Mustangs Rule
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2021
- Messages
- 699
Usually I don’t hunt deer opening weekend. Tuesday or Wednesday are when I enjoy my first hunt, enjoy being the key.
I sat in a coffee shop as the deployment of hunters drove by. Many I think came in yesterday, yet still this morning there were lots on the road in town.
What struck me first was how special purpose the rigs were and obviously so expensive. Typically there was a large high 4×4 with a quad in the bed pulling a trailer with camping gear and another quad stuffed somewhere. Maybe there was a camper shell on the truck, then the trailer with two quads and some type of pop up pop out tent contraption.
I did the math per total rig,,,$60,000 plus minimum? When I was a kid lots of my friends parents bought GI homes, a basic Cape Cod that went for $5,000.
I longed for the days of a 4X4 Chevy Apache with a canvas tent thrown in the back. In the cab there were two guys wearing flannel shirts and jeans or old surplus wool pants.
In these new rigs each hunter was dressed from head to toe in camo. The total image had a military look to it, except if it were military the men would be in shape.
And where were they gonna go with fire road closures and so much wilderness not allowing OHV’s ?
Thank heavens for that !
I sat in a coffee shop as the deployment of hunters drove by. Many I think came in yesterday, yet still this morning there were lots on the road in town.
What struck me first was how special purpose the rigs were and obviously so expensive. Typically there was a large high 4×4 with a quad in the bed pulling a trailer with camping gear and another quad stuffed somewhere. Maybe there was a camper shell on the truck, then the trailer with two quads and some type of pop up pop out tent contraption.
I did the math per total rig,,,$60,000 plus minimum? When I was a kid lots of my friends parents bought GI homes, a basic Cape Cod that went for $5,000.
I longed for the days of a 4X4 Chevy Apache with a canvas tent thrown in the back. In the cab there were two guys wearing flannel shirts and jeans or old surplus wool pants.
In these new rigs each hunter was dressed from head to toe in camo. The total image had a military look to it, except if it were military the men would be in shape.
And where were they gonna go with fire road closures and so much wilderness not allowing OHV’s ?
Thank heavens for that !