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#1
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I assume some of you have owned more than one wading staff, and at some
point said "I wish I bought this nice one before those pieces of crap I owned before". If you wanted to skip all the crap, which one(s) would you buy, and why? |
#2
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JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
I assume some of you have owned more than one wading staff, and at some point said "I wish I bought this nice one before those pieces of crap I owned before". If you wanted to skip all the crap, which one(s) would you buy, and why? http://tinyurl.com/yfa7pe You can take the rubber tip off. Ironwood is hard enough that you don't need it. |
#3
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JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
I assume some of you have owned more than one wading staff, and at some point said "I wish I bought this nice one before those pieces of crap I owned before". If you wanted to skip all the crap, which one(s) would you buy, and why? If I wanted to skip all the crap, I wouldn't buy anything. When I need a wading staff I look around for a nice stout stick, use it for the day then leave it next to the path for the next guy. -- Ken Fortenberry |
#4
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JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
I assume some of you have owned more than one wading staff, and at some point said "I wish I bought this nice one before those pieces of crap I owned before". If you wanted to skip all the crap, which one(s) would you buy, and why? I've only owned one, a Folstaff, and I've been unhesitatingly happy with it. It folds up out of the way when I'm not using it & it's rock solid when I am. At the time I bought mine, there were two models and may still be. I bought the larger diameter (3/4"). My buddy bought the 1/2" and was sorry. He always felt it was too slender & he didn't trust it. I've heard numerous negative testimonials here on ROFF about the handles coming off, the elastic breaking, and the sections getting stuck; but none of that has happened to mine. Joe F. |
#5
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On Wed, 15 Nov 2006 22:11:34 GMT, Ken Fortenberry
wrote: JoeSpareBedroom wrote: I assume some of you have owned more than one wading staff, and at some point said "I wish I bought this nice one before those pieces of crap I owned before". If you wanted to skip all the crap, which one(s) would you buy, and why? If I wanted to skip all the crap, I wouldn't buy anything. Yeah, sure, obviously you've no need, but how's that gonna help Joe? When I need a wading staff I look around for a nice stout stick, And If he were you, that's exactly what he could do, too... use it for the day then leave it next to the path for the next guy. Well, whaddayaknow... I would have bet big you just stuck it back up your ass... IAC, if a folding staff isn't necessary, a replaced ski pole makes a good staff, and if you don't ski, they can be had for little or nothing at charity shops all over N. America and lots of Europe. And a length of heavy-walled PVC with a glued cap on one end and threaded cap on the other makes a combo rod protector/staff. TC, R |
#6
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"rb608" wrote in news:1163628767.334051.175480
@k70g2000cwa.googlegroups.com: I've only owned one, a Folstaff, and I've been unhesitatingly happy with it. It folds up out of the way when I'm not using it & it's rock solid when I am. Ditto. You have to learn the trick about rolling the joint (so to speak) against your knee should it lock, but overall a great product that requires no thought or effort to deploy, which is the most important part. -- Scott Reverse name to reply |
#7
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On Wed, 15 Nov 2006 21:55:24 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom"
wrote: I assume some of you have owned more than one wading staff, and at some point said "I wish I bought this nice one before those pieces of crap I owned before". If you wanted to skip all the crap, which one(s) would you buy, and why? The same heavy-duty model (3/4" diameter tubing) Folstaff I've owned for a decade or two... /daytripper (and *don't wax the ferrules*, for the love of God! ;-) |
#8
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#9
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![]() "Scott Seidman" wrote in message . 1.4... "rb608" wrote in news:1163628767.334051.175480 @k70g2000cwa.googlegroups.com: I've only owned one, a Folstaff, and I've been unhesitatingly happy with it. It folds up out of the way when I'm not using it & it's rock solid when I am. Ditto. You have to learn the trick about rolling the joint (so to speak) against your knee should it lock, but overall a great product that requires no thought or effort to deploy, which is the most important part. -- Scott Reverse name to reply Same here. Thanks for the "rolling the joint" trick to get the thing apart. That is the only negative I have. The staff is at least 20 years old and I don't know how long the stretch chord inside will last before it deteriorates. So far, so good. Guy |
#10
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simms collapsible
-- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
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