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<blockquote data-quote="Lost Lake" data-source="post: 5185445" data-attributes="member: 12599"><p>My first climber was a TSS (Total Shooting Systems).</p><p></p><p>It was a wooden platform and used the metal band with a rubber sleeve instead of a blade. I loved it. At the time I bought it, they didn't make a hand climber for it, so bear hugging the tree was required to climb. Man it was hard on the chest and arms if you were climbing a rough barked tree, or it was wet.</p><p></p><p>But, that stand made a huge difference in how I hunted, and I started killing a lot of deer. I wish I'd have kept it just for sentimental reasons.</p><p></p><p>I was also gifted a Warren and Sweatt bladed climber, which was a Baker clone. Good lord I'm surprised I lived through using it the few times that I did. It'd spin around a tree in a heart beat.</p><p></p><p>I do miss some of those old days.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Lost Lake, post: 5185445, member: 12599"] My first climber was a TSS (Total Shooting Systems). It was a wooden platform and used the metal band with a rubber sleeve instead of a blade. I loved it. At the time I bought it, they didn’t make a hand climber for it, so bear hugging the tree was required to climb. Man it was hard on the chest and arms if you were climbing a rough barked tree, or it was wet. But, that stand made a huge difference in how I hunted, and I started killing a lot of deer. I wish I’d have kept it just for sentimental reasons. I was also gifted a Warren and Sweatt bladed climber, which was a Baker clone. Good lord I’m surprised I lived through using it the few times that I did. It’d spin around a tree in a heart beat. I do miss some of those old days. [/QUOTE]
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