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Why a hang on stand?
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<blockquote data-quote="TN Song Dog" data-source="post: 4543218" data-attributes="member: 16694"><p>I've used ladder stands and a used a climber for a short time. Once you use a climber, you will start to see the advantages of a hang on and sticks. With a hang on, you have more options of trees to chose from. With a climber, you have to look for those strait and limb-less trees of a certain diameter... and sometimes can't find that perfect tree right where you want to be. This would be more important when bow hunting, too. With a hang on and sticks/steps, you can chose larger trees and navigate limbs or curves. From what I've seen, you can nest the sticks and stand all together nicely for carrying, and you can find combos that are total equivalent weight to many climbers. </p><p></p><p>Hopefully more people will chime in with actual experience and more reasons they use the hang ons. </p><p></p><p>Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TN Song Dog, post: 4543218, member: 16694"] I've used ladder stands and a used a climber for a short time. Once you use a climber, you will start to see the advantages of a hang on and sticks. With a hang on, you have more options of trees to chose from. With a climber, you have to look for those strait and limb-less trees of a certain diameter... and sometimes can't find that perfect tree right where you want to be. This would be more important when bow hunting, too. With a hang on and sticks/steps, you can chose larger trees and navigate limbs or curves. From what I've seen, you can nest the sticks and stand all together nicely for carrying, and you can find combos that are total equivalent weight to many climbers. Hopefully more people will chime in with actual experience and more reasons they use the hang ons. Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk [/QUOTE]
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Why a hang on stand?
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