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Thread: The "Gear I love" thread - An open list for good gear

  1. #61
    Unapologetic gun slut dannyb's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by MB View Post
    I made one out of a broom stick to try out. Useful where I hunt as steep slopes covered in loose shit. My boy managed to break it somehow(?!) and I haven't got around to replacing it. Took a serious tumble on my last outing, just knee, elbow and pride scraped, but could have been a lot worse. The stick would have probably saved the day.
    Go cut a couple straight manuka poles and let them season, then a quick sand and some boiled linseed oil and they are good to go, much much stronger than any broom stick (and more asthetically pleasing).
    I usually drill a hole near the top for a paracord hand loop.
    Always got a couple in service as shit happens and nothing is indestructible, they are definitely a game changer.
    GSP HUNTER, Micky Duck, MB and 2 others like this.
    #DANNYCENT

  2. #62
    Banned
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    Truck tire tube scope cover. Cut to make a 75 mm wide rubber band out of a 825/16 - 900/20 tube depending on scope length. Will keep lenses completely dry and protect the entire scope from scratches and impacts
    Bol Tackshin, Stag, imaca and 2 others like this.

  3. #63
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    Quote Originally Posted by dannyb View Post
    Go cut a couple straight manuka poles and let them season, then a quick sand and some boiled linseed oil and they are good to go, much much stronger than any broom stick (and more asthetically pleasing).
    I usually drill a hole near the top for a paracord hand loop.
    Always got a couple in service as shit happens and nothing is indestructible, they are definitely a game changer.
    Exactly what I am doing.

  4. #64
    Gone but not forgotten
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    Quote Originally Posted by akaroa1 View Post
    The generic Lanna / Luci inflatable solar lanterns have been a huge bonus in huts and tents

    No more kero or gas lanterns smell and noise
    No more using headlights in a hut or tent and blinding your mates
    I have heaps of these and some are likely 10 years old and still go great
    Weigh nothing
    Great to leave out on slow flash to find a tricky tips camp in the dark

    And best thing is super cheap
    A few hours a day of decent light and charged
    Cheers for that, I hadn't heard of them before.
    I bought one this morning
    johnd, 308 and Bol Tackshin like this.

  5. #65
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    The one thing that's always in my pocket is a Victorinox Climber pocket knife. Not sure what I value the most, tooth pick, scissors or blade. Amazing little multitool.
    Bol Tackshin, Sideshow and RV1 like this.

  6. #66
    Ned
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    Quote Originally Posted by dannyb View Post
    Go cut a couple straight manuka poles and let them season, then a quick sand and some boiled linseed oil and they are good to go, much much stronger than any broom stick (and more asthetically pleasing).
    I usually drill a hole near the top for a paracord hand loop.
    Always got a couple in service as shit happens and nothing is indestructible, they are definitely a game changer.
    I think I'm about to move to one of these over the 2 walking poles I've been using. The amount of control and leverage I experienced using 2 hands facing in opposite directions on a single staff is a lot more reassuring that one hand at the top of a walking stick.
    Moa Hunter and dannyb like this.

  7. #67
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ned View Post
    I think I'm about to move to one of these over the 2 walking poles I've been using. The amount of control and leverage I experienced using 2 hands facing in opposite directions on a single staff is a lot more reassuring that one hand at the top of a walking stick.
    yeah, for me a pole has to reach to about eye height on level ground, that way I can hold it in both hands like an oar on the descent.

  8. #68
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ned View Post
    I think I'm about to move to one of these over the 2 walking poles I've been using. The amount of control and leverage I experienced using 2 hands facing in opposite directions on a single staff is a lot more reassuring that one hand at the top of a walking stick.
    We are still talking about walking sticks right?
    dannyb, Bobba and XR500 like this.

  9. #69
    Member Bobba's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Micky Duck View Post
    the pink bit of para cord that lives on top of Megs dog pack...it saved the day yesterday when my bit of boot lace broke,so much easier and cleaner to bone out meat when its up a tree at chest height rather than down in the dirt and leaves..untill you drop it aye @amlnz LOL...

    so my best bit of kit...a bit of string somewhere around or over 30cm long.
    Yep string/ paracord etc. In my pouch is one length of 3-4mm cord that's a spare boot lace, guy rope, close line, pack fixer, meat hanger etc. Also have two 2mm short lengths just for hanging legs and meat bags etc. Makes butchering so much easier and cleaner.

    Will always remember a day with my grandfather out in the garage. He was working away at something while i watched and he turned to me and said got a piece of string, I shrugged and he said what sort of boy doesn't have string in his pocket.

  10. #70
    Member Micky Duck's Avatar
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    Bobba...thats like the old saying "a man without a knife is like a dog without a dick"

    taking that further..what is a dog that doesnt have a dick???
    thats right a bitch
    and I dont want to be anyones bitch LOL.
    Brian and Bobba like this.
    75/15/10 black powder matters

  11. #71
    Full of shit Ryan_Songhurst's Avatar
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    Things I like that I currently use, have used heaps of shit and I actually like this stuff..

    RAB Siltarp 2, excellent bit of kit and only shelter I use now

    Cactus Hector pack, bombproof

    La Sportiva Trango TRX GTX boots, all the support of any heavy leather boot I've had at half the weight

    Pocket shortwave radio, great for rainy days at camp can pick up something literally anywhere, listen to the news etc

    Garmin Alpha200i, topo maps, birdseye maps, inreach, sos, track the hound. One unit covers plenty of features.

    Delta Titanium 15-45 spotter. Can't get over how good these are for the money.
    308, hotsoup, RV1 and 1 others like this.
    270 is a harmonic divisor number[1]
    270 is the fourth number that is divisible by its average integer divisor[2]
    270 is a practical number, by the second definition
    The sum of the coprime counts for the first 29 integers is 270
    270 is a sparsely totient number, the largest integer with 72 as its totient
    Given 6 elements, there are 270 square permutations[3]
    10! has 270 divisors
    270 is the smallest positive integer that has divisors ending by digits 1, 2, …, 9.

  12. #72
    Member Sideshow's Avatar
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    My original Huntech gaiters. Yep I’ve changed out the zip but these things are just great.
    Over 25 years old and still going!!
    Name:  image.jpg
Views: 340
Size:  1.39 MB
    Micky Duck, hotsoup, norsk and 1 others like this.
    It's all fun and games till Darthvader comes along
    I respect your beliefs but don't impose them on me.

  13. #73
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    ive fgot a stick made of mahogany with my owncarved mallard head on top -that goes everwhere when im duckshooting -bloody good for probing benath rushes etc water for holes etc and occasionally i hang gear off it!helps me bloody walk too !especially in stinky muddy crap where im prone to arseups .ive another smaller one from a cedar branch bark stripped and oiled with vege oil.its used for closing curtains at night or me bedroom door . Ihad a couple of manukas but some b......d got down on em .my other manuka pole made a bloody ecellent shovel handle. imalso keeping eyes peeled for a length of la ncewood which i reckon properly treated would be the bucks nuts.

  14. #74
    Member Micky Duck's Avatar
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    lancewood makes really good shovel handle too....
    75/15/10 black powder matters

  15. #75
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    +1 on Lancewood for sticks. I've recently started cutting Lancewood branches for stick making. Experimenting with different drying / treating methods. Some I'll leave untouched and dry for a year, some I am lightly sanding, some sanding and rubbing with my own BLO/ wax mixture, some BLO alone. But even green they seem pretty good, light, straight and strong
    I used to laugh at people using sticks, but now I'm a convert. Not only can stop you falling down slippery slopes, but great for stream crossings, knocking dead branches / cobwebs etc out of your way, probing ground ahead to see if it's safe to walk on. Plus I can extend my reach and give the dog a nudge (not a whack) if I want him to get in behind (ie not running ahead to try and murder the other dog coming along towards us)

 

 

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