*zap*
WKR
Big. game stagger steps., very safe but heavier....two feet on top step is no problem. The design is very aider friendly.
It's not just you. I bought a set of 3 years ago thinking they were the ultimate stick (or so the LW fanbase would have you believe) only to ask the same questions as you after a few trips in. I sold them for what I paid for them (again, thanks to the LW fanbase...).So I have both LW sticks and Hawk Helium sticks. I started out this season using my LW sticks because:
a. The Heliums had not arrived (gotta love covid)
b. I wanted max distance up the tree
c. Thought the one "step" system would be optimal.
After using them for about 4 weeks now, I am scratching my head and wondering why anyone owns them at all. Why?:
1. They are dreadful to carry in. Long, bulky make a lot of noise even if padded just unloading and taking them down.
2. The single step system seems sub optimal given you can't stand both feet at the same level at any time.
3. The long nature of the sticks makes them sometimes top/bottom load given a growth or change in the tree along the run - which is a bit dangerous.
After looking into aiders and other augmentations, I am beginning to wonder why anyone carries such long sticks in? Am I missing something?
About to sell mine an buy a cheap pair of API's to mod along with my Hawks.
I cant understand how anyone could say the lone wolf sticks are loud? What are you guys doing beating them on the side of the tree the whole way up? lol
I love mine but I'm not a fatass and use an ropeman ascender and have never had a problem with them only having one step on top.....so maybe thats the difference.
I use 4 of them and can get to a platform height of 20' pretty easily. All of mine have rope modifications as well.
All things aside, I normally just use my assault hand climber 95% of the time and I am up the tree and have my bow in my hand in less than 5 minutes. Why people bother with sticks when there are straight trees to climb 15 feet away never made sense to me but to each their own.
Asking those prices you'd think he would at least have them TMA certified. I don't care if he had an independent lab test the strength of the carbon fiber. He's skipping around getting real certification done. I'll pass.Check out the Timber Ninja sticks. They are carbon fiber and are so light it's pretty ridiculous. They bite very solidly on a tree, including smooth bark trees. They're not the cheapest option, but carbon fiber anything isn't cheap regardless. I'd gladly sell my LW sticks after using the TN's this season.