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Ghillie suits are the ultimate in camouflage, designed
to work so well that not even humans are capable of detecting an
experienced ghillie suit user. Soldiers in training have been known to
stalk unseen within a few feet of a sniper.
In short, the ghillie suit is the ultimate concealment tool. But, when and where do you really need ultimate concealment?
Obviously, a casual hiker doesn’t need a ghillie suit, but what
about the weekend hunter? Oddly, many people consider hunters in
ghillie suits to be the hard-core type that spend weeks in the
mountains to bag record game. However, ghillie suits are really
designed to be the weekend hunter’s friend. Even without a
ghillie suit, anyone can bag a nice buck, if they have a few weeks to
do it, but the casual hunter would be hard pressed to pull it off in a
short weekend. Unless, of course, he was outfitted with the cloak of
invisibility, otherwise known as a ghillie suit.
One might think that a rifle hunter would have no use
for a ghillie suit, as you must wear bright orange during hunting
season. However, as you may recall, most big game are colorblind, and
that means that the orange isn’t a problem. It’s the solid
outline. An orange ghillie vest on top of your regular ghillie suit may
be just what you need to break up your outline. While you don’t
need to get particularly close to your game when hunting with a rifle,
your range is still well under a deer’s ability to see you.
Okay, so you’re not a hunter. Why else would you
need a ghillie suit? There are many reasons, but the most outstanding
of them is paintballing. Any avid paintballer wouldn’t be caught
dead without his ghillie suit. Many would even say that, without their
ghillie suit, they would be caught, and they would be
“dead.” In essence, paintballers face the same problems
that hunters do: How to get close to your game without being spotted.
The effective range of most paintball guns is well under fifty yards,
and at that distance, you’re faced with two options to avoid
being seen. You can either hide behind something, listen to your
opponent approaching and try to judge his distance and location before
you pop up, and start blindly firing away. Or, you can get yourself a
ghillie suit. With a ghillie suit, you can calmly watch your opponent
approach to within ten yards.
Perhaps the biggest advantage ghillie suits offer in the
area of paintballing is that most suits cover your helmet, and a few
are bushy enough to cover your gun. Any paintballer, from amateur to
experienced, knows that the number one thing that stands out in the
woods is that pitch-black helmet, followed closely by the bulbous black
hopper or black paintball gun. You can either spend the extra money to
buy all these things in camouflage, or you can buy a ghillie suit.
I could go on, telling you about the military
applications of ghillie suits and such, but I think you are getting the
general idea. Ghillie suits, without a doubt, are the most effective
form of concealment out there today; just ask anybody who has one.
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