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Durable and handy!
The adjustment margin is really good, because the poles can be made longer/shorter depending on the terrain.
Works flawlessly on steep climbs, as a support in wading and to speed up steps on the flat.
They will definitely accompany you on hikes in the future.
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Walked through Satek with these, great buy!
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Otherwise good and quite supportive, but when used for skiing in winter, the bigger sompa of the left pole has already spun open twice during the trip and the sompa has dropped. Thus, the sompa is apparently fastened only with threads, not the most reliable system of all. Good as hiking poles, not the lightest, of course.
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Convenient poles for hiking and in winter with slippers. The package also has 100mm snowballs.
Length adjustment works well. The lock stays in place and does not open or drain during use.
Nice when two different colors were found, so we got sticks that stand out from each other.
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The old 15v BD synclinet starts to fall asleep so here's the update. They have skied and hiked. Slightly lighter these new. I use a tent that can be erected with poles and a little worry that these are somewhere in the terrain a hint of short for a good erection in my own tent. The problem has not yet come to the fore, but the length is at the limits.
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At first they felt heavy after the old, long-used light walking sticks. But once you got used to them and found the right length for each terrain then now they feel good and are in use every day. The wrist loops familiar from old ski poles are much better than those used in current poles. You should always think about how to thread them and which one is left and which one is right. I recommend very good walking and hiking poles.
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The walking stick is a walking stick ... This walking stick works as it should, but you might want a locking mechanism on your wrist strap. It adjusts the strap by pulling in either direction, but does not lock, so it may loosen on its own times - whether it is a nuisance or not depends on usage. It's nothing extraordinarily loose, but not so tense. I’m no Nordic walker, and for the first time I’m trying a walking stick on a hiking trip, so I’m probably not the most demanding user. But in other respects the rods seem completely objective - light and sturdy enough. The length adjustments work and their locks hold. There is no doubt that when wading across a river, such a rod is a better support than a fishing rod, for example.
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