my 40yrs living in LA always voting red and being proactive in my communities to protect our constitutional rights. After so many years of fighting, we've decided to move out to ND.
I’ve only fired guns a few times and am completely ignorant to hunting. If you’re not sure if you’re interested in hunting and stalking animals in the woods, should you initially practice or test things out with a camera to see if you enjoy the process?
What part of Virginia are you guys from I also live in Virginia and have always wanted to get into hunting I’m from southeastern Virginia 757 possibly one day we could hunt together havent hunted yet but plan on getting into it soon
i dont even have access to any public, private hunting lands or just some natural forests. i live in a big city in a second world country with lil hope of getting out to see the world. thats why im here learning about hunting techniques from tall hot american dudes lmao
i live near florida city and i have no clue where i could go hunting locally or if i even can. i have considered doing research looking for a good 1-2 acre land local to da city (at least 30-45 mins out) but close to hunting areas no further den a 1-2 hour drive. if anyone can help me figure out how to go about this please help i will and do appreciate it.
@@vargodon3435 Floridas system is a little bit complicated I used to live there and their regulations can be kinda tricky so make sure to read up on specific areas regs
@@vargodon3435 and in your area of the state it’s gonna be tricky to find hunting areas within 2 hrs because of population but there should be a few places that at the very least should have some hogs or turkeys
I’m 22 and my husband and I want to learn how to hunt someday soon, so we can eat a more carnivore diet. I’m in Ohio, how do we find hunters to make friends with?
All walmarts are not created equal. Ive been to a Walmart in deep texas camo cool shit everywhere. Walmart here, Arizona Cardinals and dallas cowboys jerseys, smh
realistically camo is a new thing in the grand scheme of hunting history ... you great great grand daddy and his great great granddaddy lived off hunting and they never had camo
Yeah, that's the hard part ... finding an experienced hunting partner, especially in a non-firearm/hunting friendly states like Massachusetts where I live
New Jersey is the same way, we can only hunt with Shotguns (and I believe muzzleloaders) here.
@@kerrick7621 Weird. That's exactly what the Second Amendment says. 🙄
@@therealdeal3866 Where does it say this?
@@therealdeal3866 I was also specifically commenting on not being able to hunt with rifles in the state by the way.
Yeah, it’s hard to get into in Canada, too.. I just passed the courses. Now I’m waiting on the criminal record check n shit.. I’ve always really enjoyed fishing and the learning curve that came with eating the game, so I’m ready for this next step.. Good luck to all. And don’t mind this clowny liberal heckling, they’re the same all over the globe. Cheers, boys!
I’m so glad videos like that exist now. I want to start hunting for food since meat is becoming more expensive and I have no one to teach me. Thanks
I'm in the same boat. Best of luck and good hunting.
Me too. PLUS deer jerky is GOOD
@charlesclemons1755How'd it go?
Same dude. Few to no elders still able bodied to show me the ropes. Here we go
Just got into fishing not too long ago but want to try hunting since it’s a big thing here and I already own firearms
Thank you guys! I just got interested in hunting after moving to a place with lots of deer. Bought a 308 and got it sighted at 100 yards. This video is the first I watched!👍
Heck yeah!
My experienced hunting partner passed away when I was a little girl.. It’s just me and my mom, all my brothers moved away and my boyfriend is a gamer not an outdoors men. It’s just me myself and I. ❤
Stalking husbands or dicks hey....I suggest you change that name!
I'm sorry but you need a new boyfriend. When shit his the fan he won't be able to provide.
Get a new boyfriend maybe
@@nolanortega5084 very ignorant statement...
@@nolanortega5084 literally the problem with this world 🤦♂
Those are great calibers. If you go with 270, 308, or 3006 you can hunt elk later too. Elk is delicious.
would u recommend semi auto or a bolt action?
@@chriswright517 I think both are good. If your main goal is hunting and that’s all you want it for, I’d go with a bolt gun (ruger American or savage axis are good starting places). Semi autos are probably more fun for target shooting though and could be used for defense in this crazy world but a few states are more restrictive on if you can use them for hunting. If you want a semi auto I’d check out the Ruger SFR in 308. That gun is light like a regular AR-15 but shoots 308 like an AR-10. Sweet gun.
It's nice to know people at work who hunt. I've heard this time and time again: one needs to know people in order to hunt. Knowing folks: that's the key to succeeding at just about anything. Needing people, now ain't that a pity! In certain parts of America, there is a higher concentration of hunters than in other parts. It's like a fraternity or a community. Hunting is very much a culture in certain localities. I think there are more hunters the farther one moves away from metropolitan areas. I tend to think the hunting culture is mainly in rural areas of the nation and the South. The South tends to preserve many old hunting traditions including the use of hounds to push deer.
This is the hurdle I'm stuck at. Being from NYC, the only thing I've successfully hunted is squirrel in the backyard, and that makes me the most experienced hunter I know. The last thing is want is to be alone in some rural state and get caught wandering around on the wrong property while carrying guns, or come home with lime disease because I was in some tick infested bushes without the right protection.
It would be nice to know someone who's been around the block a few times.
Having experienced hunters around you ain’t that much better I’ve asked a couple that I know and none of them are interested in taking someone
Finding public land in the east is hard but getting easier in some states as they buy more land for hunting use. But getting started hunting can be daunting. I find people are most intimidated by the post kill phase where they have no idea how to gut or clean wild game.
I find extreme value in talking to land owners and asking permission to hunt their property
As a beginner adult hunter ... absolutely. Field dressing so as not to waste the meat in general or get in trouble with CO's/Wardens or get yourself sick by not dressing fast enough or perforating the bowels etc
This is the #1 issue for me. Gear? Easy.
Information on how to do it? Learned.
How to field-dress a deer? I think I could do it.
Where to go?......not an Einstein's fart of an idea.
@@CLove511 I suggest getting on a app called ONX hunt if you dont know it or use it already. Then go around and find nice looking land you feel you would want to hunt and see who owns it. Itll tell you where they live, or the tax address at least, and you can knock on their door and ask to hunt.
A note about buying venison: because it's illegal to sell wild game (except for fish), venison you buy in a grocery store comes from a deer farm/ranch.
Awesome job guys, I enjoy these type of videos, some guys are equipment snobs and try to talk beginners into thousands of dollars of equipment. Y'all did great explaining how to START buying your gear. No point buying all the latest stuff and finding out you hate the woods lol. Totally agree on the camo, people tend to forget camo is a pretty recent thing guys hunted for decades in flannel
I live about an hour from public hunting land. And a lot of people know about it. Opening day (Saturday of the first weekend in November) and the first few days of Thanksgiving weekend are a keystone kops episode. Especially with some guys who hunt by driving. 4 or 5 guys, one is the shooter, and the others stomp through the woods talking walkie talkies.
Cheapest way to get into hunting, get a Thompson Center Compass II (mine has a factory trigger at 2 lbs 7.7 ounces and shoots an average of .5 MOA) for a little more than 400 clams, put on whatever scope you want, go and get some deer meat. Deer can see what you see but with some color blindness. Red and Orange look like gray. Blue shows up kind of bright. But whatever you wear, if it confuses your eyes, it will confuse theirs, too.
Also, always hunt from downwind of the deer. If you get upwind, they will smell your soap, shampoo, your no scent detergent and your scent hider product. Don't be afraid to put on aftershave if it smells a little flowery. You know what is in the woods? Flowers, among other things.
Awesome video.
My nephew's got me so excited about hunting.
I'm trying to learn all that I can about hunting.
Thank you so much for taking the time to make this video.
You guys really nailed it on the head. My advice for any new or aspiring hunters is that you really don't need a multi thousand dollar rifle. Those are great for long range precision but a $500 Ruger American will work perfectly, I've used them for years. Spend the extra money to get in trigger time and improve your marksmanship. Turn off all your technology and get into the woods, pay attention and don't rush anything. These videos are great but like you said you'll gain a much deeper understanding if you experience it firsthand, I wish everyone the best of luck this season!
What caliber you recommend
@Xololoko It really depends on the situation. I would recommend something versatile that's cheap to shoot and easy to find like .308 I personally use a 6.5CM simply because my rifle weighs under 6lbs and it's a lot easier on the shoulder. Both rounds are phenomenal within about 300 yards on medium/large game.
Never had a person teach me or show me the ropes. Come from a poor family so even owning a rifle was unlikely so it's definitely overwhelming when first getting into it myself.
Thanks i really appreciate you guys giving us noobs info on how to start especially the land part.
Aren't deer basically color blind ? They can distinguish medium color greens and lighter colored blues. Outside of that I don't believe they can distinguish the difference between other colors except daytime and nighttime
You gents dropped some damn good knowledge here. Goes to show people can learn from the young. Im going on my first hunt here in 2 weeks and everything in this video is pure gold. Only thing i cant follow is finding a partner to guide me. No one available so im just gonna be figuring it out on my own. still looking forward to it, and even if i dont land anything ill still have a morning in the woods and thats good enough for me.
I just recently moved to an area where I don't have private land so this year I hunted the National Forrest in my area but I spent weeks finding an area that wasn't hunted and saw a lot of sign and a bear the first day lol and I'm in VA too!
I am so thankful for channels like this. At 37 i decided i want to get a permit. Also getting into fishing. But all the outdoorsmen in my lofe, dad, gramps, uncles, all died, or became unable to go outdoors when i was young. So i never was taught. I can butcher and skin. But field dress? Tracking? Nope, lost on that.
This is great. Thank you guys for the solid information. For people who are a little uneasy or squeamish on field dressing here’s something that can help- finds somewhere you can buy slaughtered but not butchered animals. In some cities you can find viveras or live poultry shops in immigrant neighborhoods that provide this service. Chickens are a great place to start because they’re small and the basic anatomy isn’t all that different from other game. Rabbits are what I would try next. Learn their anatomy and get comfortable breaking them down. That way when you’re faced with a larger animal you’re comfortable and more relaxed- you’ll be more confident with the knife and less likely to spoil your game or accidentally cut yourself.
I'm an outdoorsman at heart, but I live in suburbs near DC now. I've wanted to hunt since I was a kid, but my family were anglers on the Chesapeake, no one hunted.
I went last season during the last few days of rifle season with my bow to GW National Forest and found myself the only guy on the VA side in that area - I didn't harvest a deer that trip, but I found a main corridor halfway up a ridge with rubs EVERYWHERE and such heavy deer traffic visible in the snow it was like a spider web. I haven't been back yet, but I plan to get there this season. Got myself a climbing stand and if I can't get a shot with my bow I have a rifle this time lol
If anyone around the Shenandoah Valley area reads this and wants a hunting buddy, hmu in the replies
edit: wanna say: much respect for being such humble and honest young men - straight forward experience-earned advice and honesty is rare in us younger generations, keep up the grind, homie! Brings me hope for the future despite the bs the news pushes
edit 2: oh, damn, yall are in VA too? I'm up north
Great video! I'm getting into hunting because I want to move away from all the gmo foods. If I save money it will be over time. I eat simple anyway. Deer, wild hog and growing my own fish and vegetables should get me to where I want to go
I work with an guy that is probably pushing 70 and has hunted religiously since he was a little kid. You'd never think it when you meet him, just an old hippy with a killer mustache haha, but this guy travels all over the East Coast for deer hunting and bags multiple every year. He spends most of his "off time" scouting and keeps me on speed dial in case he needs help dragging one out. Definitely gonna see if he'd mentor me as I'm finally about to get started in it.
Hardest part for me is finding land, also you can make your own bow. Like my ancestors. Granted it would take a while to dry the sinew and properly construct a powerful, accurate bow. But modern bows are more powerful, efficient, and cheap.
Did you do it?
@@MrDeanmfitz yes. I live in Oklahoma. In the Chickasaw Nation. As a part of our cultural education, we get opportunities to make blow darts, bows and arrows, atlatl, deer skin moccasins and clothing, how to make jewelry and weave baskets, etc. So yeah I've made my own recurve bow. I designed it after the Hun type of war bow. 150lb draw weight
@@MrDeanmfitz if you're referring to finding land to hunt on, no
@@dakotafrazier2985 Do the Chickasaw have reservation land that you can use?
@@MrDeanmfitz not for hunting no.
ive always been interested in hunting because of my friends dad but my family wouldnt let me go with him now that im in my 20's and living on my own away from family id love to get into it.
Do it!!!
@@serenarodriguez9803where do I start, never been but I’d love too.
Got my First Hunting Rifle. Savage Axis II 30-06 SPR Brand new with a Decent scope. Friend sent me a GPS. I am ready.
I'll be honest with you guys with all these supply chain issues and the government f****** around with our food and formula I've decided to take my exceptional marksmanship skills and try to apply them to hunting. Like I said I've never shot anything before first time I went skeet shooting I got 23 out of 25 which I would say is pretty good. And that was the first time I shot that 12 gauge at a skeet shooting range. I shot a frying pan from 50 ft away 9 out of 10 times with slugs. I'm deadly with a crossbow. But a lot of people probably are. I just want to be able to feed my family in case the s*** hits a fan.
I use a 7mm-08 savage axes. Very accurate and cost effective.
I use my 6.5 creedmoor for everything except bear. That requires the attention of my .444. Weird calibers? I think not. I bought a savage 110 6.5 creed for 700 and ammo for 40 dollars a box at cabelas
You must hunt a lot of hills or mountains! Upstate ny ....we can get meat with a 12!
I’m starting to get into hunting and I don’t know anybody so this channel is going to be helpful. I will tell you the $300 for a fun is very cheap.
My state doesn’t allow shouldered cartridges so all the best deer cartridges are out the window and we have to go with all the fancy straight wall stuff they’re coming out with just for us to hunt with something other than slugs and handgun magnums.
.450 bushmaster for the win. Or 350 legend. Bolt options and ar15 options.
Elliot I am completely new to hunting especially deer never been to the backcountry or country on foot and I wanna know where do you park your truck if your on public land, how do you know where to go off the main roads?, and how far away should you be from your truck when hunting for deer 6miles out?
You have to spend time in the woods before season starts to know good spot. A lot of times there are pull offs where people can park and walk into public land. Distance away from your truck doesn’t matter a ton.
Hey bro. Getting into hunting since the price of meat is insane plus looking to learn to hunt for prepping purposes. Thanks for the video
You forgot Winchester 3030 Model 94, great gun to use..
I just found your video. Im starting to get into hunting. Thank you for this video.
Thermals in Florida is suicide haha. Thanks for the tips guys this is really helpful
Plus, I’m going hunting in a few months on hunting season for the first time and I’m gonna try to hunt some deer
I wish someone in my family knows how to hunt so I can go hunting as well
You guys forgot to mention carrying a sidearm, usually .40 cal or higher.
In a lot of states there’s really no need
@mattc6015 Shit, in Canada, you can't even carry a handgun for any purpose other than transporting it to and from a gun range (it's illegal to hunt anything with a handgun), and you have to apply for an authorization to transport (ATT), which shouldn't be hard to get once you have your RPAL, but it's just another hoop to jump through for something you can only shoot on a range anyway.
Super excited to get into this, thank ye Sirs’
Going hog huntin for the first time and decided to watch some videos. This video literally feels like I’m just chillin with these guys
That’s what I want to do too. How did your first time go?
I’m assuming not in a Walmart in California right? 😅😅
Depends on the city and county. The ones closer to public hunting areas stock hunting gear.
great video, just a heads up the time line on video isn't totally accurate. The part about guns is is said to start at 9:04, but starts 8:30
I live in Texas but never been hunting. I want to start this year but don't know where to start. Ty
Same! I can't believe I live in Texas and never been hunting!🤣
@@maritzanavarrete5043 lol what part of texas?
West Texas
@@maritzanavarrete5043 I'm in Central but might try public hunting land in East tx
I'm not sure where I'll go, I need to do more research.
I got a 45-70 rifle to try hunting with. All those calibers you listed aren't legal here in Illinois.
Public land is tough , but it makes you a better hunter.
Here in Indiana we are limited to shotgun and straight wall cartridges. I just dropped $800 bucks on a Winchester xpr chambered in 350 legend. It's a great firearm and the 350L was designed for deer hunting it's a great round with minimal kick
Yo I’m in indiana can I be your apprentice 🤣
Had a call years ago when I was a cop to a near-by wooded public land. Hunter thought someone near them was a deer or something, and shot. Shot him with a .308. He was DOA.
Oh man that sounds rough to deal with
Do you know what the legal outcome of that, and prison sentence was? Voluntary manslaughter, or did he get a second degree murder? That's frightening... I guess if anything, it highlights the importance of blaze orange. Even when I hike, I try to have some orange on me, due to my fear of negligent, trigger-happy dumb-dumbs in the woods during season.
@@awkwardme5375 He got involuntary second degree manslaughter. He ended up with a 1 year in prison which HE WANTED. He was offered a plea deal to get just probation and turned it down. He WANTED prison time for killing someone. He had to pay a few thousand in fines and lost a wrongful death civil suit. He definitely didn't do it out of malice. He tried to save the guy, tried to drag him out of the woods to get him help faster but just couldn't drag him the whole way, already tried to administer aid, it was a horrible accident. I feel terrible for the dead mans family. But I'm very glad the hunter took full accountability even when he really could have skirted by. That is VERY rare to see.
Thought on 223 browning XBolt, would be good also to show your gear
I have a 270 and a 12ga this is my first time hunting my furthest shot is 50 yards so I decided to just use a slug out of the shot gun
Thanks for making this for us newbies. Any particular trail camera you'd recommend?
One at home...Love it!
If you're in a straight wall jacket state then check out 350 legend. If you're hunting white tail then the 150 gr winchester deer season xp is your best bet. If youre shooting bear or boar then a 180gn bonded round is great.
I just bought a Savage model 110 at Cabela's in Pa. It came with a Vortex scope and a threaded barrel with a thread protector. My cost was $819.00 which isn't bad !!
I enjoyed what you said. Thank you for sharing.
Keep up the good content 🔥
What about a 45-70 gov? 🤔
Great video boys!
I’m wanting to go hunt public in Florida
Problem is i’m pretty sure it’s mostly marsh land with some dry islands peppered in
I don’t want to get attacked by gators or water moccasins 😂
Any suggestions? South FL near Loxahatchee, Holey Land, Big Cypress
Buy loads of sitka gear and a Marlin rifle ✅
Some states are straight wall only (Ohio). 45-70 gov is a good round if you need straight wall.
.350 Legend is cheaper and more common, especially in GA for some reason...
30-30 is a good starting caliber I’d say may be a bit pricier than 300 tho
Military supply store is good too
How do you know where the deer are at... Well, trail cameras 😂. Genius
Great video guys
.223 you think is too small for deer? I am old guy with two bad shoulders.
I just recently purchased a 12 guage ro hopefully do some dove hunting soon and maybe some other game bird. I know nothing about hunting and it would be a new hobby for me. I have no friends or relatives that hunt ans will most likely be doing it all alone. I just don't know where to start.
@___meph___4547 where about you at bro?
Can you hunt deer with 6mm Arc? I have a 22” Ar15 chambered in Arc
What about hunting permit or license or i just go like tht to hunt ?
This was so helpful thank you so much! I just need to find someone in WV who can be my hunting partner 😂
If you aren’t too far from the VA border you may be able to hook up with us if you need.
Did you say Roll King, or Rural King (the store in NC)?
im from mass its so hard but i want to get into it but around me is kinda difficult
Great video!!
How in the heck did you get that rifle for $300 and what kind of rifle and optics do you recommend? I've been saving up for a Remington ADL or SPS and was going to look at Vortex optics since I get a discount through work. Do you or does anyone have any sources that they can vouch for that is a good quality sight and rifle for a lower cost?
It’s a bear creek arsenal
Not basic enough. I think it would have been much better to make a video with a complete idiot like myself and actually walk him/her through it.
Buy gun. Point gun at desired animal. Shoot animal. Animal dead. Eat animal. Cooking Optional. Lol
Rifle calibers would be great if I could use them in my state
CA I reckon? Same here. We're about to move out after my 40yrs living in LA always voting red and being proactive in my communities to protect our constitutional rights. After so many years of fighting, we've decided to move out to ND.
I’ve only fired guns a few times and am completely ignorant to hunting. If you’re not sure if you’re interested in hunting and stalking animals in the woods, should you initially practice or test things out with a camera to see if you enjoy the process?
Late to the party. What are your thoughts on paid party hunting where a guide takes you?
What part of Virginia are you guys from I also live in Virginia and have always wanted to get into hunting I’m from southeastern Virginia 757 possibly one day we could hunt together havent hunted yet but plan on getting into it soon
Besides buying guns, ammunition and other equipments. How much does it cost to hunt animals?
Should make a hunting legal video, what to do and how to do it and get tickets without brushing up against the law
4.50 bushmaster is what I use is that good
W finna get into it w ❤
i dont even have access to any public, private hunting lands or just some natural forests. i live in a big city in a second world country with lil hope of getting out to see the world. thats why im here learning about hunting techniques from tall hot american dudes lmao
Shout out to the 20 dollar bow kill that story killed me 😂
i live near florida city and i have no clue where i could go hunting locally or if i even can. i have considered doing research looking for a good 1-2 acre land local to da city (at least 30-45 mins out) but close to hunting areas no further den a 1-2 hour drive. if anyone can help me figure out how to go about this please help i will and do appreciate it.
Most states have a public land map available
@@mattc6015 is there a certain site or search that could help me find this map?
@@vargodon3435 wma stands for wildlife management area
@@vargodon3435 Floridas system is a little bit complicated I used to live there and their regulations can be kinda tricky so make sure to read up on specific areas regs
@@vargodon3435 and in your area of the state it’s gonna be tricky to find hunting areas within 2 hrs because of population but there should be a few places that at the very least should have some hogs or turkeys
Good video man
I’m 22 and my husband and I want to learn how to hunt someday soon, so we can eat a more carnivore diet. I’m in Ohio, how do we find hunters to make friends with?
I’m just getting into hunting I just bought a bow!
Well if I had an experienced hunting partner I wouldn’t be watching this video. Lol
NIce video.
Thanks alot.
What do you recommend for hunting people?
A sword is your best bet.
7.62x39 would be a good round also.
Love from mekha restaurant from Portland Oregon
I ain’t got a dad to teach me so no hunting partner for me reason I’m trying to learn myself
I think Walmart took guns except for pellet air rifles out of their stores.
We still have some here in Va
It depends on the location
In GA and TN they stock basic rifles and shotguns.
They still have bolt action guns in Washington.
I hope I can go to US someday 😁 And become a hunter🤣
Lol once everything settles down. that's cute
All walmarts are not created equal. Ive been to a Walmart in deep texas camo cool shit everywhere. Walmart here, Arizona Cardinals and dallas cowboys jerseys, smh
Let him talk bro !
Everyone I know can hit a quarter five states away, but they don't frickin hunt 😢
realistically camo is a new thing in the grand scheme of hunting history ... you great great grand daddy and his great great granddaddy lived off hunting and they never had camo