Sleek & Stylish Bamboo Walking Cane
Walking canes are not just restricted to providing support nowadays… These have more to offer. Designer walking canes like bamboo walking canes are durable, lightweight, stylish, as well as inexpensive options to go for. The earthy tone and natural touch of these walking sticks make them elegant in appeal and the sturdy bamboo construction likewise makes them apt for regular use. If you are looking for good walking canes for daily usage, here are a few options that might be helpful:
Traditional Bamboo Walking Canes with Crook Handles
Conventional Bamboo Walking Canes usually come with curved handles and are popularly categorized as Crooked Handle Canes. While the wooden shaft of the bamboo stick brings in a raw touch, the crook handle shape further offers a comfortable hand grip, thus making these walking canes suitable for elders or patients who need extra support while walking. The Natural Acacia Cane with Crook Handle for instance offers the ideal combination of both style and functionality.
Bamboo Shaft Walking Canes with Stylish Fritz Handles
If you want to take your style statement a notch higher, consider going for the bamboo walking canes with Fritz handles. The precisely designed Fritz Handle with Bamboo Shaft Cane for example is the ideal present for those who are a fan of minimalist designs. The natural-colored shaft comes in contrast with the marble-finished Fritz handle making this a subtle yet uber-stylish option.
Sleek Bamboo Walking Canes with Derby Handles
A more attractive option ideal for all age groups is bamboo walking canes that come with derby handles. The hand-crafted Classy Walking Cane in Tuscan Sienna Red with Derby Handle is one such piece. It is elegantly polished for an exceptional style, is incredibly strong, comes with a hook at the end of the handle, and has a rubber tip to ensure improved support. For folks who like something new and different, the walking canes with derby handles are the best choice.
Concluding Thoughts
Bamboo canes although light in weight, are perfect to become your favorites. Not only do these offer the maximum balanced support but also come with stylistic features that make them a more preferred option than other usual canes.
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Cane/Bamboo Adventures Part 1/?
So we just moved into a new house and there's this huge thing in the very back of the yard along a creek that I thought was bamboo, then I thought it was cane, and then after checking as many cane ID posts and videos I could find, I'm still completely unsure. My friend who's a wildlife student says it doesn't look like bamboo to her, but we both agree it doesn't look like the cane we've seen around South Georgia. She said it must be Arundinaria gigantea because no other cane gets this large, but all the cane we've seen identified as A. gigantea doesn't look like this. Here's my notes and some pics.
First, the leaves are much smaller than cane I've seen around here. Even very small, young cane around here has leaves about the length of my forearm.
Second, a couple things online I found distinguishing bamboo from cane say that new bamboo branches grow outward, while cane grows more upward. However there seems to be both upward and outward shoots on this bunch (examples of both pictured above). Also worth noting, the picture above on the left is the biggest diameter branch I found. I have relatively small hands for context (I wear small-medium sized gloves).
Then here's just some more pictures. I crawled down into a creek for the root picture (left)(a steep 7 foot drop haha). The middle picture is the youngest bunch I found, again it doesn't resemble cane I've seen around here. The picture on the right is a further away picture after I cleared some dead branches.
Also worth noting, this is tucked behind a house, between a fence, a creek, and like 3 trees. So it doesn't have a ton of space to grow, and I'm guessing that's why it's so dense.
If anyone happens to know anything about this please let me know! A week or so ago I emailed a guy from NC State and uploaded it on inaturalist, but I haven't received any replies or ID 😭
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so my quest now is to get Arundinaria federally listed as endangered because I think the evidence is highly compelling
it's declined to less than 2% of its original range
it used to be a keystone species in an ecosystem that included Bachman's warbler, passenger pigeons and Carolina parakeets, all extinct now
Currently canebrakes are major habitat for several endangered or critically endangered plants including Venus flytraps and Alabama canebrake pitcher plants
it grows in large clonal colonies and reproduces sexually only every 30-40 years. this means that existing genetic diversity could be incredibly low.
(Personal observation) very, very few existing examples of rivercane are large, robust, and healthy canebrakes. like, most photos and observations I can find are of little, twiggy canes growing as part of the underbrush in a forest.
My canebrake has no canes that look like that. The shortest canes are 4-6 feet tall. But it's not declining—it's healthy looking and on the ground there are tiny sprouts nudging up from the rhizomes. ALSO. I found an old photo of the canebrake, from June 2020. It was like. Half the size. I am certain the river cane was not this tall and striking in the spring. I go on walks daily in the neighborhood; I would have noticed it.
I hypothesize that as a canebrake expands and matures, its growth rate increases, so a "mature" canebrake can shoot up 6+ foot canes in a single growing season. Existing research by the few organizations working on canebrake conservation states that after a controlled burn, canes resprout very rapidly from the rhizome system, growing as fast as 1.5 inches a day. Historical records attest that river cane reached 30 or even 45+ feet tall, but there is like, one photo online in existence of cane taller than 15 feet.
What this means is that almost all remaining river cane is in incredibly poor condition, basically existing in a weak immature state. "Maturity" for river cane means a large clonal colony, not a few sparse sticks in the undergrowth. The fact that this plant grows in large clonal colonies is key—if no mature, healthy colonies exist in an area, the plant is almost functionally extinct.
With the rate of development and clearing of land compared next to river cane's slow flowering schedule, it's likely that many clonal colonies are eradicated without ever flowering, meaning that genetic diversity is almost certainly dropping.
Rivercane is dependent on human management via regular controlled burns to thrive. This is not a species that will recover if simply left to itself—if an area of land is left to reforest, the cane will be outcompeted. If it is grazed by cattle, it will be destroyed.
It is already listed as endangered in a couple states
i'm going back to my volunteer job soon, I will bring this proposal, I already know the head forester and ecologist are interested, and i'll be gathering contacts
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Deloss Webber (b.1951, working in Seattle)
Mountain in Four Seasons - granite, fiber, pigment, mixed media - average size 16″x 12″x 4″
untitled - stone, fiber - 2019
Freud's Couch - steel, rattan, basalt - 18″x 22″x 76″
After the Fire - basalt, rattan - 6″x 12″x 19″
Venice - granite, cane, pigment - 6″x 10″x 15″
Fireworks on Mt. Fuji - granite, fiber, wood, pigment - 29″x 10″x 8″
Visitation (two views) - carved wood, found wood chips - 58″x 33″x 26″
Tracks in the Snow (back) & Morning Dew (front) - granite, cane, pigment - 14″x 12″x 7″ & 12″x 12″x 8″
Tracks in the Snow (detail) - granite, cane, pigment
Old Soldier Series - granite, wood, bamboo, pigment - heights vary 16″ to 22½”
Wood Chip Book set - wood chips, pigment, stone
Tome - found wood chips, pigment - 16″x 16″x 2″
https://www.delosswebberartist.com/
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You're telling me all bamboo species have their own globally synchronized periods?
(Source is a 1982 copy of Readers Digest North American Wildlife)
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SO MANY MUD BRICKS. ...more mud bricks will be necessary in the future.
But right now, I need more quartz. A lot of quartz.
This is, as far as anyone knows, historically and archaeologically accurate, btw. It will remain so. I play to leave little lecterns around to give information about the facts regarding certain features of the ziggurat and the temple complex.
I’ll probably also add lecterns with my own lore (clearly indicated), because I’ve gone to the effort of getting a whole lot of heads of goblin Grian and Scar and Gem to slap on my villagers before I release them into the temple complex. The goblin lore is going to happen.
But the point is, the ziggurat is historically and archaeologically accurate. It’s frankly an improvement on the design I did a few years ago. It’s beautiful.
.......if you’re interested in playing this world and exploring my ziggurat, pls PM me or @ruffboijuliaburnsides on twitter. We’re very open to friends, there’s plenty of space to claim, we’d love to have you if you think my archaeologically accurate builds are interesting.
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A few 7ft 4wt cane rods underway.
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Hollow Home, 2014
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Butterfly Cane Chairs For Home Party Event @Cane Furniture Garden Balcon...
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Modern Outdoor Home Chair Restaurant Bar High Chair Rattan Rope Woven Metal Bar Chair
Product Description
Application: Living Room, Outdoor, Office Building, Other, Wine Cellar, Home Bar
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Appearance: Modern
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Usage: Bar/Restaurant furniture
Product name: Bar chair
Style: Simplicity
Main material: metal
Function: home bar
Keywords: Bar chair Bar stool
Quality: High Quantiy
Size: 5858105cm
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