Blaze & Daze

buckaclark

Well-Known Member
If you really want quality glass, look at Leupold brand. They're one of the few times I've really spent some heavy coin and been happy with the results. They run 175-500 bucks but have really good anti fog coatings and optical quality lenses. Monacular lenses don't offer very wide site pictures but are easy to pack in a fanny pack or jacket pocket. All my good rifles have Leupold glass on them for scopes and some are more expensive than the actual rifle. Good stuff. Here's a good article they did discussing the numbers for binoculars and what they really mean.
20230416_173648.jpgWind river 10 x 23. 13 ounces and 20 years old.
 

GreatwhiteNorth

Global Moderator
Staff member
This is what I am seeing . One of the ranges, from a canyon trail I did today. It’s all just going to disappear so quickly. In need of some binoculars. Anyone have any suggestions?.
thanks.
I've tried all kinds of binos during my guiding days & if you REALLY want to see, you get what you pay for.
I tried Zeiss and Swarovski & settled on the Swarov's - and the view is incredible edge to edge, they were in the $1800 range but spectacular!
If you can't see it, you can't hunt it & I've easily spotted Moose, Bear, Sheep, Caribou from well over 2 miles away with my 8.5 X 42's.
I also put a Swarovski scope on my main hunting rifle that has the same beautiful optics - never been more satisfied.
 
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