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Hunting

Choosing the Right Optics for the Field

Key considerations to help you choose optics that align perfectly with your hunt.

7 min readApex Scope Gears Expert Team

Start With Your Use Case

The best field optic is the one matched to your specific application. A whitetail hunter in dense forest needs completely different glass than a sheep hunter in open alpine terrain. Start by defining your primary use.

Terrain and Distance

Light Conditions

If you hunt at first and last light โ€” when game is most active โ€” prioritize exit pupil and glass quality over raw magnification. An 8ร—42 with a 5.25mm exit pupil and ED glass outperforms a 12ร—50 with average coatings in low light.

Golden rule: Buy the best glass you can afford for your primary use. Optics that perform in the hardest conditions save hunts. Budget glass fails when it matters most.

Weight vs Performance

Every ounce matters on a 10-day backcountry hunt. But false economy in optics costs hunts. Prioritize glass quality over size reduction โ€” then optimize weight in other areas of your kit.

Complementary Optics

Consider a system: quality 10ร—42 binoculars for primary glassing, a compact spotting scope for trophy assessment, and a matched rifle scope for the shot. Each has a role โ€” don't try to make one optic do everything.

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