Gareth Griffith
Active Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- SJPdP to Santiago de Compestela in May(2016)
Why oh why oh why do people ask whether they need two trekking poles or could they get by with one as they like to have one hand free?
Just don't buy any poles and have both hands free!
When I go rowing my boat I always just take the one oar as it leaves me the other hand free to take photos as I go round in circles.
Cycling home afterwards is always a bit of an uphill struggle as i took one pedal off my bike so I'd have a foot free to kick out at any dog that came to attack me or just in case there was a game of bicycle football en route.
I bought a pair of rollerskates for Christmas and gave one of them to my friend so we can both go out rollerskating together with one skate each. I find it very useful to have a spare foot that I can use to push off with and it helps enormously that I have one foot safely encased in a sturdy boot for stability.
Why on earth anyone would want to buy and use two trekking poles is completely beyond me. The good Lord gave us two hands so that one could hold a pole and the other can be used for holding a drink, a cigarette or picking ones nose.
The fact that the manufacturers of the more expensive trekking poles sell them in pairs is purely a marketing ploy to double their sales. Alternatively, one of friends has suggested it could be for couples who go walking together. I highlighted to him that some of these trekking poles that are sold in pairs are marked L and R to which I got the withering response that he is right handed and his wife is left handed. How could I have been so stupid not to have thought of that myself!
Over the summer months I have been building myself an aeroplane with just the one wing to keep costs down and so that it fits in the garden shed a bit easier. Can anyone suggest what might be the reason I am having difficulty getting the thing up in the air?
Just don't buy any poles and have both hands free!
When I go rowing my boat I always just take the one oar as it leaves me the other hand free to take photos as I go round in circles.
Cycling home afterwards is always a bit of an uphill struggle as i took one pedal off my bike so I'd have a foot free to kick out at any dog that came to attack me or just in case there was a game of bicycle football en route.
I bought a pair of rollerskates for Christmas and gave one of them to my friend so we can both go out rollerskating together with one skate each. I find it very useful to have a spare foot that I can use to push off with and it helps enormously that I have one foot safely encased in a sturdy boot for stability.
Why on earth anyone would want to buy and use two trekking poles is completely beyond me. The good Lord gave us two hands so that one could hold a pole and the other can be used for holding a drink, a cigarette or picking ones nose.
The fact that the manufacturers of the more expensive trekking poles sell them in pairs is purely a marketing ploy to double their sales. Alternatively, one of friends has suggested it could be for couples who go walking together. I highlighted to him that some of these trekking poles that are sold in pairs are marked L and R to which I got the withering response that he is right handed and his wife is left handed. How could I have been so stupid not to have thought of that myself!
Over the summer months I have been building myself an aeroplane with just the one wing to keep costs down and so that it fits in the garden shed a bit easier. Can anyone suggest what might be the reason I am having difficulty getting the thing up in the air?