Average Weight for Day Hunts? What’s in Your Pack?

Joined
Nov 19, 2020
Messages
43
Depending on season and animal I am hunting. Elk or mule deer I am right around 20# with tripod and 15's, rain gear, water etc etc. Black tail closer to ten #'s since I don't carry my glassing gear and am wearing my rain gear.
 

Tick

WKR
Joined
Jun 2, 2017
Messages
323
15-17lbs. Add about 6lbs if I take a tripod/spotter.

Snacks, 2L water, kill, rain jacket, insulation layer, camera, gps, headlamp in pack for deer/elk.
 
Joined
Jul 31, 2018
Messages
63
Location
Central Colorado
For September elk in Colorado, most days I carry the following, stacked from bottom up:

First aid kit (Adventure Medical Sportsman 200 plus C-Splint, inflatable CPR mask and additional meds)
Kill kit (game bags, blades, flagging, 4 contractor bags, electrical tape, license, paracord)
Survival kit (firestarter, 3 AAA batteries, hand warmers, 2 Iodine tabs)
Trowel & TP
Rain pants (if rain is in the forecast)
Warm hat and gloves
Puffy jacket
Rain shell
Nalgene bottle
Water purifier press
Food

Weight is about 20lbs, though I have a Stone Glacier Solo on the way and will re-shape and weight the set up once it's here.

I'll carry a spotter and tripod, which adds about 10lbs, if I'm hunting open country for the day.
 
Joined
Nov 26, 2020
Messages
531
Location
Northeast
Feel like I need to improve my packing and gear selection but I figure our last hunt where I was just glassing most of the time my pack had to be over 30lbs. Between normal gear, food, glass, tripod and water it was a lot of stuff.
 

Gunaddict

FNG
Joined
Dec 10, 2020
Messages
88
23 to 25 lbs in my daypack.
No spotter or tripod. I carry more survival items, since my hunting partner got lost 18 yrs ago. He was missing for 14 hours. He did not have his daypack or a coat with him. When he left the p.u. it was 47 degrees and when we found him it was 32 degrees. He was very lucky.
 
Joined
Apr 3, 2013
Messages
77
I am right around 25#.

Tripod, BTX and water make up the majority of the weight. I love elk hunting because I can drop the Big Glass. Lol.
 
Joined
May 16, 2020
Messages
800
23 to 25 lbs in my daypack.
No spotter or tripod. I carry more survival items, since my hunting partner got lost 18 yrs ago. He was missing for 14 hours. He did not have his daypack or a coat with him. When he left the p.u. it was 47 degrees and when we found him it was 32 degrees. He was very lucky.
Yeah, I tend to think about what I'd need to survive, and of course that changes based on where and when. I was hunting late season cow yesterday and it was -3 at the trailhead. In those temps a twisted ankle could be deadly if improperly prepared. When I sat down to glass for half an hour the last thing I cared about was the extra few pounds in my pack.
 
Joined
May 9, 2019
Messages
471
23 to 25 lbs in my daypack.
No spotter or tripod. I carry more survival items, since my hunting partner got lost 18 yrs ago. He was missing for 14 hours. He did not have his daypack or a coat with him. When he left the p.u. it was 47 degrees and when we found him it was 32 degrees. He was very lucky.
This is another reason I always have a lighter and knife in my pants pockets at all times,and I'm not a smoker lol
 

accurat

FNG
Joined
Aug 12, 2019
Messages
61
Tripod, spotter, 40 oz of water, 2 knives, first aid kit, headlamp, backup AA light, nitrile gloves, rangefinder, small camera, multi tool, maybe a small camp axe, lighters, 100' of paracord, 5 extra rounds of ammo, 2 Clifbars, a bag of trail mix, 6oz of jerky and a few small miscellaneous items. (A 4oz flask of Willetts Small Batch 4yo Rye might be in there somewhere as well....in a titanium flask because, you know, I'm really trying to save weight damnit!! LOL!)) All packed in one of the older Camelbak HAWGs with 4 additional pouches, it comes in at 17lbs. This is for 4-8 mile, all-day out-and-backs for the most part, but I usually don't go all that far. Gotta have the gear at the ready though.
 
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