- Page 104 of 104 - Journal of Mountain Hunting

The Most Versatile Mountain Camo Pattern Part One – An Objective Multi-Environment Comparison

The hunting apparel industry has evolved considerably over the past few years, nowhere more so than in the mountain hunting sub-segment. Technical fabrics designed to excel in higher output hunting scenarios have been combined with

Sambar Down Under, By James Barben

This hunt began many months before driving into the Alpine National Park, northeast of Melbourne, Australia. I knew it was going to be tough both mentally and physically, in part because the terrain is steep,

Temptation at Timberline, By Justin Stark

Like many hunters, Labor Day weekend is one of the most anticipated weekends of the year for me.  It was especially so last year. As busy as I was with work, this would likely be

So You Wanna Hunt Sheep? By Dustin Roe

Sheep hunting is without question one of the most physically and mentally demanding hunting experiences available to the mountain hunter.  Whether we’re talking the snow white Dall’s of the Northwest, the ghostly Stone’s of BC

An Interview With Kyle Nickolite, Producer/Editor at SICMANTA

www.DonnieVincent.com Over the past few years the bar has been reset in the hunting film industry.  The days of incessant “kill porn” and repetitive, shamelessly unimaginative content are giving way to the works of a

Rise of the Hunter Athlete

In the past few years the concept of the hunter “athlete” has thankfully begun to replace the media popularized stereotype of the blood lusting, beer swilling redneck shooting deer from the lawn chair in the

Ibex Shooting In The Thian Shan Mountains, By George L. Harrison Jr.

www.historyofhunting.com In the late winter of 1908, Chew and I decided on a shooting trip in the following summer to the Thian Shan Mountains, in Chinese Turkestan, where we knew there were many ibex—carrying the

The Ultimate Mountain and Wilderness Expedition Vehicle? AEV’S Brute Double Cab

www.aev-conversions.com There’s no question that if we could hunt remote fly-in, float-in or pack-in locations all season every year each and every one of us would.  But at the end of the day, that’s just

An Interview with Kenton Carruth, Owner and Co-Founder of First Lite

www.firstlite.com Wool has been a staple of the outdoor adventurer’s kit for millennia, first worn by our primal ancestors in the form of woolly skins from the wild sheep they killed for food. Nature’s true

A Good December, By Charles E. Erickson, Jr.

For several years, I had been helping a friend of mine by the name of Mick Holder with cow work and such on his ranch in Gila County, near Globe, Arizona. I have been in