Originally Posted by
Fenelon
Some good advice here. If you arrive at your spot all sweated-up you're beat if you don't have a dry change of clothes. Sitting in damp sweaty clothes will chill you to the bone in no time. I sweat like a pig, so it took me a few years to finally figure out a good system when I was hunting areas that involved a 25 min walk into my spot. I'd leave the truck in work pants with a polypro long underwear and shirt top. One light wool sweater on top. Orange ballcap and super thin orange vest. I'd usually be soaked by the time I'd get to the stand. First thing I'd do is strip to bare gitch and socks. I'd carry everything in a canoe tump pack. Out came the roll of paper towel. I'd dry all the sweat off my body, esp. my scalp. Used paper towel goes into a plastic bag. First thing on was Ice Breaker merino wool long gitch and top. Next is a light wool sweater and Big Bill thick wool pants. Then the fleece neck warmer and wool orange hat. Next goes another wool sweater and a gortex light shell over it. I wouldn't do the zipper up yet. Now I'd get comfy in the stand and take my wool hat off for about the first twenty mins. When I start to chill then I'd zip up my jacket and put my hat back on. The absolute essential is either a light sleeping bag or a heavy wool blanket. I'd drape this over my legs from my waist down. This makes a huge difference in keeping you warm. I swear by wool to breathe. Nothing is warmer. The 280 weight IceBreaker merino is tough to beat. I could sit all day like this and be toasty warm, even with snow on the ground. I walk in the dark with a Petzel head lamp to make sure I'm in my spot about 1/2 hour before legal. I always bring a big thermos of hot tea and a couple of peanut butter and honey sandwiches with some granola bars. Hunt in ground blinds. It's much warmer than going up a tree. I'd be very leery of trusting an old wooden stand. Not worth getting paralyzed falling out of it. All the crap about cover scents is totally overrated. Yes, wind direction comes in to play but the most important thing to learn is to sit absolutely still and you'll fill your tag. I've sat with friends before and was horrified at how much they fidgeted and moved the entire time we were sitting (playing with phone, digging stuff out of their pockets, quickly moving their heads, coughing, smoking, etc. ). They couldn't sit still for more than two minutes and they wondered why they weren't seeing many deer! You will not be capable of sitting still if you're not comfy and warm.