Welcome to Way Up West Outdoors! We’re the Laughters. Follow along one video at a time as we adventure through seasons not just here in Idaho. Preparation for all seasons take place year round in our house. Fitness and hard work are the ethos of our hunting style. Primarily you’ll see us with bows in hand but we aren’t afraid to use a boom stick on occasion. When we aren’t at our day jobs you can bet we’re in the woods - together. As you could guess, hunting with your spouse takes ample patience. Learning to navigate the well deserved ups and many inevitable downs of hunting has bound us together stronger than our wedding vows. For the record, it’s not pronounced laughter - it’s like daughter but with an L. 😅 - Steven & Jess
📍Idaho diy | public land | western big game | archery | sheds | fitness
If you run into that platypus bag breaking/getting holes for your dirty water like mine did, look into replacing it with the cnoc bag. Definitely an upgrade
Congratulations! Very well done. And thank you for making the film so concise nothing but the facts not a bunch of loud obnoxious music. Very nicely shot and edited.
Do you mean the thoughts on the two puffy jackets I brought ?? Or do you mean the Lost Park Parka (the big Kifaru one) that’s synthetic vs bringing a down jacket?
The LPP has been hands down the warmest/most durable puffy we’ve ever ran. It is synthetic and it’s pretty robust so a little heavy but worth its weight. Half zip over a full zip to keep in heat and be more cozy. I brought the small and light BP to hike in and buck wind while hiking. You can hike in the LPP if it’s close to 0°. But it’s a key glassing piece to keep ya warm and protect from the wind.
The Elk (Cervus canadensis), also known as the wapiti is a large deer species native to North America and Eastern Asia, it is the largest of the six extant deer species constituting the genus Cervus and the second largest deer species alive today, with only the Moose (Alces alces) being larger, the closest living relative of the elk is the Hangul (Cervus hanglu) that resides in Central Asia, there are fifteen known subspecies of elk: the Tibetan Elk (Cervus canadensis wallichii), the Kansu Elk (Cervus canadensis kansuensis), the Sichuan Elk (Cervus canadensis macneilli), the Mongolian Elk (Cervus canadensis mongoliensis), the Alashan Elk (Cervus canadensis alashanicus), the Tian Shan Elk (Cervus canadensis songaricus), the Manchurian Elk (Cervus canadensis xanthopygus), the †Korean Elk (Cervus canadensis coreanus), the Siberian Elk (Cervus canadensis sibiricus), the Roosevelt Elk (Cervus canadensis roosevelti), the Rocky Mountain Elk (Cervus canadensis nelsoni), the Tule Elk (Cervus canadensis nannodes), the †Merriam's Elk (Cervus canadensis merriami), the Manitoba Elk (Cervus canadensis manitobensis), and the †Algonquin Elk (Cervus canadensis canadensis).