I have spent a lot of time in the Rocky Mountains, from New Mexico to Canada, Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, Utah, Idaho, fishing, camping, canoeing, back packing, wildlife watching, never hunting, and it is a totally different environment than the eastern deciduous forest. Beautiful, and completely different. Especially the surface. That may seem obvious, but I think it in part explains "why such a long learning curve." Which sounds judgmental as hell. Jiminy crickets. If you have ever tried to climb one of our steep, rocky, leaf covered, fall-on-your-face slippery, heavily timbered mountain sides, and then tracked a wounded animal up or across, you would understand what I am talking about. This is a far more challenging and varied surface than anything I have seen in the Rockies. The thick leaves break up blood trails and hide hairs, heck half of the leaves are already red and look like blood is on them. Walking here, or sidehilling, is a contest between Will I fall and break my neck or will I fall and break my gun and then break my neck? Evidence of a black powder hit is not so easy to find, even if it is right there in front of my face. And we are used to watching deer go right down when we shoot them through shooting lanes between the trees with modern centerfires. Connecting the dots out here after a shot is very different than in the wide open Western spaces or those spruce forests. Don't judge people, and don't write things here that make it sound like you are judging them. You ain't squat, and neither am I. We are here on this website to learn from each other, have fun, and pick up cool gear before it gets onto the bigger web. See ya around