This was posted 10 years 8 months 1 day ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

Related
  • expired

Pop up Ground Hunting Blind Tent 25% OFF, Now Only $75 Plus $17 Flat Postage Stock in Melbourne

40

The brand new professional pop up Ground Hunting Blind Tent with zero detection is excellent for hunting. With high-quality steel wire frame, weatherproof poly featuring wood camo, 4 small windows with removable mesh camo and 3 full view windows, our portable ground hunting blind tent can help you to conceal for viewing and shooting. Can be set up and folded easily in minutes.

Features:

With wood and leaf camo, perfect to conceal for viewing and hunting.

Durable steel wire frame and heavy 300D polyester fibre for windproof and water-proof.

With a large zippered door.

3 zippered full view windows.

4 zippered small windows with removable slotted camo mesh for easy shooting.

Black-out interior with bottomless design.

8 ground stakes and 4 tie down ropes to fix this hunting blind tent stably.

2 folding sticks with ropes to prop up the top of this tent. (simple installation is needed.)

Come with a portable carrying case with easy carrying belt and camo storage pocket.

Related Stores

Xhunter
Xhunter

closed Comments

  • +4

    Might get one for the kids… thanks…

    Are the assault rifles included ???

    • +7

      You cant hunt children with these.

      • +12

        not with that attitude

      • +4

        Correct, ice cream vans are far more effective.

  • +1

    Its just like a kiddy play tent but included raining death.
    How sweet.

  • -1

    the tent is free if you byo assault rifle

  • +5

    Would also be good as a camera hide for wildlife photography.

  • -7

    shooting defenseless animals with guns is really manly

    • +10

      You do realise that if a large number of native and non-native species populations were not controlled by humans they would overpopulate and starve by the thousands.

      Ever been to the interior? Most people think they'll see Kangaroos, Emus and Dingos but it's nothing but goats, goats, goats, camels, foxes, goats, rabbits, horses, bushpigs/boars, feral dogs and other assorted pests that do absolutely nothing but destroy the environment, displace native species and ruin crops.

      They cause millions of dollars of damage to the environment and farming crops (especially the introduced species but also the 12 million plus Kangaroos out there who form Biblical stampedes). Also, rural pest controllers primarily use poisons and traps these days.

      Most private hunters are highly ethical, law-abiding people (if you know anything about Australian gun and hunting legislation) and there's very few cases of unpermitted trophy shooting of native animals each year.

      Keep that in mind next time you saddle up the high horse to defend your media-ingrained image of cute and fluffy Bambi and her herd of innocent babies.

      • i dont disagree with you but some of these feral animls are selectivly controlled ie: camels they only ship males and older females so they have replacments to ship the next year. Some stations release stallions with the brumbys to upgrade the quality and size. All the grazing animals are easily controlled remove humans livestock and manmade water sources and protect natural water from non native and overpopulatd native animals.

      • +3

        I grew up on a farm and strangely killing animals was never referred to as "hunting" . If we needed food we went and got some or had a problem with feral cats/dogs we dealt with it but never "hunted" anything . If a farmer bought one of these and sat in a paddock waiting for roos/whatever to bounce by it would be the town joke for years . Pretty much what country people think of hunting townies with guns really .
        I would agree it might make a cool hide for photography .

    • +3

      Pigs are FAR from defenceless ;-)

      • +1

        I did want to add that something like a Red deer (which you find a lot of in rural VIC) is armed with some of the best sensory perception in the mammalian kingdom (way better than dogs), it can see, smell and hear humans a kilometre away if the wind is right and approaches 70km/h at full sprint.

        Deer can not only smell your air scent but your ground scent (i.e. the terrain you've walked on).

        Not to mention the males are +200kg and about as tall as most people (and extremely aggressive in mating season); so if you went toe-to-toe with one it wouldn't exactly be a level playing field. Being on the receiving end of those antlers would not be fun.

      • -2

        yeah, well i'd me more impressed if you said you were going to bare-hand wrestle with a pig, bear or crocodile instead of hiding in the bushes and shooting things from a distance and running away when they get too close.

        • +2

          Man is a tool user, always has been. It's why the Neanderthals perished miserably while Homo Sapiens thrived. All that brawn and brute force translated into a higher basal metabolic that was impossible to sustain during the Ice Age and food shortages, combined with their limited tool use meant every meal was a Herculean task.

          Meanwhile us smaller, less muscular, weaker Homo Sapiens survived and thrived by using the elements and environment against our prey and by being thrifty with our energy economy.

          Can't argue with 200,000 years of unparalleled evolutionary success I'm afraid, but do continue with your moral relativism about how "cowardly" hunting is; meanwhile virtually everything that you consume is a byproduct of a logistical and productive supply chain that employs hundreds of people and requires thousands of man hours of work just to deliver goods to your residence that you can haphazardly consume from the comfort of your soft furniture, while rambling about people who choose to take maximum responsibility for their sustenance.

          As opposed to you know, wandering around in the bush for hours, exposed to the harsh elements, carefully stalking dangerous wild animals who have no concept of political correctness, failing many times and then skinning/gutting the carcass; consuming roughly the energy deficit you need with little wastage and letting the remains fertilise the soil and feed scavenger animals, much like, I don't know, the natural circle of life?

          I'm going to go out on a limb and say you would only take issue with hunting done by Western folk, which is humane, efficient and clean (large diameter cartridge to the center of mass/head; virtually instantaneous death) as opposed to hunter-gather societies like the bushmen of the Kalahari who stab, butcher and rend their prey and string it up to feast on it and make trophies out of animal hides.

          well i'd me more impressed if you said you were going to bare-hand wrestle with a pig, bear or crocodile

          Notsureifsrs.

          Hunting is not done to impress chicks and it's a fortunate thing you were born in and continue to live in a city because with those kinds of survival instincts you'd struggle to make it through parts of Sunshine, let alone the wilderness.

        • +1

          I loved reading this!

  • Do they come in vending machine livery? I need it to hunt the most dangerous game… MAN

    • +1

      *MAN

      I see that and raise it to WOMAN.
      My ex would happily cut a man's knackers off with a blunt thong

  • -7

    I didn't even think there'd be a market for this type of product in oz? I guess there must still be a few brainless, gun toting hillbillies out there who like hunting. Each to their own.

    • +1

      Similar to the brainless fools watching TV or playing video games for hours on end.

      • Not really, I'm pretty sure nothing gets injured or killed in the virtual world.

        • +2

          Just the mind ;-)

        • +4

          Glad to see you're a 100% vegan/daoist monk who lives in the mountains and never eats anything but Kale.

  • +5

    "Don't kid yourself Jimmy, if a cow ever got the chance, he'd kill you, and everyone you cared about!"

    • Lol I have been stalked by a cow. Turn around and the thing bolted. Keep walking it stalked me again. It had the chance to kill me but was a big scaredey

  • +1
  • +3

    Would this make me better at playing Buck Hunter

    • I would pay 2 see this :-D

      • +2

        I would play buck hunter from in a blind if someone paid me for sure

  • where do you even go hunting, in NSW?

    • +1

      State Forests and private property. NSW is much, much bigger than the cities along the coast you realise? It's larger than many European countries where they have hunted for hundreds of years and continue to do so today.

    • +1

      Lives in one of the least populated and largest nations in the world; asks where you can go hunting. I worry about humanity…

  • +1

    No need to worry anymoreTuba. I'm pretty sure that male cow you saw was the last of its kind… All the remaining cows are female. At ease soldier, your work here is done.

Login or Join to leave a comment