As I said before, as with most hunter’s, I am constantly trying to improve my gear. One of my primary objectives though, is to make that gear myself whenever it makes sense. This seat is no exception. It took a bit of research and trial and error to get it right, so I thought it might help others who like to hunt on the ground and are looking for a good, comfortable, portable hunting seat.
This one took me a good 4-6 hours to make with a second day of tweaking for another couple hours.
It works sitting on all 4 legs or leaning against a tree of blow down.
Once again I started with a separate set of shoulder straps and wound up going back to the backpack straps. The backpack can still be easily removed (although I doubt I ever will) but one shoulder strap doesn’t snap, so it means removing the strap out of the buckle and rethreading it to put it back together.
The purple strap (off an old life vest) just hold the leg up if it’s carried by the backpack handle.
The DIY Hunter’s Pack Seat (Take Two) is also a few ounces lighter than the other version at just a tad over 5#. (without the backpack of course)
As with the first one, the seat is made from 100% of material I had in the shop. The poles are actually the lumber stickers used to stack my green lumber off the sawmill, some canvas left over from the target project, and a piano hinge from I don’t know where.
The canvas is just fastened by folding it over to double or triple it and fastened with 1″ sheetrock screws and small washers.
The canvas is dyed with
Fiebing’s leather dye and the wood is stained with some left over stain that’s been in the shop for 30 years or so. All just to help concealment. I did a lighter spot/camo type wood stain so it wasn’t quite so consistent and dark as the first one.