Welcome to Kountryfried Outdoors. We are a group of friends and family who share a love for the outdoors. This channel is a passion project for us to share our outdoor experiences from private to public land. In the end we hope to encourage and inspire others to get out and enjoy nature, all while having a good time doing it.
Pretty sad you lie your way u have no past experience and u stole any knowledge of this from the owner of BuckStik and completely stole the idea from Chris and u don't harvest any deer but one of a ranch be real and synthetic products are garbage
Pretty sad you lie your way u have no past experience and u stole any knowledge of this from the owner of BuckStik and completely stole the idea from Chris and u don't harvest any deer but one of a ranch be real and synthetic products are garbage
James has definitely forgotten more information about mock scrapes than most people would ever know. He’s a great resource for us to raise the bar, and was an amazing guest!
For once....just once,i would any(ANY) off these tryouts/reviews to NOT talk of anything else but the product they are reviewing....just once. I'm here for the specific item,all the others i have seen or will see(eventually). 🥴🙄🤠
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Thank you for the feedback. We are glad to hear that you found this video helpful! I was really happy with this pack during our 2023 backcountry elk hunt!
@@KountryfriedOutdoorProductions yes sir! It’s the most helpful video I’ve found so far. How many pounds were you able to carry comfortably? And how many pounds could you carry for several miles if you had to?
@TheCarson65 Unfortunately I didn’t get to pack out an elk with it yet. During training hikes I would carry 60+lbs of weight in the pack for a couple miles at a time. During the hunt, our pack in was just about 4 miles with about 2,500 feet of elevation gain. I had about 55lbs of gear and water on the pack. No problem on comfort, especially once you get it fit just right. The pack was with me throughout the hunt. I just cinched it down and used it as a day pack as well. I would say that pack could potentially haul more than the average person can physically carry.
titanium if you climb K9 so every gram is important but for average joe and on You Tube is 95% of us camping hiking guys Titanium is not necessary as TI is very soft material and will get damage so easy on end of the season you will have something that looks like Water bottle :-)))))) regular one plastic is enough and even than is outrageously expensive, 30$ they charge for extra filter so basically you pay 70$ for piece of plastic that holds water ....
There are a lot of options out there to make your kit yours. Sawyer, Katadyn, MSR, Steripen, all make great products and I’ve used products from each line. The Sawyer Squeeze is great, but it’s a filter only. I still need to carry an additional item to sterilize or purify the water especially in more crowded places. The Grayl Geopress and Ultrapress are purifiers. I like the Ultrapress Ti version as it doubles as a cook pot, meaning that’s one less piece of gear for me to carry. Weight isn’t a major issue, more than space and duplicating things I don’t have too.
Thanks for sharing your experience. So far I’ve used mine in several different environments to fairly inhabited regions of Ohio to backcountry Colorado. So far no issues. Have you tried contacting Grayl themselves?
Sorry for the delay! I wasn’t 100% sure about fluoride, so I wanted an answer straight from Grayl. The Grayl does filter out fluoride to about a 20% reduction.
Thanks for the heads up on the new adapter for my fletcher. What is with the monster racks mounted in the furnace room? Get control of the wife and move them upstairs!😂
@KountryfriedOutdoorProductions Harvested 3 doe this season. My son harvested 2 so far. Now he's got his sights set on a buck he calls DIEGO. Congratulations to you and your son on an absolute great season! Happy Holidays to you and yours.
Thank you for this video we could not figure out how to open the battery compartment for the life of us and it was not in the manual. We were trying to use a screwdriver you saved as a broken compartment.😂
I think $100 for the standard grayl is completely fair given the high standard their filter is manufactured with. At $200, with $25 titanium cook pots on the market, you are really only spending $75 on the ability to save space. And If you’re already storing stuff in a $25 cup I could see it technically not saving any space That being said I have no self control and I want it so badly
Thanks for your thoughts on this. I agree that when you first see the price, it can be a bit of sticker shock. They had a promotion going that if you purchased the Ultrapress Ti, you got Grayl’s Titanium dining set for free. That really help make the price a little more palatable. After using the product, I would buy it again.
That is a legitimate concern. I didn’t have any tipping occur, a couple times my heart skipped a beat, once it hit a full boil. It did get a little “wobbly”. I was near the stove and as soon as it hit a boil I turned it off.
Great review! We love our Badlands packs. I wouldn’t hesitate to put Badlands in the premium category of packs. For the size of the MRK6 only the Kifaru packs are noticeably lighter the rest are right around the same.
It does have openings on each food portal to use anchors. They aren’t much bigger than a thicker tent stake you would use for a canvas tent. Definitely could make the unit a little harder to walk off with.
Was skeptical if mature bucks would use it but they do. Have had some nice bucks stand at it and eat over an hour at a time and on some days they show up at the feeder several times a day. So now i use 3 of them. Absolutely love these feeders. God bless
We hear you! In our experience older bucks tended to avoid feeders, or if they did visit it was well after dark. In personal observations, I have noticed increased buck activity at the TruStumps.
I have always ran with the arrows forward, so I don’t really have any personal experience with a rear facing quiver. Forward facing has always worked for me.
Oh my Gd Thank you. As a trad guy, the most annoying thing about these targets is the advertising about the " 60 yard shot " comparison. Now for you compound guys it might be different because of your pin placement and selection. For me it's no different than shooting my hog or bear target at 15 to 20 yards. I'm still gapping just low of center. If it was actually 60 yards I'd be about 10 feet higher and lucky at all to hit it. Aside from that I love everything else about the target, We even had one at our local out door shoot just to mess with your ranging. The first few times you shoot them they mess with you. The large moose messes with me too trying to range it, but that's another story