First lite sawbuck pants? upland hunting pants question

AFenny11

FNG
Joined
Jun 1, 2020
Messages
43
Hey All, I'm looking for a pair of pants that would be suitable for upland hunting mid-late season in the midwest. Need to hold up to walking through cattails, briars, and take a brush up with barb wire without shredding. Just looking to upgrade from the typical brush pants that are blue-jean with the carhart-like covering on the thighs. Anyone use the FL sawbucks for this? If they would work and also double as a mid/late season tree stand pant would be a bonus.
 
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Joined
Apr 8, 2019
Messages
1,796
Wife got me a pair for Christmas last year. They held up well for rabbit season. Havent had a chance to use them for anything else. I didn't test them on any barb wire. I plan on using them for doves and quail this year too.
 

NDGuy

WKR
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Feb 13, 2017
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3,907
Location
ND
Anyone have updated experience with these? I need a new pair of upland pants.
 

Superdoo

WKR
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Feb 21, 2020
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ND
In the fall I’m always spending the majority of the day in chaps. If you’re looking to stretch to late season chaps will keep you much warmer.

I have no experience with the sawbucks. That being said, for the money you have a ton of options. What’s making you want SBs in particular?
 

Bigboone1988

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 28, 2018
Messages
249
Location
IL
I wore the sawbucks last season for pheasant/deer hunting in IL and they held up great. Only thing I dont like is my legs get wet on the damp mornings but they dry out quickly.
 

NDGuy

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I wore the sawbucks last season for pheasant/deer hunting in IL and they held up great. Only thing I dont like is my legs get wet on the damp mornings but they dry out quickly.
That was my worry with them being that guide pant material.

I am thinking I may go the chap route or just something cheaper like the Browning pant
 

ChrisAU

WKR
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Jan 12, 2018
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SE Alabama
Wore mine yesterday putting out cameras and minerals. They are worlds above carhartts or traditional updland pants in high temps IMO, much more comfortable and keep you much cooler.
 

Tater86

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 3, 2017
Messages
174
Location
Pennsylvania
I've worn a lot of brush pants over the years and the Sawbucks are far and above the best I have ever worn. They move with you and are not constricting. I've used them extensively since they came out and they still mostly look brand new minus the dirt and grime stain from falling into a swamp. Bear hunting here in PA is very brushy and thorny. I'm not sure what the one section was of thorns, but they were longer than barb wires and there were no issues going through them, no pulls, tears, etc. As far as wetness, they are DWR coated and will shed water and when I fell in the swamp, they dried extremely quick.
 

NDGuy

WKR
Joined
Feb 13, 2017
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I've worn a lot of brush pants over the years and the Sawbucks are far and above the best I have ever worn. They move with you and are not constricting. I've used them extensively since they came out and they still mostly look brand new minus the dirt and grime stain from falling into a swamp. Bear hunting here in PA is very brushy and thorny. I'm not sure what the one section was of thorns, but they were longer than barb wires and there were no issues going through them, no pulls, tears, etc. As far as wetness, they are DWR coated and will shed water and when I fell in the swamp, they dried extremely quick.
I just am unsure if I want pants that get wet/damp. In ND, usually have snow on the ground by November so I'd be pissed walking around with wet pants all the time.
 

Tater86

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 3, 2017
Messages
174
Location
Pennsylvania
I just am unsure if I want pants that get wet/damp. In ND, usually have snow on the ground by November so I'd be pissed walking around with wet pants all the time.
I've worn them in the snow/rain and never felt like they were wet or damp. Nothing like carhartt or jean type brush pants. Those things feel like a wet soggy diaper walking around. The only time they felt damp, as noted above, is when I feel in a swamp. It was leaf covered and I didn't notice it. I wasn't wearing gaiters so moisture got up both sides of my pants. I don't think there is anything on the market that wouldn't have felt the same.
 

NDGuy

WKR
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Feb 13, 2017
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I've worn them in the snow/rain and never felt like they were wet or damp. Nothing like carhartt or jean type brush pants. Those things feel like a wet soggy diaper walking around. The only time they felt damp, as noted above, is when I feel in a swamp. It was leaf covered and I didn't notice it. I wasn't wearing gaiters so moisture got up both sides of my pants. I don't think there is anything on the market that wouldn't have felt the same.
Thanks man. I ordered some after reading a few threads guys seem to really like them and they seem pretty versatile.
 
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