Speaking of saddles and such.
I am in the process of weaning my daughter off her conventional single tie-in-point saddle and into a dual or split tie-in-point type saddle. In the process I have tried a few different things. Some were OK and some were disappointing.
The first thing I tried was the Sherrill Elevation. Nice looking saddle. I think it’s based on the Buckingham ArborLite. At 3 pounds it is light enough for a child. However, I was not happy with the overall fit. Although it is very adjustable, I just couldn’t get it right, so pretty as it was, I considered it unacceptable.
I had a Buckingham Master model 1290 in stock so I gave it a try. A marked improvement in fit and comfort. Better leg pads, lower tie-in points. It was better but still not quite enough to off-set the simple comfort of the current New Tribe unit.
Now I’m tinkering with a Sherrill Classic-Deluxe. The extra padding should take up just enough room in the waist and legs to get the fit just right. Pretty colors too. If all works out, I can hack off a few pounds of steel snaps & rings to lighten things up a bit since I don’t see my 11 year old daughter hauling a chainsaw, dynamite, or jerry-can into the canopy anytime soon. I’ll put up some photos of it if this rain ever stops!
Several years ago, when I first started climbing, my first saddle was a New Tribe (I currently climb in an Arbormaster-Pro which Sherrill no longer sells).
My Son started on a New Tribe, my Daughter too, and whenever I do SRT I always don a New Tribe saddle (
that’s cause my Arbormaster-Pro saddle suffers through SRT like an old school bus would handle a Formula-1 race course).
Conclusion. . .
You can’t go wrong with a New Tribe as your first saddle. Even the cheep basic model will do nicely (I own two basics but I’m “itching†to buy a new Tengu). If you later move on to other products, your New Tribe saddle will never get left alone for long. Light, Comfy, Economical, Safe, and easy to transport. You’ll keep going back to it.