I have used two fiberglass golf clubs with the heads off of them and drilled out and glued in field tips for grab. To connect them I used castrating bands and the grips are in place for padding. Easy win with cheap or broken golf drivers!
I use my trekking poles as a bipod. If you wrap the straps around the opposite pole they make a good rest. If I’m in a hurry I just shoot from one resting on my hand.
Various forms of optic stabilizing apparati populate a significant portion of my hunting/shooting collection. Absolutely mission critical in my opinion. Per usual, you gentlemen are on it.
I shot a boone and Crockett mountain caribou in Northern BC this year off of one of those tripod trigger sticks. It was absolutely rock solid. I'm a big fan.
I've been using shootings sticks for many, many years and consider them essential items. I hunt a lot from the ground and shooting sticks give me a stable shooting platform. I don't leave home without them.
@@zacadelic7247 A Primus fully adjustable Trigger TRIPOD Shooting stick is about the best at an affordable price here in the UK at £100, or go to a similar product by BOG at around the £290 price. There is plenty of choice & prices.
I have the bipod primos trigger sticks. Used them as a walking stick and love the quick adjusting it does. Carried them in my mule deer buck hunt last few weeks and will carry them this coming mule deer doe hunt later this week great for rolling hills. Will shoot prone off my pack any chance I get but it’s a great backup. .
Over here in germany most people have standing shooting sticks for stalking. Especially in flat areas they increase the angle of the bullet hitting the groud thus providing a better backstop. Which is quite practical in highly populated areas like many parts of germany are.
I agree with you. Here in England we have the same need for backstop in populated areas. Quad shooting sticks work very well for both stability and increased angles.
Absolutely essential piece of hunting equipment, I gave up on bi-pods entirely this year also. Sticks are so much more versatile. - I use Blaser Carbon Quad Sticks.. You need to try these!
I just took a mule deer a few weeks ago using the same sticks that Ryan has. I ditched my bipod at the last minute and went with those Easton's. Lightweight, fast and easy to use.
My preference is definitely for trekking poles because you have one piece of gear that is more versatile. There’s a way to interlace the wrist straps on them to function the same as the rubber grommet on the purpose built ones. Makes for a great cradle for your rifle
I like the Vanguard shooting sticks for ground blind hunting. Snipe Pod sticks for mobile hunting. Still carry an atlas bipod in my pocket for the occasion that I can use it.
Yeah man I like them a lot if I don't have something to rest my rifle on... I hunt mostly in box blinds or climbing stands so I have a good rest but I use those pop up ground blinds or brush in a ground blind every now and then and when I do a shooting stick is mandatory in my opinion. I use the primos sticks kind of like what yall have here but they're a monopod style. Great video guys as always keepem coming!!!
I am a firm believer in supported shots. So is Jeff Cooper. In his book, "The Art of the Rifle," he states that you should never rely on off-hand shooting. You can practice, if you want, but always seek a support and successful shooters do. So, I hunt with a regular Bog Pod tripod that I bought on clearance at Academy. I practice with it with dry fire practice. Part of my belief that you should practice how you will hunt. I will use a door jamb to mimick a tree to stabilize my off-hand arm or hand. I have used tree branches, similar to using the tripod. Many is the time I post up sitting on a camp chair with my tripod and the fore end of the rifle in the cradle and then I mimick a tree. But sticks are also great. Someone I know harvested an Aoudad Sheep with his .300 Win Mag and shooting sticks at about 200 yards-ish.
Hi guys, from South Africa...can you and your gurus possibly discuss the 7x64, out here in South Africa its a very popular caliber. Very close, I believe, to your 280 Remington in the USA
16:30 Or, for a better setup there, you could simply place the wrist straps from one pole over the top of the other pole. That will give you a better saddle to shoot off of.
An older hunter with one artificial knee, I have used shooting sticks for years. I would not go hunting without it! I prefer the tripod shooting stick.
Really good video do you guys use quad sticks popular one in Scotland is the viper quad stick light weight and solid shooting platform great show keep it coming....
Made my own out of pine. With a simple bolt. Sometimes a little cumbersome but they cost 50 cents to make but make all the difference. Not worried about betting the farm shooting off of them.
Ive managed nearly a 20 year hunting career without shooting stix. I can shoot well in most situations without them. Regardless, I cant deny the benefit of shooting stick, especially for less experienced/capable shooters. My wife and kids benefits enormously from sticks as do I when I actually have the opportunity to use them. Many of the shots i have to take on public land in Montana dont afford me the time to fiddle with sticks. The difference between getting skunked and putting meat in the freezer can be a second or two. A second or two that would be spent setting up a stick and resting the rifle.
I was searching online for a stable way to use trekking poles as shooting sticks today and found an adapter from Wiser Precision - Quick-StiX Adapter 2.38 oz locks poles together. I have yet to buy them and test them. I have a health condition that causes spinal cord swelling so need good poles to help when my right leg begins to weaken. I think I will give this adapter a try. Thanks for the vid guys.
They are incredible and worth the money. Hope you ended up with them. Made my trekking poles into shooting sticks in seconds. Used a little foam pipe insulation around where my rifle sets for protection
Can you guys do a podcast on hunting 101 for beginners, like where one starts, what are some important considerations, whether one should backpack or drive in, what are the seasons, what tags/permits one needs, what gear one needs, how much hunting costs, what are the best places for each game, etc. Also, can you do a 10 minute talk on the .357 Magnum and .44 Magnum calibers? Also, can you do a 10 minute talk on personal hygiene when hunting? How does one stay clean when out for a hunt for any amount of time between three days and up to two weeks? Also, my main man, Ryan Muckenhirn, always emphasizes the point of having good boots, but I haven't heard him elaborate or describe what makes a good boot. Can we have a 10 minute talk on boots, gloves, and headgear? Otherwise, keep it up! I only recently found this channel, and I've been going through the content slowly, but I thoroughly enjoy it.
Check out Cutting the Distance podcast with Remi Warren. He goes into a lot of that stuff. Also episode 21 from vortex is all back country hunting tips. Episode 150 from vortex is all about meat care. Really great listen for new hunters.
Those are to many questions, make a list and start each question separatelly, #1 You do not backpack on hunt till you got experince, Drive in ( unless you know the area,( I bought topo maps and targeted state land to scout, long before GPS) and use a day pack with esentials, water, space blanket, ways to light a fire, sandwitches. Camping out by yourself is cheap, I used a tent, cut my own firewood till I saw a hunter take out the front seat of his CJ5 and lay a matress, No more tent, Driving to the hunting grounds plenty fire wood for sale allong the road (In my days a cord for $4) Higene? No bathing in winter time or in desert like ares( no Water) Today you can use whipes, or a small towel to clean up, If you hunt upwind game doesn't care if you smell. Ask a question at a time and plenty readers will give their input
The set I use is a single pole button control. and it has enough adjustment to use sitting or standing. I use it a lot during the rut when I might see a buck chasing a doe and I might have too run a couple hundred yards and set up quick, or in the stand I put it right in the notch behind my rifle grip too help steady my rifle.
does anyone have a recommendation for split sticks that are available in 2023? Most of the ones that seem to have good recommendations are discontinued.
Mine are old fiberglass tent poles glued together and wrapped in white hockey tape another essential is one of those tripod stools gets you up above the grass and brush.
I had one with a silicone/rubber flap that hooked across the rifle...it was great for if you had to pick up and move a short distance...I can't find one like it and I can't remember the brand
I use the trigger sticks. Killed a deer sitting down on a hillside. They are great for sits. It’s little tough to get your gun up quickly and quietly when still hunting or spot and stalk.
Simple test, shoot a group standing freehand, shoot the next group off a monopod, then a homemade bipod, then quadsticks, then a solid tripod with a saddle or quick release lock. Watch your groups come in tighter each time. I've been shooting 40 years and never leave home without some form of support. I change what I take based on the accuracy I need for what I'm shooting on the day. Rabbits at 100 are bogpod too easy.
I use a set XC ski poles fitted with a quick stix adapter. Let's me get multiple uses out of the same piece of gear for minimal weight and performance penalties
You’re all missing out on the obvious solution. Put the straps of the trekking poles across each other and give it one twist, and you have instant shooting sticks.
The shooting sling is superior in almost every way to most stick systems except for the standing shot, some sticks will aid in this but a lot of shooting sticks are sit and kneel only.
I have been filling my freezer for years with standing off hand shots. Its a skill that Americans are losing. A heavy rifle with mild recoil is the best. You can work on skill building with a pellet gun throughout the year. Having the confidence to take a swift accurate shot off hand is worth working for
I've hunted that way my entire life. Started with robins and turtle doves with bb gun. Graduated to squirrels, rabbits, deer and hog in South Georgia. I hunted for me than 30 years before I ever considered a shooting stick. I took them out last year but still didn't' use them. Perhaps if I get a shot more than about 250 or so....
Ive also made a lot of off hand shots on both stationary and walking/running animals. Not everyone grew up shooting 300 days out of the year. That being said, I'm all about shooting sticks when they are available and especially for less experienced/capable shooters.
Pretty sure these guys are talking about taking shots hundreds of yards out across mountains and canyons out west, where you have to Acount for wind and other factors. Where I’m from I’m lucky to find a shot over 200 or even 100yards so yeah 99% of the game I’ve taken have been offhand. But no matter how good you think you are you can’t tell me when you got an animal that steps out hundreds of yards away on a mountain you’re gonna make as ethical of a shot as you would if were to be using sticks. I head shoot squirrels free hand with a .22lr on a daily basis, and shot many whitetails on a full sprint. Hunt for water fowl, rabbits. So yes I see where you’re coming from about it being a good thing to be confident in shooting your gun off hand at game within a reasonable distance. But that’s a totally different animal than taking quarter mile pokes out across canyons. That’s where a rest of some sort just might be your best bet. Especially after hiking all day. But then again I’ve never hunted out west lol or even seen a mountain with my own eyes.
I would suggest something like the Jakele Z4 Stick in one Moment it is a Round 1.8Meter Long Walking Stick (in German or Bavarian Bergstecken / Mountain Stick) in the next Moment it is a Quadpod with Front and Backrest for your Rifle with a little Training you can unfold them within Seconds and the Rest is Super Stable to Shoot from way more Stable then Bipods and even more then Tripods / i have Build one for my own and for my Dad out of Aluminium Profils and Wood yes not as light as the Carbon of the Blaser but not hvy at all and it has cost me something around 50€ you have to be a little bit skilled to bulid it but it was ok
I use a walking stick that has a big v on top….I can shoot standing or shorten it for sitting. But its main purpose is for walking….only shot one deer using it as a shooting stick.
Why not just go to the tripod? Almost everyone has one for glassing and now with the ARCA rail, it takes seconds to lock your rifle onto the rail. Plus more stable than shooting sticks.
Honestly, In 60 yrs of hunting I never needed Shooting Sitcks, For one in the evironment I have hunted most of my life 150 Yds is way out yonder, If you need to shoot further out then yes. In brush a long rifle is cumbersome, and taging allong a pair of sticks even worse, and have a steady hand and an accurate rifle that can shoot the eye of a deer at 100 yrds,( usualy much closer)
@@Woodwerks theres a time and place for that. I listen to plenty of long format content but when it’s presented as 10 minutes - they set the expectation for the audience. Then don’t deliver.
I have used two fiberglass golf clubs with the heads off of them and drilled out and glued in field tips for grab. To connect them I used castrating bands and the grips are in place for padding. Easy win with cheap or broken golf drivers!
I use my trekking poles as a bipod. If you wrap the straps around the opposite pole they make a good rest. If I’m in a hurry I just shoot from one resting on my hand.
Various forms of optic stabilizing apparati populate a significant portion of my hunting/shooting collection. Absolutely mission critical in my opinion. Per usual, you gentlemen are on it.
I shot a boone and Crockett mountain caribou in Northern BC this year off of one of those tripod trigger sticks. It was absolutely rock solid. I'm a big fan.
I've been using shootings sticks for many, many years and consider them essential items. I hunt a lot from the ground and shooting sticks give me a stable shooting platform. I don't leave home without them.
I’m new to hunting. I have a pop up ground blind. Trying to figure out a good stick to use tripod, bipod or single stick?
@@zacadelic7247 A Primus fully adjustable Trigger TRIPOD Shooting stick is about the best at an affordable price here in the UK at £100, or go to a similar product by BOG at around the £290 price. There is plenty of choice & prices.
I have the bipod primos trigger sticks. Used them as a walking stick and love the quick adjusting it does. Carried them in my mule deer buck hunt last few weeks and will carry them this coming mule deer doe hunt later this week great for rolling hills. Will shoot prone off my pack any chance I get but it’s a great backup. .
Over here in germany most people have standing shooting sticks for stalking.
Especially in flat areas they increase the angle of the bullet hitting the groud thus providing a better backstop.
Which is quite practical in highly populated areas like many parts of germany are.
I agree with you. Here in England we have the same need for backstop in populated areas. Quad shooting sticks work very well for both stability and increased angles.
I really enjoy listening to Ryan talk about literally anything
So does Ryan
Absolutely essential piece of hunting equipment, I gave up on bi-pods entirely this year also. Sticks are so much more versatile. - I use Blaser Carbon Quad Sticks.. You need to try these!
We'll have to look into those! 👊
I agree. Quad sticks are the way to go, but there are more budget friendly versions like Rudolph PH.
Got the 2.0 version of the Blaser Sticks - amazing piece of kit!
I just looked these up and holy smokes, $432.77?! That is wild!
Which damn shooting sticks should I buy for my antelope hunt?! It doesn't seem to be a straight forward answer.
We’re not dropping pins today and feeling like Mr. Peanut. Great content
A sapling 2" at the base cut at 5'-5'.5" works good in a pinch as both walking stick and mono pod
I just took a mule deer a few weeks ago using the same sticks that Ryan has. I ditched my bipod at the last minute and went with those Easton's. Lightweight, fast and easy to use.
Used them on all my hunts. So far 100% successful.
Was just looking into this. Good timing !
Would the mono pod work as a tracking pole and hunting blind ?
How about walk pole and folding back buck thorns when your walking threw the briers
My preference is definitely for trekking poles because you have one piece of gear that is more versatile. There’s a way to interlace the wrist straps on them to function the same as the rubber grommet on the purpose built ones. Makes for a great cradle for your rifle
Just simply place the strap from one pole over the handle of the other, do it with both straps. Easy peasy.
@@amorton94 exactly. Creates a great cradle for your rifle.
I like the Vanguard shooting sticks for ground blind hunting.
Snipe Pod sticks for mobile hunting. Still carry an atlas bipod in my pocket for the occasion that I can use it.
Yeah man I like them a lot if I don't have something to rest my rifle on... I hunt mostly in box blinds or climbing stands so I have a good rest but I use those pop up ground blinds or brush in a ground blind every now and then and when I do a shooting stick is mandatory in my opinion. I use the primos sticks kind of like what yall have here but they're a monopod style. Great video guys as always keepem coming!!!
We appreciate you tuning in, Daniel!
I am a firm believer in supported shots. So is Jeff Cooper. In his book, "The Art of the Rifle," he states that you should never rely on off-hand shooting. You can practice, if you want, but always seek a support and successful shooters do. So, I hunt with a regular Bog Pod tripod that I bought on clearance at Academy. I practice with it with dry fire practice. Part of my belief that you should practice how you will hunt.
I will use a door jamb to mimick a tree to stabilize my off-hand arm or hand. I have used tree branches, similar to using the tripod. Many is the time I post up sitting on a camp chair with my tripod and the fore end of the rifle in the cradle and then I mimick a tree.
But sticks are also great. Someone I know harvested an Aoudad Sheep with his .300 Win Mag and shooting sticks at about 200 yards-ish.
Hi guys, from South Africa...can you and your gurus possibly discuss the 7x64, out here in South Africa its a very popular caliber.
Very close, I believe, to your 280 Remington in the USA
16:30 Or, for a better setup there, you could simply place the wrist straps from one pole over the top of the other pole. That will give you a better saddle to shoot off of.
Thank you!!! I was going crazy that they missed such an obvious solution.
Check out the wiser precision quick-stix if you want to use trekking poles. Doubles as glassing tripod if you buy the whole set up.
We'll check them out - thanks, Martin!
An older hunter with one artificial knee, I have used shooting sticks for years. I would not go hunting without it! I prefer the tripod shooting stick.
Where do I buy those collapsible shooting sticks?
Really good video do you guys use quad sticks popular one in Scotland is the viper quad stick light weight and solid shooting platform great show keep it coming....
been using ski poles as shooting stick or bipod since childhood, I did biathlon and learned this, adjust height by spread.
I use the Primos monopod trigger stick. Nice walking stick and I got a deer last year at a dead run at 64 yards last year
Made my own out of pine. With a simple bolt. Sometimes a little cumbersome but they cost 50 cents to make but make all the difference. Not worried about betting the farm shooting off of them.
Same here. Two fiberglass golf shafts with arrow tips in the legs and fastened with a piece of heater hose. Been using them for 15yrs.
What would y’all use out of a pop up blind with a rifle tripod bipod or single stick?
Ive managed nearly a 20 year hunting career without shooting stix. I can shoot well in most situations without them. Regardless, I cant deny the benefit of shooting stick, especially for less experienced/capable shooters. My wife and kids benefits enormously from sticks as do I when I actually have the opportunity to use them. Many of the shots i have to take on public land in Montana dont afford me the time to fiddle with sticks. The difference between getting skunked and putting meat in the freezer can be a second or two. A second or two that would be spent setting up a stick and resting the rifle.
I was searching online for a stable way to use trekking poles as shooting sticks today and found an adapter from Wiser Precision - Quick-StiX Adapter 2.38 oz locks poles together. I have yet to buy them and test them.
I have a health condition that causes spinal cord swelling so need good poles to help when my right leg begins to weaken. I think I will give this adapter a try. Thanks for the vid guys.
They are incredible and worth the money. Hope you ended up with them. Made my trekking poles into shooting sticks in seconds. Used a little foam pipe insulation around where my rifle sets for protection
I need trekking poles any time I’m walking on uneven surfaces so that Quick-Stix product looks just about perfect.
Can you guys do a podcast on hunting 101 for beginners, like where one starts, what are some important considerations, whether one should backpack or drive in, what are the seasons, what tags/permits one needs, what gear one needs, how much hunting costs, what are the best places for each game, etc. Also, can you do a 10 minute talk on the .357 Magnum and .44 Magnum calibers? Also, can you do a 10 minute talk on personal hygiene when hunting? How does one stay clean when out for a hunt for any amount of time between three days and up to two weeks? Also, my main man, Ryan Muckenhirn, always emphasizes the point of having good boots, but I haven't heard him elaborate or describe what makes a good boot. Can we have a 10 minute talk on boots, gloves, and headgear? Otherwise, keep it up! I only recently found this channel, and I've been going through the content slowly, but I thoroughly enjoy it.
Check out Cutting the Distance podcast with Remi Warren. He goes into a lot of that stuff. Also episode 21 from vortex is all back country hunting tips. Episode 150 from vortex is all about meat care. Really great listen for new hunters.
Those are to many questions, make a list and start each question separatelly, #1 You do not backpack on hunt till you got experince, Drive in ( unless you know the area,( I bought topo maps and targeted state land to scout, long before GPS) and use a day pack with esentials, water, space blanket, ways to light a fire, sandwitches. Camping out by yourself is cheap, I used a tent, cut my own firewood till I saw a hunter take out the front seat of his CJ5 and lay a matress, No more tent, Driving to the hunting grounds plenty fire wood for sale allong the road (In my days a cord for $4) Higene? No bathing in winter time or in desert like ares( no Water) Today you can use whipes, or a small towel to clean up, If you hunt upwind game doesn't care if you smell. Ask a question at a time and plenty readers will give their input
The set I use is a single pole button control. and it has enough adjustment to use sitting or standing. I use it a lot during the rut when I might see a buck chasing a doe and I might have too run a couple hundred yards and set up quick, or in the stand I put it right in the notch behind my rifle grip too help steady my rifle.
I use the BOG Mono but I will be switching to the BOG Havoc Bipod. Thanks for the video!
does anyone have a recommendation for split sticks that are available in 2023? Most of the ones that seem to have good recommendations are discontinued.
Viper flex shooting sticks used them for years 👌
🙌🙌
What about the infinitely adjustable Cuddeback solid aim shooting stick? I'm considering buying one, but would love to hear your advice.
What’s the second set spoken about with the bright orange tape on each stick called?
Mine are old fiberglass tent poles glued together and wrapped in white hockey tape another essential is one of those tripod stools gets you up above the grass and brush.
I got the swagger bipod, LOVE THEM!! Check them out! Prone to kneeling, they are perfect!
Love shooting sticks like they said it's key to a successful hunt I've shot deer with out them but now I got one I'm going to always take it with me
I had one with a silicone/rubber flap that hooked across the rifle...it was great for if you had to pick up and move a short distance...I can't find one like it and I can't remember the brand
I use the trigger sticks. Killed a deer sitting down on a hillside. They are great for sits. It’s little tough to get your gun up quickly and quietly when still hunting or spot and stalk.
Simple test, shoot a group standing freehand, shoot the next group off a monopod, then a homemade bipod, then quadsticks, then a solid tripod with a saddle or quick release lock. Watch your groups come in tighter each time. I've been shooting 40 years and never leave home without some form of support. I change what I take based on the accuracy I need for what I'm shooting on the day. Rabbits at 100 are bogpod too easy.
I use the Primos Jim Shockey trigger stick version. And they are the best for ground blind shooting.
Recently switched to the Blaser Carbon Shooting Sticks 2.0 - awesome piece of kit 🥰
I just looked these up and holy smokes, $432.77?! That is wild!
@@GleCow I payed 180€ 😳😳😳
Wiser Precision Quick-Stix Connects your trekking poles.
I use a set XC ski poles fitted with a quick stix adapter. Let's me get multiple uses out of the same piece of gear for minimal weight and performance penalties
You’re all missing out on the obvious solution. Put the straps of the trekking poles across each other and give it one twist, and you have instant shooting sticks.
Wiser Precision Quick-Stix on carbon trekking poles is the way to go
thanks guys
For western or Africa hunting shooting sticks are an absolute
Viper flex sticks are unreal had the primos trigger viper flex is was better and lighter aswell
Seen the headphones and mics and turned off 😅
Saplings for walking sticks shooting sticks tire tube 550 cord ect one up one down fits hand better. They are disposable and easy to replace
The shooting sling is superior in almost every way to most stick systems except for the standing shot, some sticks will aid in this but a lot of shooting sticks are sit and kneel only.
I have been filling my freezer for years with standing off hand shots. Its a skill that Americans are losing. A heavy rifle with mild recoil is the best. You can work on skill building with a pellet gun throughout the year. Having the confidence to take a swift accurate shot off hand is worth working for
I've hunted that way my entire life. Started with robins and turtle doves with bb gun. Graduated to squirrels, rabbits, deer and hog in South Georgia. I hunted for me than 30 years before I ever considered a shooting stick. I took them out last year but still didn't' use them. Perhaps if I get a shot more than about 250 or so....
Ive also made a lot of off hand shots on both stationary and walking/running animals. Not everyone grew up shooting 300 days out of the year. That being said, I'm all about shooting sticks when they are available and especially for less experienced/capable shooters.
Lol good for you. I'd rather take a steady shot than shoot off hand because of my ego 😂
Pretty sure these guys are talking about taking shots hundreds of yards out across mountains and canyons out west, where you have to Acount for wind and other factors. Where I’m from I’m lucky to find a shot over 200 or even 100yards so yeah 99% of the game I’ve taken have been offhand. But no matter how good you think you are you can’t tell me when you got an animal that steps out hundreds of yards away on a mountain you’re gonna make as ethical of a shot as you would if were to be using sticks. I head shoot squirrels free hand with a .22lr on a daily basis, and shot many whitetails on a full sprint. Hunt for water fowl, rabbits. So yes I see where you’re coming from about it being a good thing to be confident in shooting your gun off hand at game within a reasonable distance. But that’s a totally different animal than taking quarter mile pokes out across canyons. That’s where a rest of some sort just might be your best bet. Especially after hiking all day. But then again I’ve never hunted out west lol or even seen a mountain with my own eyes.
You should have featured the 4 legged design like GUNSTIX shooting sticks. Once you use one of them you will never use a tri-pod again
Quad shooting sticks are excellent for stability.
We'll have to check those out!
I would suggest something like the Jakele Z4 Stick in one Moment it is a Round 1.8Meter Long Walking Stick (in German or Bavarian Bergstecken / Mountain Stick) in the next Moment it is a Quadpod with Front and Backrest for your Rifle with a little Training you can unfold them within Seconds and the Rest is Super Stable to Shoot from way more Stable then Bipods and even more then Tripods / i have Build one for my own and for my Dad out of Aluminium Profils and Wood yes not as light as the Carbon of the Blaser but not hvy at all and it has cost me something around 50€ you have to be a little bit skilled to bulid it but it was ok
Wonder what all the old-timers used?
A tree
I made mine from dowel rods. They are meant for sitting and help on briar patches
I use a walking stick that has a big v on top….I can shoot standing or shorten it for sitting. But its main purpose is for walking….only shot one deer using it as a shooting stick.
Instead of clarifying what the acronym PITA means bro really said look it up. 😂
Primos tripod sticks every time
You guys really should talk about tripods. They seem really popular with target shooters
Check out this video: ua-cam.com/video/AAGr63sByyA/v-deo.html
A product approved by all musket hunters.
I used a 12 pack of toilet paper 🧻 on a table for target practice.
Not stable...
Now the vanguard bipods are light shooting sticks
I made a set out of a set of broom handles. Cheap and very functional!
Thank You
Sometimes? I carry them always, but usually end up shooting off my pack 9 out of 10 times.
Definitely a time and place to both - it's certainly better to have them and not need them rather than needing them and not having them.
Why not just go to the tripod? Almost everyone has one for glassing and now with the ARCA rail, it takes seconds to lock your rifle onto the rail. Plus more stable than shooting sticks.
Honestly, In 60 yrs of hunting I never needed Shooting Sitcks, For one in the evironment I have hunted most of my life 150 Yds is way out yonder, If you need to shoot further out then yes. In brush a long rifle is cumbersome, and taging allong a pair of sticks even worse, and have a steady hand and an accurate rifle that can shoot the eye of a deer at 100 yrds,( usualy much closer)
I get quite a bit of wobble with a stick
It's definitely important to practice getting steady. Does yours have 1 or 2 legs?
Swagger Bipods offers a pretty legit setup that mounts to your gun. EXTREMELY versatile and useful.
I heard a Manifest reference!
You heard right...were you on the plane, too?
How did you go that whole episode and not talk about shooting off a tripod. You guys just came out with tripods directed at shooting this year?
Because the talk is about shooting sticks and not tripods
Because it's a shooting stick episode obviously as the title says. Not a shooting stick and tripod video
PITA: Pain In The Ass
Walking stick gives bonus 500 ft/sec and plus 20 agility
I use a crutch.
Im a big adovocate of shooting sticks
I carry vanguard bipods
Swagger Bipods.... Check them out haha
Pita look it up..OK..hahahh
Yes Mr planters carries a cane
Go Cougs!
Bipods are for target rifles. Shooting sticks are for hunting rifles
All of the antelope I have shot and seen shot would disagree.
@@amorton94 I have had the same experience. 🤠
It looksbl8ke tent material
I'm glad that other speaker wasn't in this. I'd watch these podcasts more if he wasn't around. I really like your content, but he's too annoying.
His voice is annoying 😂
its a 10 minute but its 20 minutes long seems like a bad start
#10Minute-ishTalk
sticks vs tripods.......
It is painful wading through all the BS to get to the content.
Terrible. Put a 10 minute timer on, only to waffle for 9 of the 10 minutes.
Then over-run for another 10 🤣
Feel free to go elsewhere for your info. Some of us would rather listen to an organic conversation, rather than a scripted list of bland information.
@@Woodwerks theres a time and place for that.
I listen to plenty of long format content but when it’s presented as 10 minutes - they set the expectation for the audience. Then don’t deliver.
@ well now you know. It’s never 10 minutes, and its better that way
@@Woodwerks it’s pointless having the clickbait title of a 10 minutes talk though. Misrepresenting themselves.
World bedst schooting stik. ua-cam.com/video/yaTvkmRpGyM/v-deo.html