foggy
5 year old buck +
Anyone have one of these blinds made in Alexandria. Price seems "right" and seem well thought-out for what they are. http://www.deerstandsdirect.com
I would like one box-blind on wheels.....so I could try different locations on my land (the grass is always greener - right? ;)). I think 6 feet high at the floor....and placed on a small rise.....would give me pretty good vision over the cover.
So make a trailer! You can use screw in anchors and guy lines to stabilize it once placed too.
I got a bunch of scrap plywood a couple years ago, I keep intending to turn into a couple blinds but never seem to make it a priority.
My bro-in-law and some other farmers have used an old hay wagon. they put a stand on it for season and taker the stand off for haying time.I would like one box-blind on wheels.....so I could try different locations on my land (the grass is always greener - right? ;)). I think 6 feet high at the floor....and placed on a small rise.....would give me pretty good vision over the cover.
The first one of these that I ever spotted was on a farm very close to your place and over 30 years ago. The farmer and his buddy would sit in the deer stand and play cards. Usually one of them would get a deer.That's what Tom's talking about with the running gear, but it wouldn't need to be that stout. Hay wagon's meant for hauling multiple tons of hay. A blind really only needs to be built with a reasonable safety margin, and typical construction would meet that easily.
There's a lot of mobile blind trailers out there, but all of the ones I've seen are over complicated and made more for rolling down the interstate. I'd be more inclined to build something on some skids and move it when the ground is frozen or add some wheels to roll year round, then keep it from tipping with guy lines.