Know-How: Bring Your A-Frame

by
posted on December 29, 2016
** When you buy products through the links on our site, we may earn a commission that supports NRA's mission to protect, preserve and defend the Second Amendment. **
bring_your_aframe_f.jpg

Is the reign of the layout blind coming to an end? More hunters are starting to think educated ducks and geese have learned to spot layout blinds and avoid them.

So what can you do when birds flare from your coffin-style blinds as though the Grim Reaper were standing in your spread? Leave the layout at home and get into an A-frame blind instead. You may never go back to lying on your back.

I’m not suggesting you toss the layout in the trash, but it’s time to admit the layout is not the do-it-all solution it once was. For most situations in which a layout system would be used, a simple A-frame blind, constructed of T-posts and two sheets of chicken wire covered in grass, deployed in an “A” shape for concealment, can be more effective for piling up the birds. Here’s why.

• An A-frame blind, commercial or homemade, can conceal more hunters than a single-man layout blind. You can build an effective A-frame that will hide 4-5 hunters for less than the cost of a single layout blind.

• Regardless of crop color and crop height, an A-frame blind can be placed in any field. Despite its apparent size, an A-frame is easy to hide and can be adapted to blend into many different landscapes by adding some of the surrounding natural vegetation the same way you would conceal a layout. Once set up, it resembles a swath of tall grass or uncut crop, which farmers commonly leave untouched in low or swampy locations.

• An A-frame blind is more comfortable because it allows you to sit on a stool rather than strain your back in a lay-down position. Once the birds are in range, simply stand and shoot. And because hunters are more elevated in an A-frame, they have a larger range of motion for shots in front, to the sides and behind.

• A single A-frame blind is more portable than four or five layout blinds as all of its components—T-posts and grassed poultry wire—can fit into a single, Beavertail-style drag sled. Once in the field, setting it up is fast and easy. Simply hammer in the T-posts with a mallet, and place the grassed poultry wire on top of them. Add some natural veg to the outside, set your seats inside and get ready to pound the birds.

Latest

Decoy Spread
Decoy Spread

7 Sure-Fire Ways to Fail When Hunting

Looking to come home from the field empty-handed? Simply follow one or more of these avenues to failure.

First Look: Radians Outdoor's Heated Mossy Oak Bottomland Apparel

Radians Outdoors is cranking up the warmth this season with new heated gear in Mossy Oak Bottomland, the legendary camouflage pattern trusted by hunters for more than 35 years.

5 Black Friday Sales for Hunters

Looking for some hunter- and outdoorsman-focused sales as we swing into the holiday season? Look no further than the great sales and deals going on at the retailers below.

Hardware Review: Riton 5 Primal 3-18x50mm

Check out Frank Melloni's Hardware Review on the Riton 5 Primal 3-18x50mm.

Duck Hunting Haven: Conservation in Colonsay

Delta Waterfowl’s mission is on full display during a hunt for ducks, geese and cranes in Colonsay, Saskatchewan.

Hunter Missing 20 Days Found Alive

Sixty-five-year-old Ron Dailey, of Selma, Calif., was found alive on Nov. 1 after spending 20 days and nights stranded alone and cold in the Sierra National Forest. What began as a one-day deer hunting trip that began on Oct. 13 turned into a life-and-death situation after a series of mishaps while driving to his destination.

Interests



Get the best of American Hunter delivered to your inbox.