What Makes a Better Deer Blind
- Lauren Joerg
- Feb 7
- 2 min read
The best blinds are built around the things hunters notice after hours in the stand.
A deer blind can look good from the outside and still miss the mark once you are sitting in it.
That is usually where the truth shows up.
After a few hours in the stand, you start noticing the things that either make the hunt better or get in the way.
A window that is too loud.
A door that fights you.
A shelf that does not sit where you need it.
A tower that feels too narrow.
A blind that feels thin, hollow, or worn out before it should.
A better deer blind is not just about having four walls and a view.
It is about how the blind works when the hunt is actually happening.
The body should be strong enough to handle weather, movement, and years of use. The windows should open cleanly and quietly. The door should be easy to get through, especially when you are carrying gear. The inside should give you room to sit, move, store what you need, and stay focused.
The small things matter because hunters spend real time inside a blind.
Comfort matters.
Visibility matters.
Quiet operation matters.Access matters.
Storage matters.
Long-term durability matters.
That is why The Charro was built the way it was.
The fiberglass body and gelcoat finish were chosen for strength and longevity. The oversized door makes getting in and out easier. The overengineered windows are built for smooth, quiet operation. The carpeted shelves, integrated gun slots, removable floor carpet, jacket hooks, drink holders, and available solar setup all came from thinking through how the blind would actually be used.
Not for one hunt.
For season after season.
A better deer blind should make the day easier, quieter, and more comfortable without asking the hunter to work around bad design.
That is the difference.
A blind should not just be something you sit in.
It should be something that works with you.
That is what makes a better deer blind.
That is The Charro.




























