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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
In ear hearing protection
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<blockquote data-quote="Buck Buster" data-source="post: 1369352" data-attributes="member: 99718"><p>Huh!, I can only hear out of my right ear, and it has sever loss also. I worked in a very loud steel mill for 43 years, the first 10 or 15 years we didn't wear hearing protection or hard hats the only requirement was steel toed shoes. Now I wear a hearing aid in my right ear, every thing that I hear, I think its to the right regardless of the actual direction. All I can say is protect your hearing while you can, when its gone it isn't fun. Spring gobbler hunting I keep moving around the tree that I'm up against trying to figure out what direction the gobbler is coming in on. It is better hunting in a ground blind, the birds don't see you move. As far as shooting now, my hearing aid only lets a certain amount of noise into my ear to protect it from further damage. Good luck hunting and be safe.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Buck Buster, post: 1369352, member: 99718"] Huh!, I can only hear out of my right ear, and it has sever loss also. I worked in a very loud steel mill for 43 years, the first 10 or 15 years we didn't wear hearing protection or hard hats the only requirement was steel toed shoes. Now I wear a hearing aid in my right ear, every thing that I hear, I think its to the right regardless of the actual direction. All I can say is protect your hearing while you can, when its gone it isn't fun. Spring gobbler hunting I keep moving around the tree that I'm up against trying to figure out what direction the gobbler is coming in on. It is better hunting in a ground blind, the birds don't see you move. As far as shooting now, my hearing aid only lets a certain amount of noise into my ear to protect it from further damage. Good luck hunting and be safe. [/QUOTE]
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