Best light trekking poles?

After breaking 3-4 Cascades in the last few years I broke down and got some of the Durston Iceline's. Hope these last me more than one mountain hunt lol.

Have you used your durstons much yet? I just ordered a pair
 
Have (since- posting) read alot of stuff about trekking poles... my brother uses Peax backcountry elite. I remember trying them and having sore hands quickly because of the grip orientation vs my stick. With my stick, which is about eye -level in height, I reach out while stepping and let the pole slide through my hand (You like that, don't you?!) before reaching stick out again at next step...

This grip thing is what i am not sure i can get used to... I will just have to try some out to see if I can. Maybe I ll stick with my stick - it has helped me out on many bucks and several elk packouts.

Still appreciate your feedback on which poles work for you all.
@highcountrymuley -

If you're gripping the handle on your trekking poles, you're using them wrong. The strap is what supports your hand, not the handle.

This guy give a long, but great explanation w/examples, give it a click and take a look: GREAT TREKKING POLE TUTORIAL

Hope this helps!

JL
 
I am a fan of Durston gear but his poles have some issues. They look great but I don't think they would survive a backcountry mountain hunt. I use BD alpine cork....heavier but have survived a shitload of others I've tried.
This video starts out with his failure of the Iceline poles.


Randy
 
Wow, multiple fails with the Durstons......he lambasts those for almost 10 minutes.

I think we need to factor that any trek pole can fail in those boulder hopping conditions. The end of the pole can get hung up in the rocks and it doesn't take much to break it.

The UL BD aluminum pole I broke was on a gravel road- steep downhill and I was moving pretty fast. My bet is a shorter man that doesn't have the pole extended close to the max wouldn't have had a problem.

I am surprised there is a complaint on those Montem poles at my link....those suckers are strong even with a big/tall guy like myself.
 
I run the LEKI Legacy Lite COR-TEC AntiShock, not sure if they even make them anymore but at the time they were 35% lighter than any other poles Leki made. They’re extremely durable and the anti shock works great also very quiet on rim rock and other rocks when trekking through rougher country.
 
Yup—BD Alpine Corks; they're certainly lighter carbon poles, but with nearly a 100 lbs on your back and side-hilling, the Alpine Corks are the only ones I'm trusting
 
I've used the crap out of a pair of alps mountaineering momentum carbon trekking poles. Hard hikes, backpacking, rucking, lots of rocks, wilderness hunts with 60# pack.
Weight is 14.5 oz pair.

I broke the tip on one the first year, got a free set under 1 year warranty (super easy warranty process). Didn't have high hopes for them after that, but have been using them hard for 3 years since then with no issues.

Appears they aren't making that model anymore and have gone to the alliance aluminum/carbon hybrid model. I'll give those a try when it's time to replace. They are under $100.

Wife uses Costco Cascade. They felt a bit heavy for carbon when I checked them out. She's not going to be very hard on them so good choice for light duty use.
 
I run the amazon cascade cheapies and honestly work great. I broke one of my leki and for me spending the money on expensive poles just isn't high on my list.
 
Black Diamond Carbon Distance Z Poles for me ultralight and have been durable. One my second set with each lasting 6-7 years. Current pair has well over 500 miles on them of hiking, hunting and some ultra-marathons.
 
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