|
Camouflage is an interesting and fascinating subject. Sure
to evoke opinion from the elusive hunter and raise pointed
questions by the outdoorsman that has successfully harvested
game wearing a plaid flannel shirt and jeans, brown duk overalls
or standard issue military surplus. Camouflage, by definition,
is the art of making one inconspicuous amongst their surroundings
whether it be in the thick, lush green vegetation of spring
green-up, tan cattails of the duck marsh, sun bleached western
prairie grasses, a fresh blanket of snow or hidden in the
shadows of dawn and dusk.
The most diverse camouflage will enable one to blend in with
their natural surroundings independent of geographical location.
However, camouflage or more importantly, effective camouflage
is more than sticks and leaves or an artist's rendition of
nature. In order for a camouflage pattern to be truly effective
and work to your advantage thus increasing your ability to
get closer to game animals, your choice of camouflage must
obey certain principles of concealment and laws of physics.
Currently, there is a host of camouflage designs on the market
that aesthetically appeal not only to the outdoorsman and
casual hunter but the suburbanite as well. All camouflage
is not created equal. As hunters and conservationists,
we must not fall prey to savvy marketing techniques but rather
make an informed decision based on scientific principles as
it relates to the art of concealment and physical deception.
The Science
When it comes to science I'm hopelessly committed. If I
am good at only one thing it is separating marketing poppycock
from science. Marketing is what often drives sales but
is the story accurate or is some slick marketer trying so
separate me from my hard earned dollars?
.Before we examine the desirable qualities of effective
hunting camouflage, we must first understand certain principles
as they relate to perception of our environment as humans
and ultimately our quarry. These tenets are based upon brain
physiology or the way our brain processes our environment.
A few terms one must understand to fully appreciate effective
camouflage are primary vision, secondary vision, positive
space and negative space. These terms and the application
of these terms will ultimately determine your ability to be
visually unnoticed afield. The untrained outdoorsman begins
his day afield with glamorous expectations practicing secondary
visual techniques by default usually learned from the host
of videos, fireside stories or glamorous field shots observed
at the local sportsman's club coupled with his lack of field
experience.
Secondary vision is employed when a hunter looks for
complete images of subjects he hopes to observe such as a
buck standing broadside. He scans an area and perceives his
environment based upon preconceived ideas and mental images
of what he thinks, believes or hopes he will see. Many times,
the novice has missed what is truly present due to his focus
on his desired sights. .
Primary vision, on the other hand, is when an individual
does not rely on preconceived images of what he should be
seeing but is acutely aware of his physical surroundings.
Shed hunting is a great example of the contrast between primary
vision vs. secondary vision techniques. An individual skilled
and accomplished in shed hunting is not looking for that typical
main beam of the shed but rather has trained himself to pick-up
on partial objects associated with antlers or irregular patterns
of nature.
Another practical example of primary vision are military
snipers. They search for nuances that relate to the object
they are seeking. These individuals undergo rigorous training
to deprogram themselves from observing their environment with
preconceived notions of what they should visualize but rather
scanning and looking for that minute disruption of the natural
environment.
Positive space vs. negative space: positive space
is matter which physically occupies space. More specifically,
positive space objects are those items that naturally draw
our attention such as trees, large bushes, dark objects, man
made objects with definitive lines and angles or out of place
structures found in nature and the most alarming to prey,
the predatory human being and it's silhouette. Positive space
can generally be defined as that which interrupts negative
space. Negative space, on the other hand, is that space between
positive space objects.
Mammals have a tendency to be drawn to positive space objects,
not only physically but visually. Next time you are outdoors,
scan an area and make a mental note what you are visually
drawn to when gathering visual information. Chances are, without
conscious thought, you will visually pick up on that which
is positive space.
Camouflage Considerations-What Science Works
With this basic knowledge, your desired camouflage pattern
should possess the following qualities: A, light in color,
base that absorbs yet softly reflects the majority of available
surrounding light. The light base color should have a high
contrast color superimposed on it, resulting in a large patch
appearance to assist in vision disruption.
The large patch appearance is in contrast to the commercial
tendency of many small blotches or highly detailed images,
dark in nature, which completely blend together at distances
greater than 12-15 yards creating an unmistakable outline.
The contrasting darker colors should consist of geometrically
designed shapes that flow with the natural habitat causing
the brain to connect the dots, so to speak, naturally concealing
you in your hunting environment.
This configuration shifts you, the human predator, to a
negative space entity, in part. By reflecting versus absorbing
available light, your camouflage will allow you to become
part of the current natural habitat not only by breaking up
your outline but allowing you to bear natural shadows and
reflect light much the same way the coat of a whitetail magically
causes it disappear among sparse vegetation while standing
still.
A.S.A.T (All Season All Terrain)
Deer and other game animals have mental images of their natural
predators, their lives depend upon it. The number one predator
of white-tailed deer in Pennsylvania is man. Therefore, it
is critical to your success that your predator outline is
broken up or disrupted.
The principles of effective camouflage were first introduced
to the commercial market in 1986 with ASAT, All Season
All Terrain camouflage. This pattern contains the colors
predominately found in nature: black, brown and tan and was
unlike any pattern previously created. These colors were and
still are configured in a way that is congruent with what
is naturally observed in nature yet not drawing attention
to the individual wearing the camouflage.
The base color is a yellow-band tan that is one of the few
colors that will primarily reflect its environment. The light
toned base color has been recognized by the US government
in the creation of the newest camouflage worn exclusively
at this time by the USMC. It has been acknowledged by the
United States government in the development of this new camouflage
that it is important for ones camo to be adaptive to its surroundings,
taking on a 'color shift' towards its environment by reflecting
it. ASAT proved this over 20 years ago.
In addition, the predominant black and green in previously
issued US uniforms have actually drawn unwanted attention
to the wearer. This observation has resulted in the wearer
becoming perceived as positive space or an identifiable object,
in essence a natural visual target.
Unfortunately, many commercial camouflages are created to
represent that which is positive space, especially those that
decorate you specifically as a tree and/or its limbs. This
is in stark contrast to the science based ASAT pattern.. Another
oversight of many commercial camouflages is the tendency for
the schematic of the pattern to blend together or blob out
at distances greater than 12-15 yards and use black or green
as a predominant color of the pattern. As a result, one again
becomes a visual target for approaching game by becoming positive
space and unnecessarily attracting attention. This, I believe
is impossible with ASAT.
When a camouflage pattern incorporates a negative space
perceptive schema and is visually disruptive so that you blend
perfectly into your surroundings, you have successfully increased
your odds of getting that clean fatal shot to your quarry.
If you frequently hear the claim "The animal looked right
though me and kept on feeding", you know that camo is
doing its job and it's probably ASAT.
Now here is a question you can quietly answer in your own
head. Are you wearing a camo pattern because some "TV
Hunter" wore it or maybe your buddy has some
or
are you wearing camo that is based on science? Are you a cookie-
cutter hunter or a predator?
asatcamo.com
|