~ All I want is affordable, simple, ultralight luxury. That’s not asking too much is it?
Thanks to all who responded. I think I will try it out in the backyard and see what happens, as TallPaul suggests. I have seen where the rubber bands do not seem to stay tight. Frankly I'm leaning towards the shoelaces because a) I have used them before and I know they work and b) there is no real extra weight. I guess I have been confined to home too much and started to over analyze my set up again. Last time i did this Dutch got more profitable that month. Thanks again, stay safe.
~ Rerun
In 100 years it won't make any difference...
What about those plastic notched squares used on bread wrappers. We don’t have a lot of rain in high desert country - the tarp is mostly a sun shield - so I haven’t tried them out. Only been collecting them for about a year. Figured if I ever gave a presentation, I’d hand them out. I know the cotton shoe string is the gold standard. Has anyone had success with that plastic fastener? I’m sure I read about it on HF.
In order to see what few have seen, you must go where few have gone. And DO what few have done.
i keep a couple strips of Shamwow or whatever it was, knock off chamois, in my ditty sack just for drip lines. Larksheaded in a Vee and slide them anywhere up or down the suspension you need.
I cut them off of an old piece I had been carrying for a towel when I replaced it with a new square.
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Anyone ever use or hear of anyone using rubber bands for a drip line as a water break? I use a couple of rubber bands for other purposes and was just wondering if they would work. Thanks
KOHLI68
Hey Kohli. This entire discussion was based on rubber bands as drip lines. The general consensus was that it’s probably not the best option.
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