I didn’t grow up normal! I know that doesn’t come as much of a surprise to some of you but by normal, I mean I grew up dirt poor but happy – a case of you don’t know what you don’t have if you’ve never seen it.

I was the youngest of four boys so you can imagine that growing up poor your “hand-me-downs” where at least three generations old and most of the time older than that because my oldest brother got someone else’s hand-me-downs.

When it came time for deer hunting season, the biggest argument was who got to carry the shotgun and who got to carry the single-shot Remington .22 bolt action. Let me tell you a brief bit about each.

The shotgun, a 12-guage, was an ancient relic from Montgomery Ward. It was mostly held together with black friction tape and shooting the blasted thing was always a mystery. Never, ever shoot up over your head while bird hunting. There stood a better than even chance the barrel would fall off beyond a certain point. There were no sights. You simply looked over the top of the barrel and hoped that was good enough. I did shoot my first deer with than blunder bust.

The .22 Remington was a beauty but none of us young boys had the strength to pull the bolt back so it could be fired. It didn’t matter much as nothing less than a precisely placed shot would do little more than annoy a Maine whitetail deer. In most states now it is illegal to hunt deer with a standard .22 caliber rifle.

If all us boys wanted to go hunting on Saturday, which I’m sure my father hoped wouldn’t happen, two of us had to walk along and carry lunch.

My father had traded his way into the ownership of a Winchester Model 94, .30-.30, lever action, saddle rifle. He got it for $8.00 and he gave the guy a haircut to boot. The owner said no one could hit the side of barn with that gun but my father proved that statement wrong many times over.

Ammunition was also a bit of a mystery come hunting season. Most of the time whoever got to take the 12-gauge got one 00 buckshot, one 0 buckshot, a slug and some number six shot that I think Christopher Columbus brought over with him. We had a 1/2 dozen rounds of .22 long rifles. It was what we could afford. If you wanted to live, you did NOT waste ammunition.

For hunting garb we wore whatever we had. No special pants, shirts or jackets. Back then hunter orange wasn’t even heard of but a few “rich” people were wearing red hats and jackets.

Fast forward about 47 years and my how things have changed. A quick visit to the Cabela’s web site and you can quickly see that only a few thousand dollars and you can have the very latest and greatest in the long line of gimmicks and gadgets to increase your chances at bagging a trophy buck.

Here’s what it now available for the “average” hunter, to name only a few:

1. Scent elimination, clothing and soaps
2. Scents and lures. I think they even now have scents for each day a doe is in estrus.
3. Radios
4. GPS
5. Binoculars
6. Riflescopes
7. Laser sights
8. Spotting scopes
9. Range finders
10. Game finders – special lighting to help you track wounded game (a good thing)
11. Night Vision
12. Trail cameras
13. Specialty ammunition for every occasion
14. Black Powder – It isn’t so primitive anymore
15. Game calls
16. Shooting sticks and by-pods
17. Blinds
18. Tree stands
19. Grow your own food plots, feed and special minerals to grow your own herd of trophy deer
20. Game feeders
21. About 2 gazzillion Cds, DVDs, books, magazines, etc. to tell you exactly how it’s all done.
22. Or, hire a guide and have everything set up for you.

And this only scratches the surface.

While at hunting camp this fall, a brief discussion was started about all this stuff. This discussion quickly turned to one of ethics. For those that know me, I don’t like to go down that road because ethics is something that I believe shouldn’t be legislated but taught.

So, ditching any discussion on ethics, the one question I do have is whether all this stuff actually gives a hunter that big of an advantage? And, if so, does one’s financial status provide more of a hunting opportunity than someone who can’t afford any of this stuff? And is this right? (I hate to use the word fair because nothing is fair)

Does anyone know of any hard data that can support any hypothesis about success rates due to gadgets and gimmicks or is it really just a negligible difference? Isn’t tried and true hunting knowledge, scouting and knowing the terrain you hunt and the habits of the game you chase a better way to seriously improve your chances of success?

What do you think?

Tom Remington

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