Flp - Bushwhack

The platform has a subtle, engineered flex—maybe 1/8 of an inch—but it’s not spongy. It feels like a solid deck. The secret is the angled teeth on the back of the platform. They bite into the bark like a bear trap. I have set this on wet oak, slick pine, and frozen ash. It has not slipped one millimeter.

I weigh 210 lbs before gear. The first time I stepped on the FLP, I braced for the dreaded "diving board" flex. It didn’t come. bushwhack flp

The build quality is immediately apparent. This is a CNC-machined aluminum platform (reportedly 6061-T6). The finish is a textured, matte black that looks like it belongs on a military drone. It’s not pretty in a glossy way; it’s pretty in an "I’m going to outlive you" way. The platform has a subtle, engineered flex—maybe 1/8

If you are serious about hunting pressured public land where every ounce and every inch of pack space matters, stop fiddling with clunky hand-me-down platforms. Buy the Bushwhacker FLP. Your back and your knees will thank you after the 2-mile hike out. They bite into the bark like a bear trap

After two seasons, it has become the one piece of gear I will not leave the truck without. It is stable, it is quiet, and when folded, it fits in places your other platforms can only dream of.

Verdict: 9.2/10 Best For: Saddle hunters, run-and-gun public land hunters, and anyone tired of lugging heavy, bulky climbing sticks. Worst For: Budget buyers and those who only hunt out of permanent box blinds. Introduction: The Problem with Height For the last decade, mobile deer hunting has been dominated by a clunky trade-off: Do you carry heavy, solid climbing sticks for security, or do you use lightweight aluminum sticks that flex and wobble? Do you bring three sticks for a 15-foot setup, or four sticks for 20 feet and hate every step of the hike in?