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the same plane, and centered as viewed from between the guyline pairs; confirm this 
after all adjustments. The poles should lean roughly as shown viewed from the side. 
More upright poles achieve greater height, while more leaned poles stress the 
ground anchors less, lowering their end of the hammock. Assure that the feet of 
steeply leaned poles will not slide inward by digging small divots in the ground for 
them to settle into. In all but hard ground, place hard flat objects such as stones or 
the snow baskets beneath the feet to prevent the poles sinking under load. To 
achieve more height difference between head and foot ends (typically to lower the 

head end) either lengthen the suspension on the end to be lowered, set up on a slope, 
or omit the extension segment from the lower end pole (107g less to carry!). Never 
lengthen a pole in hammock mode with two extension segments. 

6. Carefully sit in the hammock to test the anchors and stretch guylines tight. Bounce a 

little to simulate tossing and turning in the hammock while watching all anchors. If 
any anchor fails or threatens (look for gaps behind the anchors), loosen the attached 
guyline, and re-set the anchor farther away to try again, repeating as necessary. In the 
worst case, select another site with firmer ground, or get creative. For example, if one 
or more guylines can attach to boulders or the bases of woody shrubs, then you can 
use the spare ground anchors to double up in spots of looser soil. You can even tie to 
an anchor crosswise on the surface behind a pile of rocks. Send pics of your most 
unlikely “you can’t hammock here!” hangs! 

7. When satisfied with the hang and anchor strength, re-tension the guylines to remove 

the slack the test sitting produced. To prevent the guylines from slipping later, for 
example if some person or other creature bumps into them in the night, tie a slippery 
half hitch in the orange line tail where it enters the black constrictor section. 

6

Summary of Contents for Trekking Treez

Page 1: ...TensaTrekkingTreez v2 0 Svelte UserGuide Description 2 Getting started 2 Trekking mode 3 Hammock mode 4 Speci fi cations 7 ...

Page 2: ...igiblesiteseveninwoodedareas Twosystemsformacompletestandand pairoftrekkingpoles TrekkingTreez usedasreplacementsforstandardtrekkingpoles removetheneedforredundantgroundsleepinggear savingweightwhilepreservingthe superiorcomfortofhammockcamping Gettingstarted Familiarizeyourselfwithallparts Eachsystemincludes 1 Handle top knob Hubz andstrap 2 Adjuster 3 Coupler 4 Extension 5 Trekking foot tarp ext...

Page 3: ...aquickchokeuponthegriportothetopknobinpalmto extendtheeffectivepolelengthforbriefdescents withouthavingto adjustthefliplock Therubbertipismeantmainlytoprotectthebag yourtarp and itemsinyourpackfromthehardcarbidetipofthetrekkingfoot Asa walkingtip itiseasilywornorlost Bothrubberandcarbidetips as wellassnowbaskets arenon proprietaryconsumableitems with replacementsavailablefrommanysources Youmayrepl...

Page 4: ...ts it swisetostopearlytotestsitesbefore nightfallbringsurgency Asinglehealthytree pole orrockfeatureabletosupportoneside ofyourhammockdoublesyourchancesofsuccesswhilehalving thelaborofsettingup Eventreesunsuitableforhangingoften haverootsystemsmuchlargerthantheircanopies helpingassure thatadjacentgroundanchorswillhold Assembly Screwallsegmentstogether withthehammockfootatthe bottom and ifusingatar...

Page 5: ...pairofHubzhooks Hubzaredesignedtoreceive7 64 Amsteelcordage If yourhammocklackssimilar wesuggestyoufashionadapterloopsofAmsteeltofit 5 Tensionallguylinesandthehammockridgelinebypullingtheorangelinesthrough theblackconstrictors thenmilkingtheburiestoset Milkingtheburymeans pinchingtheblackconstrictorsthroughwhichtheorangelinespass andsliding downtoelongate removingslack Slidingtheconstrictorsupwill...

Page 6: ...thtwoextensionsegments 6 Carefullysitinthehammocktotesttheanchorsandstretchguylinestight Bouncea littletosimulatetossingandturninginthehammockwhilewatchingallanchors If anyanchorfailsorthreatens lookforgapsbehindtheanchors loosentheattached guyline andre settheanchorfartherawaytotryagain repeatingasnecessary Inthe worstcase selectanothersitewithfirmerground orgetcreative Forexample ifone ormoreguy...

Page 7: ... Ifshort tiealoopinyour ridgelinearoundthetarpextensiontipattherightdistance andthenguyoutthetail If long drapetheexcesstarplengthovertherubbertipandguyout Singlepolesetup Whensettingupwithasinglepole firstattachthefootendofthehammocktotheon sitesupport thenpulltheheadendouttodeterminethecorrectpolepositionandassess bestanchorpoints andproceedasfromstep4above Specifications TrekkingTreezsupportgat...

Page 8: ...ica Seehttp tensaoutdoor com support forrevisionsinPDF format Emailinfo tensaoutdoor comforsupport attachingphotosasmayhelp Part Weight g Usable length cm Handle assembly 128 19 35 Adjuster 118 37 Coupler 56 21 Extension 107 25 Trekking foot tarp extension 49 21 trek 31 tarp Complete trekking pole worn weight 351 458g 12 16oz 98 139 Hammock foot 88 41 Guyline pair 45 71 340 30cm Tensa Boomstake 11...

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