Yeah, what they said.
GPS can open a whole nother world of possibilities and fun for your hunting, and all other outdoor stuff.
A few short years ago, my wife wouldn't get beyond the sight of the rig or camp for fear of getting lost. Then we got all GPSed up. The change was incredable. She is now a long distance land navigator, and confident with or without me in the toughest country.
Hers is an Etrex Legend, and mine is the older, plain Jane E-trex. (no bells and whistles) We also have a couple of old Magellan 310s that we got on Ebay cheap. Use em for backup, loss, or friends who need one.
We hunt in country that is pretty flat, very big, and has just enough trees to hide distant land marks. A real pro with a compass would have a very hard time finding the same place twice, and wouldn't get much hunting done in the process. We can now go to and meet each other at pre-determined points, find where the rig is parked, or simply hunt to camp without missing by a mile and backtracking.
We still carry compass and maps, and use them in conjunction with the GPS. Also carry spare batteries.
Mrs. jd is now the best hunting partner I could have, and we get real hunting done instead of wasting time looking for each other or finding our way back to a kill.
I've got macho buddies who claim they don't need a GPS, and I wouldn't even turn them loose where we now go. jd