Posts Tagged ‘ghillie suits’
Turkey Hunting Secrets
If you are a beginning or intermediate turkey hunter, you might have found out that it’s more difficult than it seems. The turkey out in the wild, even with it’s name, is a difficult bird for someone to stalk and hunt. The turkey has an unexpected intelligence level and keen vision and it’s survival skills should not be underestimated. It can take years for a hunter to advance the qualifications it takes to close in on and sneak up on a turkey. However, with a superior kind of camouflage, you can greatly increase your odds in turkey hunting and have the edge. This allows the hunter to close in enough to take a shot by lowering the visibility of the turkeys.
For the person on the field, the most efficient form of camouflage out there is the ghillie suit, which was developed over one hundred and fifty years ago in the woodlands of Scotland. It is a suit you can place over your regular clothes to significantly transform your form and significantly decrease your visibility to game in the wild. Pieces of fabric like jute or burlap hang down all over the suit, making it very difficult for animals to see you. This makes a human wearer meld in to their environment by breaking up the pattern and human frame. If a hunter is being really quiet, the ghillie camo can be so efficient that it’s possible for unsuspecting game to wonder right up to them.
The ghillie suit assists turkey hunters by breaking up human patterns and bewildering the turkey’s acute sense of sight. To prevent an injured turkey from scurrying off in the woods a hunter must get in a range to get a quick kill shot to achieve success. A person stalking the turkeys can cut this distance between themselves and a rafter of turkeys by walking patiently and keeping low to the ground.
Read the rest of this entry »
The Secret to Fruitful Turkey Hunting
You may have found out by now that hunting turkeys is harder than it appears if you’re a beginning or intermediate hunter. A turkey in the wild is a hard bird to hunt and pursue, even with it’s name. They may have a humorous name, but the turkey has an unexpected intelligence and sharp vision. It is extraordinarily hard to get close to and sneak up on a turkey and can take many years for a hunter to cultivate the skills it takes to perform this difficult task. However, with a superior form of cover, you can significantly raise your odds in turkey hunting and have the upper hand. This decreases the visibility for the turkeys and allows the hunter to get in close enough to make the shot.
For the hunter out on the field, the most effective kind of camouflage out there is the ghillie suit, which was developed over 150 years ago in the forests of Scotland. It’s a suit that you can place over your regular clothes to drastically alter your form and dramatically lower your visibility to animals out in the wild. Strands of material like jute or burlap hang down all over the suit, making it hard for game to locate you. This blends the pattern and frame of the human wearer and makes them meld in to their environment. Ghillie camo is so efficient that it is possible for animals to come right up to a wearer that is being perfectly quiet.
A turkey’s fine sense of sight is confused when human patterns are broken up with the assistance of a ghillie suit. In order for a person to successfully hunt a turkey, they must get in a range to have a kill shot to impede an injured turkey from scurrying off in the forests. By moving patiently and keeping low to the ground, a hunter can close the distance between them and a rafter of turkeys.
It is ideal to try and find turkeys at night as they are preparing to roost. It is really hard to stalk a turkey. In fact, there’s a good chance it’s already seen you if you spot a turkey on the field. It is challenging to sneak up behind them because they not only can see a great distance but also have a broad range to their vision. To keep predators from sneaking up on them, a group of turkeys will face each other in a circle to cover all angles of the field.
Read the rest of this entry »
The Ghillie Suit; a Sharpshooter’s Most Essential Asset
Anyone knows what camouflage is, but fewer people have seen a ghillie suit. And unless you are looking very carefully, you may not see it period. Landlords would hire guys to go around their property and repel illegal hunters in the beginnings of the ghillie suit. They were called ghillies and would make suits from old rags and frayed textiles to hide themselves in the brush and wait for poachers.
Today a variety of operations, from combat sharpshooting to paintballing are performed in the ghillie suit. The technology remains the same even though the textiles have changed over time. The modern ghillie suit wearer looks like a pile of sticks when they are being still and can remain undetected even when the opposition or target comes within a very close range to them.
Ghillie suits have been associated with sniping because of their simple concept and high efficiency. The act of sharpshooting started around the time of the end of the eighteenth century. Guerillas would shoot at opposing armies from far-away areas to destroy and break the spirits of the enemy. Sharpshooters came about when rifles became more accurate and sharpshooter could be more than 100 meters from their mark.
The implementation of shooters in military engagements changed the the technique in which battles were fought. Officers would stand with battalions and give orders during battle before the deployment of snipers. As more and more commanders were assassinated, troop combat went from direct encounters to more sheltered, flanking techniques. Commanders had to attempt to blend in with the common soldiers to avoid being shot. covered areas such as woods and mountains became the choice area over open areas as shooting tactics became more prevalent. As more ferocious and far-away tactics were used in combat, the rules of engagement that troops before stood by was abandoned.
Read the rest of this entry »
A Ghillie Suit; a Sharpshooter's Most Essential Item
Everyone has heard of what camouflage is, but far fewer people have seen a ghillie suit. You might not see it at all unless you are looking hard. The ghillie suit dates back to Scotland when barons would pay men to patrol their properties to repel illegal hunters. Ghillies, as they came to be known, would get in the bushes and wait for poachers in outfits they would craft from rags and frayed materials.
Nowadays ghillie suits are used for a number of activities from the deadly act of sharpshooting to the much less deadly game of paintball. The materials used have changed but the concept behind the covering remains the same. Even when the enemy or mark comes within a really close range to them, the modern ghillie suit wearer can remain unseen and look like a pile of sticks in the forest.
Ghillie suits have been associated with sharpshooting because of their straightforward concept and high effectiveness. Around the time of the conclusion of the eighteenth century the art of sniping began. To destroy and break the spirits of the enemy, rebels would pick off targets from far-away areas. Snipers came about when weapons became more accurate and a shooter could be over one-hundred meters from their mark.
Read the rest of this entry »