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Hunting
Physical Training For Mountain Hunts & Backpacking
Trekking Poles
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<blockquote data-quote="dok7mm" data-source="post: 1637215" data-attributes="member: 90080"><p>Amen to the trekking poles and clear cuts. Those clear cuts are anything but clear, an accident waiting to happen! </p><p></p><p>Nearly as bad, are the thinning cuts the Forest Service makes. Rain and snow move them into rafts of solid 3-4" down timber. Impossible to walk on, you just have to skirt around them. At 71 years, good poles are a blessing hiking up to timberline. I keep saying I'm gonna hunt lower, but I always end up @ 9500 ft. I couldn't do it without poles.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dok7mm, post: 1637215, member: 90080"] Amen to the trekking poles and clear cuts. Those clear cuts are anything but clear, an accident waiting to happen! Nearly as bad, are the thinning cuts the Forest Service makes. Rain and snow move them into rafts of solid 3-4" down timber. Impossible to walk on, you just have to skirt around them. At 71 years, good poles are a blessing hiking up to timberline. I keep saying I'm gonna hunt lower, but I always end up @ 9500 ft. I couldn't do it without poles. [/QUOTE]
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Trekking Poles
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