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The Road Hunter Podcast has officially hit 100 subscribers, and weâre celebrating with a giveaway! In this episode, we share all the details on how you can enter to win. We also dive into some essential beginner hunting tips, covering gear, scouting, and strategies to help new hunters get started the right way. Whether youâre brand new to hunting or just want to brush up on the basics, this episode is packed with insights and a chance to win!
Related: finding public hunting land.
Please Like and Subcribe
Visit our site for the lastest podcast and other merch. https://www.failedoutdoors.com
The first question every new hunter asks is where to even go. In Oregon, that list is bigger than most people realize: state parks and greenways near civilization (usually shotgun/bow only), national and state forest in the Cascades, BLM checkerboard land, tribal land open to public use, and timber company land: some open freely, some requiring a free permit, some gated where you park and walk in.
OnX Maps is the tool that changes everything here. Look up landowners in your area, check their websites for public access rules, and confirm before you go: we spent years driving roads until they dead-ended into private gates before we figured this out. Donât make our mistake.
You donât need Gucci gear to fill a tag. $25 Wranglers from Walmart camouflage you about as well as the expensive stuff: deer care a lot more about scent and movement than brand names. But there are three places we donât cheap out:
Sitting alone and glassing for hours gets old fast. Having someone next to you, even just to laugh at how miserable you both are under a poncho in sideways rain, makes the long sits tolerable and the failures memorable instead of discouraging. Find a buddy who wants to be there as much as you do, or youâll end up driving around more than sitting still, which is the opposite of what works.
Every â10 tips to be a successful hunterâ article on the internet skips the boring truth: most of hunting success comes from sitting still on a stump, glassing the same edges, until your butt goes numb and then further. Deer tuck into the little crevices and seams of a clearcut and donât move until youâve stopped looking. Outlast them.
Use OnX Maps to identify BLM, state forest, and timber company land near you, then check each landownerâs website for specific public access rules before heading out.
A rifle or bow, a decent pair of binoculars, a scope that dials to distance, a rangefinder, rain gear, and good boots. Clothing and calls can be budget options: spend your money on glass and footwear instead.
No. A dog helps with retrieving birds, but plenty of successful hunters, including beginners, get by without one.
Giving up on a spot too early. Most success comes from sitting and glassing far longer than feels reasonable, not from constantly moving to a new location.
Get out this season and try it, even if you suck at it and even if you donât get anything, thatâs how all of us started. Thanks for listening and subscribing.
The post đ 100 Subscribers Giveaway + Beginner Hunting Tips | The Road Hunter Podcast appeared first on Failed Outdoors.
By Brad and Eli McKinneyThe Road Hunter Podcast has officially hit 100 subscribers, and weâre celebrating with a giveaway! In this episode, we share all the details on how you can enter to win. We also dive into some essential beginner hunting tips, covering gear, scouting, and strategies to help new hunters get started the right way. Whether youâre brand new to hunting or just want to brush up on the basics, this episode is packed with insights and a chance to win!
Related: finding public hunting land.
Please Like and Subcribe
Visit our site for the lastest podcast and other merch. https://www.failedoutdoors.com
The first question every new hunter asks is where to even go. In Oregon, that list is bigger than most people realize: state parks and greenways near civilization (usually shotgun/bow only), national and state forest in the Cascades, BLM checkerboard land, tribal land open to public use, and timber company land: some open freely, some requiring a free permit, some gated where you park and walk in.
OnX Maps is the tool that changes everything here. Look up landowners in your area, check their websites for public access rules, and confirm before you go: we spent years driving roads until they dead-ended into private gates before we figured this out. Donât make our mistake.
You donât need Gucci gear to fill a tag. $25 Wranglers from Walmart camouflage you about as well as the expensive stuff: deer care a lot more about scent and movement than brand names. But there are three places we donât cheap out:
Sitting alone and glassing for hours gets old fast. Having someone next to you, even just to laugh at how miserable you both are under a poncho in sideways rain, makes the long sits tolerable and the failures memorable instead of discouraging. Find a buddy who wants to be there as much as you do, or youâll end up driving around more than sitting still, which is the opposite of what works.
Every â10 tips to be a successful hunterâ article on the internet skips the boring truth: most of hunting success comes from sitting still on a stump, glassing the same edges, until your butt goes numb and then further. Deer tuck into the little crevices and seams of a clearcut and donât move until youâve stopped looking. Outlast them.
Use OnX Maps to identify BLM, state forest, and timber company land near you, then check each landownerâs website for specific public access rules before heading out.
A rifle or bow, a decent pair of binoculars, a scope that dials to distance, a rangefinder, rain gear, and good boots. Clothing and calls can be budget options: spend your money on glass and footwear instead.
No. A dog helps with retrieving birds, but plenty of successful hunters, including beginners, get by without one.
Giving up on a spot too early. Most success comes from sitting and glassing far longer than feels reasonable, not from constantly moving to a new location.
Get out this season and try it, even if you suck at it and even if you donât get anything, thatâs how all of us started. Thanks for listening and subscribing.
The post đ 100 Subscribers Giveaway + Beginner Hunting Tips | The Road Hunter Podcast appeared first on Failed Outdoors.