evo
Been here much more than a while
- Location
- My Island, WA
Ahh the ole cats paw… gets the job done but f that…It's not like I've never used the side Ds. When I first started climbing, I didn't realize that you don't climb in a fall arrest harness, but that already had the Ds more forward, and when I finally realized that I needed to buy my first proper climbing saddle, I saw that all the fancy looking ones had very prominent lower Ds and and the bridge was clearly the primary connection, so it just made sense in my mind that the side Ds were generally just for side restraint in work positioning.
When I first got my spurs, I was so accustomed to having my lanyard on the lower Ds, it's just where I hooked it up from the start, and when I did start to wonder why guys were using the side Ds on modern harnesses, I tried it really briefly and thought it must be old habits/ingrained muscle memory and wrote it off. The old schoolers tried to show me the way they did it with a knot directly on the side D, but it was 98⁰ by 9:30 am, and I was just trying to get through this chubby codom incense cedar with a dead top, so I couldn't really focus on the differences, but it worked fine. That was the first time I got heat exhaustion, but telling the story, I remember thinking before I passed out that I should try that side D for spurring again.
Part of my dislike for lower dee’s it feel that level placement of the flip line is the most comfortable and it’s just too low to easily flip up a trunk.
Coming down or standing around it’s super comfy and more so with a vertical tip on your climbing line.
I also like more space between my climbing line and lanyard when chunking or gaffing up a tree. Keeping my rope on my bridge lower than my flip does this but means my flip line is on the hip dee’s










