I am confused by the appeal of these new 4 pt sticks. Conventional sticks are much faster, easier to adjust to a moving target, and with a little practice, easily capable of 300+ yard shots.
Fellow Hunters,
I am +1 with WAB, AZDAVE and perhaps others, on the shooting sticks topic here.
I have tried this newest trend, (multi-point shooting sticks), shown below in the first photo.
If this design is what some members are endorsing, (possibly called “Quad Sticks”), I salute you for being able to sort these out and set them up quickly on rough ground.
And I mean no disrespect to anyone for the following description of my disappointing experience with them.
“One man’s bread is another man’s poison”.
At the rifle range, while standing on a flat concrete slab, once I finally got them set up, these were somewhat more stable than the simple bipod type shooting sticks.
“Somewhat” being the key word here, not a huge amount more stable.
Then, away from the hard flat surface, I found them not only too slow to deploy but, quite unsteady on rough ground as well, a veritable see-saw / teeter-totter of frustration and lost opportunity.
I fully admit that I am possessed of little to no fine motor skills.
In other words, I’m a knuckle dragging oaf.
Nonetheless, I can shoot well from field positions, including from standing with bipod.
Therefore, I will stay with what works for me, the simple bipod type of shooting sticks.
I’ve made them, literally from sticks (bamboo is my favorite) and duct tape.
Then later, a vacuum cleaner rubber drive belt in place of the tape.
I also have a stand up length bipod that I made from two, 6 foot long plastic garden stakes, again bound together with a smallish rubber drive belt.
Said garden stakes are about .45 inch or 11.5 MM in thickness.
These home made shooting sticks are too long and awkward to carry anywhere except from home to rifle range and back again.
Shown in my 2nd photo attached below, are my store bought shooting sticks.
These are very portable and very light weight.
They’re made by Stony Point and not only inexpensive but well made and surprisingly sturdy considering their low price (at least low price back when I bought them).
Other companies make very similar simple but sturdy bipods as well.
Stony Point was the least expensive of the well made ones at the time I bought mine.
Anyway, I guess that’s about all the news that’s fit to print around here.
Cheers for now,
Velo Dog.