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-   -   Climbing Stand Question? (https://www.huntingnet.com/forum/bowhunting-gear-review/305904-climbing-stand-question.html)

kldad06 10-05-2009 11:30 AM

Climbing Stand Question?
 
I recently bought a climbing stand. At my house there are not trees straight enough to practice but the places that I hunt have big pines and ash. Well this weekend my buddy and I (who also just bought a climbing stand) tried them out for the first time. We picked the straightest trees in which the base was as close in diameter as about 15ft up as we could. But even then the base is just enough bigger to make it impossible to make the feet level once you are 7-8 ft in the air. Is there a way to tighten the feet section while in the air or are we tough out of luck?

HooSIER|Hunter 10-05-2009 02:10 PM

When your at the base getting ready to climb up, you need to have your foot platform angled up. So the higher you get the foot platform will level out..

kldad06 10-06-2009 07:39 AM

I did that and it still was too loose once I got to about 8 ft. I am pretty sure had someone been behind me with a video camera they could have won $10,000 on Americas Funniest Home Videos. Someone needs to invent some sort of racheting system which would allow you to use a climber on any tree (without limbs). Just kind of frustrating.

bowfly 10-06-2009 08:50 AM

a buddy tried tightening his while about 10 feet up and the entire bottom fell to the forest floor...there he sat, 10 feet above, feet just a dangling...NOT ADVISED

i do what hoosier does, but something extra...i put it about shoulder level and angle it, then I lift myself up onto that bottom platform, then attach the seat portion, this gives me the levelling that i need, but also not having to worry about the tree "thinning out" as I climb

grahambow 10-06-2009 08:54 AM

you might need to start with the 'bottom' at a much steeper angle........have had to do mine at a harsh angle to start with and as i got up in the tree it 'flattens' out - would rather have it that way so you fall back at the tree versus the feeling of falling from the tree!

kldad06 10-06-2009 11:01 AM

totally agree. It just seemed as though no matter how steep I put it, it was still going to angle the wrong direction once up in the air. But I will play with it prob on the next trip and then it is going back to craigslist. Thanks for all the input.

nodog 10-07-2009 01:09 PM

The reason the started making adjustable stands.

You can sit on the top section, put your heals under the front lip of the bottom section and lift keeping pressure on the tree. Reach down carefully with your hand and try and adjust the cable/belt. One thing that always should be done is tieing the top and bottom section together that way if it falls you can pull it back up.

All of this requires no small amount of strength and balance. Your definetly on the right track though, practise is the key to safe hunting.

HooSIER|Hunter 10-09-2009 01:07 PM

Do you have one of those 1980's climbers that's a metal bar in the back and one in front with two wingnuts?

bigbucks98 10-13-2009 06:07 AM

Hoosierhunter is righ have it angled up and if its still doing it tighten it even more. its guna be a lil harder to get up the tree but itl stay level

NC hunter 10-16-2009 12:43 PM

https://www.equalizertreestands.com/index.php Check this out

SIDEWAYS 10-18-2009 05:22 PM


Originally Posted by NC hunter (Post 3475264)

Had the same problem 3-4 years ago.
Bought an equalizer, problem solved!
And its solid as a rock once you tighten down the side straps.

kldad06 10-18-2009 08:38 PM

that is freakin awesome. wish I would have seen that about 6 months ago, before I bought this one (which has become a fixed stand with a ladder next to it).

Valentine 10-21-2009 06:34 AM

What if tree stands weren't absolutely perfect
 
Unfortunately, we seem to be getting shortcuts from experience and expecting it more.

All tree stands at one time, if not advertised, required some judgment from the hunter climbing the tree. A hunter was expected to eyeball a tree, and notice how it tapered into less width, as it ascended.
And that took experience and practice. Can you believe hunters were expected to judge the width of the tree at the various heights to be climbed?

The problem for some is the width of the climbing stand is constant and the tree, many times, is not. Why a hunter was to eyeball how much angle he had from the tree to the stand, at the beginning of the climb. And a number of times it was greater than a 45 degree angle.

For some, asking for a little mathematics computation, is asking a lot.

Hunting is suppose to be simple. Well when did the advertisers say otherwise.

deer slayer Jr. 10-21-2009 02:49 PM

I usually angle mine about 45 deg at the base of the tree and she sits about level at 20 ft up

NavyDeerHunter 10-22-2009 09:46 AM


Originally Posted by NC hunter (Post 3475264)

Great Stand. Sideways (post #11) only bought his because I had one and he wanted to be kewl like me :happy0157:, but unless he sold his bow and bought a Bowtech he's still falling short.

Okay, fun aside, this is a very nice stand that allows you to level your platform as you climb. I still start out at a slight angle just to minimize the leveling, but I have never run into a situation where I could not get level. It's a comfortable stand too...If you get a sling type seat to go with it. This is the only stand that I can sit all day in and not be uncomfortable.
Highly recommended.

Skeeder1964 11-09-2009 04:45 PM

climbing treestands
 
To bad you can't find an Amacker climbing stand, the Bowhunting version. I have one and it does just what you are talking about. It has pins on both sections of the climber. As you climb you pull the pins and the straps have tension on them to adjust as you climb and release when you level out. To bad they went out of business. Good stand.


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