I use the short Lane's tubes for pre-weighed powder charges. For the bullets, I fit them into the appropriate sabot for that caliber and slip them into a long Lane's tube, bullet first. Three bullet/sabot combos to a long tube. I use another long tube for loose primers plus I have a couple 9-nine primer silicone blocks filled with primers. The tubed powder, tubed primers and tubed bullets go in a zip lock and then in my coat pocket. One of the primer blocks goes in the same pocket and the other in a pants pocket. I'm primer obsessive. I want them available everywhere.
If I get a hit on a deer, the first thing I do is focus on where that deer was standing at the shot. I'll study that spot for 5 minutes or more if the deer has run. I need to know exactly where the critter was and I'll spent an inordinate amount of time focused on that spot. ... during which I get the goodies out of my pocket and reload pretty much by feel if the deer is out of sight. When the bullet is seated, I swap the bag for the primer block, then I take my eyes off that spot to prime and then get out of the stand.
A deer that drops at the hit is one thing. One that runs is quite another and the best of things to happen is to focus on that spot and load while you focus, which means whatever system you use to carry the loads has to be darned near fool proof. I have used my system for over twenty years.... it's as much of an engrained thing to do as my breathing. Finding a deer that runs after being hit starts right where it was standing and if your re-load takes your eytes off that spot, half of what might find that deer will be lost.
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