Show Us Your Hiking Staves

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Thought this might benefit from a 5-year bump given one or two recent threads so lets see what you've made and are using please.

Will try and put a pic up of my 2016 go-to stick tonight.

Cheers

K
 
Excellent thread. This is something I will probaby have a go at this year. I get bouts of gout (bad in my foot) so will be handy to pop something in the car for dog walks etc.
 
For Christmas my sister bought me a chestnut stick mounted with a beautifully carved walnut crook featuring a badger.

It's really too nice to get muddy! :dunno:
 
I've hiked with a walking stick for over 50 years but about 7 or 8 years ago I switching to carrying a cane. I find hiking with a cane less fatiguing than hiking with a walking stick. My arm hangs straight and I can shift more weight to the cane. I like a longer cane for rough terrain and on the sides of mountains and a shorter cane for groomed trails.

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I found that after a while I'd get into a wood and the 'stick head' would start :rolleyes: and I'd spend so much time looking for the perfect, straight or bent stick, that I'd miss out on the rest of the wood. So now a days if I don't take a stick I just cut the first one that will do, but leave it as I leave, for the next explorer without one

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I use mine as a prop when I need to cross a burn, or when the ground is uneven or icy. It's also a known length so I know how deep the puddle/bog/quagmire is before I step forward. It's handy for pulling down branches, or holding bramble stems out of the way when foraging. It's stability, and extra reach and I can tie stuff onto it and carry it over my shoulder too.
Farmers and shepherds use theirs with livestock (handy for us too, to chase away something too aggressively nosey)
I can prop it up, drape a waterproof over it, and it's an instant shelter from the rain for a brew up too.

Useful things are sticks :)

M
 
:D You have a wonderful collection Dan :notworthy:

I am growing a honeysuckle up an ash hoping that I might get a useful stick from it in time :)

M
 
Here's mine, it's about armpit height. The staff itself is dog rose, the handle is antler, that was on my late fathers walking staff, he found it about 45-50 years ago. To bridge where the antler meets the staff I used a plumbing olive. The end cap is from a 12 bore shotgun casing. Due to change the staff as it's developed a split . Just looking for the right bit of wood.

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Boogers to photograph but here are a couple of my single sticks for hunting with a rifle. They are a little over 7ft. The one on the left is holly and has seen heavy use for some 7 years. The other was cut this year and is hazel. The weight difference is distinct as you would expect.

As already mentioned they not only help support the rifle when taking a hurried or otherwise off-hand shot but are invaluable when working through undulating and slippery ground.

The leather knotting permits a better grip of both stick and rifle. Simply stick first finger through a loop of the right height and use the remaining pinkies to cradle forend.

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Thanks, I've since fitted it with a leather wrist strap as I use this for support in uneven woodland, helps me when I do my rounds in the woods as the area is classed as a wet woodland but a better description at the moment is a swamp.
 

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