by Biggles » Wed 20 Dec, 2023 1:23 pm
If poles that can take a decent beating are your thing, then expect to get heavier aluminium or composition (carbon-alloy or cabon-resin composite) poles than what many people use (myself, I use HELINOX Ridgeline 135s). I know from my own experience even seemingly rugged poles will bend, then maybe fracture or snap at the worst possible moment (twice this has happened); the poles in question were Leki Terrano. A pair of poles long before that (c. 2007) also fractured after a mishap en route Feathertop. If all else fails, a stick from an obliging tree is a pretty good sub, though blisters and splinters may be the penalty.
Trekking poles are expensive (some ridiculously so), and should be treated with care (and maintenance as required) — put to use for their intended purpose, as supports for walking tarp/fly supports etc, but not as makeshift seats placed between two rocks (sit on the rocks!) or used as assistst for flying jumps of a ledge.
My research prior to buying the Helinox poles was fairly extensive; among bushwalkers I occasionally walk with, only one was using them; another was using the ultralight fold-up style (which appeared very flimsy); but the majority I had seen are unknown or uncommon brands with probably equally unknown reliability — that reliability question is something that is answered in perhaps the least convenient circumstances.
An outdoor shop should oblige you in extending a pole set of interest to your correct (bent elbow) height. Then further tests for excessive flexibility of the pole fully extended, with a load placed on top (similar to descending steep rocky terrain where the pole is extended outwards and down for an extended drop).
Conversation about the weather is the last refuge of the unimaginative.
—Oscar Wilde, 1890.