When You're Out There Alone, Your Gear Is Your Partner
Solo hunting strips everything down to what matters. No one to hand you a tool, no one to help drag an animal out, no one to call for help if something goes wrong. That means your field kit has to be thoughtfully built, well-tested, and ready for anything. Here's exactly what belongs in a solo hunter's pack.
Communication & Navigation
- Satellite communicator (Garmin inReach or SPOT): The single most important piece of safety gear for solo hunters. Two-way messaging and SOS capability anywhere on Earth, no cell service needed.
- GPS device or topo map: Know your terrain before you're in it. Mark your truck, your stand, and your entry/exit routes.
- Fully charged smartphone: Backup navigation, camera, and communication where service exists.
- Portable power bank or power station: Keep all your devices charged through multi-day hunts.
Safety & First Aid
- Tourniquet (CAT or SOFTT-W): Field accidents happen. A tourniquet can stop life-threatening bleeding fast.
- Hemostatic gauze: For wounds where a tourniquet can't be applied.
- Blister care and moleskin: Long walks in hunting boots take a toll.
- Personal medications: Allergy meds, pain relievers, any prescriptions.
- Emergency whistle: Three blasts is the universal distress signal.
- Space blanket or emergency bivy: Lightweight insurance against an unexpected night out.
Lighting
- Headlamp with extra batteries: Pre-dawn entry and post-dark exit are standard in hunting. Don't get caught without light.
- Backup flashlight: A small handheld as a secondary option.
Field Dressing Kit
- Fixed-blade hunting knife: Sharp, reliable, and easy to clean. Your most-used tool after the shot.
- Bone saw or folding saw: Essential for quartering large game solo.
- Rubber or nitrile gloves: Multiple pairs — field dressing is messy work.
- Game bags: Keep meat clean and cool while you work and pack out.
- Paracord: For hanging game, securing loads, and a dozen other uses.
- Zip ties and flagging tape: Mark your animal's location and secure gear.
Pack-Out Gear
- Quality pack frame or game cart: Solo retrieval of large animals is one of the hardest parts of solo hunting. The right pack frame makes it manageable.
- Extra dry bags: Protect meat and gear from rain and moisture during the pack-out.
Sustenance
- High-calorie snacks: Jerky, nuts, energy bars — fuel that doesn't require cooking.
- Water and filtration: A filter straw or squeeze filter for any water source in the field.
- Electrolyte packets: Especially important on warm-weather hunts or long pack-outs.
Clothing & Weather Gear
- Base layer, mid layer, outer shell: Dress in layers you can adjust as you heat up and cool down.
- Rain gear: Lightweight and packable — weather changes fast.
- Blaze orange: Required during firearm seasons in most states. Wear it, no exceptions.
- Warm hat and gloves: Even in early season, mornings in a stand get cold.
Build Your Kit, Know Your Kit
The best field kit is one you've used before. Practice with your gear at home. Know where everything is in your pack without looking. Test your satellite communicator before you're in the field. A kit you're unfamiliar with is almost as bad as no kit at all.
Solo hunting is one of the most rewarding pursuits in the outdoors — and the right gear makes it safer and more successful. Build your solo field kit at FieldToPeak.com — we carry portable power stations, headlamps, survival gear, and field essentials built for hunters who go it alone.
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