The official 2025 Wyoming elk hunt for Dave N thread.

Trekking poles are here. Now to get some practice time and get used to using them.

Broke out the bike and put in a few miles. Been a long winter. Wasn't feeling bad until I climbed the steps into the house. Ugh. Have to work back into it.
I make sure to have trekking poles if I have about 40lbs or more in the pack. Also if I backpack. My tent uses one for the pole.
 
Big old box of clothes showed up today. Now I'll LOOK like I know what I'm doing! Maybe. Boots are good. Rifle is ready. Lots of ammo. Trekking poles are set to length, ready to try them out. Spotting scope, pack and bino harness being borrowed. Planning to do an oil change in the truck before heading out. Getting restarted on my bike riding and sled dragging now that the weather has changed. I picked up a little winter weight that needs to go. Again. :rolleyes: Not easy at my age! Guess all I really need now is the tag itself!
 
I listed to Randy’s elktalk the other day about mountain tough. There is a spring sale in that right now. It would be a good use of the funds we raise to get on that for the summer. I am going to do it as well.
 
Dave,
Just think back a couple years when in Idaho and we were each packing two 5 gallon buckets of bear bait uphill. I doubt you have any "hills" like that around your place, so fill two buckets full of sand and drive to a town where there is a high rise building (at least 10 stories). You know what to do then, and NO you cannot use the elevator!

Bill
 
Dave,
Just think back a couple years when in Idaho and we were each packing two 5 gallon buckets of bear bait uphill. I doubt you have any "hills" like that around your place, so fill two buckets full of sand and drive to a town where there is a high rise building (at least 10 stories). You know what to do then, and NO you cannot use the elevator!

Bill
Couple DECADES ago now! :ROFLMAO:
 
I listed to Randy’s elktalk the other day about mountain tough. There is a spring sale in that right now. It would be a good use of the funds we raise to get on that for the summer. I am going to do it as well.
It is a super helpful program. They knew that at age 59, I wasn't going to be a fit gym rat. They used me as the test sample of how can a hunter regain the strength necessary to excel at the unique activity of mountain hunting. It wasn't about weight loss (I lost about five pounds during that programs). It was about functional strength designed for carrying 40-50 pounds, over uneven terrain, and being able to climb slopes with the same weight.

That's a simplification of the exercises designed to improve the strength, but it is not that complex. A lot of asymmetrical exercises. Lots of core strength building. A lot of balance improvement, as they saw in my assessment example how age brings a higher level of balance struggles. Mostly, a focus on the muscle groups most taxed in mountain hunting.

I'm back at it again this spring. I'm back to week Four. There are nine weeks in the course. The good part is that you don't need an elaborate gym setup. Most of this is done with simple items; a couple dumbbells and kettlebells, some resistance bands, a step up box or cooler, and a treadmill.

I have no interest in being a gym rat. I long ago realized that being an accountant is not conducive to any sort of physique. By the time you're in your 50s, your vanity, or even concern about vanity, is about 15 years in the rearview mirror. This is about being better in the mountains.

If you start at week one and you have to repeat each week before going to the next week, then repeat a week. You will see noticeable improvement if you stick with it.

If you don't catch one of their sales, you can use promo code RANDY and get a 30-day extension of the free trail period. That will get you a pretty good distance through the PP50+ course.

 

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