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Our Swedish stickhandling Balls are made from high-quality natural wood, making it durable and resistant to warping and cracking, these hardwood No-Bounce floorball are a great gift for hockey beginners or seasoned players, these wooden hockey training balls offers you a feeling that’s quite similar to training with an actual puck in the rink, it works exceptionally well as an alternative to ice hockey pucks when it comes to off-ice training, you can practice ice hockey anytime on a smooth surface, it effectively enhances muscle memory for the sport, and consistent practice will quickly improve your ice hockey skills.
Steve K.
Reviewed in the United States on March 14, 2025
Hard & solid but light weight, no cracks, and (as advertised) almost no bounce on a hardwood floor.Definitely not round. They’re ovoid, which can be seen in the photo although it’s exaggerated a bit with the wide angle default lens. The measured variation is between 1 57/64” - 1 61/64” instead of the advertised 2” diameter. Maybe it’s low humidity shrinkage? Around here the humidity is usually 15-30% which is desert-like, and can get as low as 5% at times, so some shrinkage in ALL wooden objects is inevitable and it’s always asymmetric.So… I plunked a ball in a 100% humidity sealed container for a day to see the results. The measurements rose just a bit to 1 59/64” – 1 62/64”, which means maybe 1/3 of the shrinkage was corrected in only 24 hours? After a week or two it might actually get back to the original 2”, who knows. Not that this necessarily matters for quick stick handling practice but if used on a flat and hard floor for more relaxed drills and/or passing to others, or maybe just rolling back and forth with the small children, the wobbling will definitely be noticed. Plumping them back up to high humidity and then immediately sealing with a few layers of polyurethane or the like might get them round again but I’m doubtful that anyone is actually up for that work. So the balls might be irregular ovoids rather than straight spheroids, depending on your climate, but that probably doesn’t matter for most buyers.At $13 they aren’t dirt cheap but they do seem like good quality.They serve well for juggling practice! And make for more of a challenge than the standard beginner’s beanbags — there’s no tolerance at all for mid-air collisions, so get it right.
Epillon
Reviewed in the United States on February 21, 2025
They're smaller than regular hockey balls about the size of a pool ball. They're not solid wood but still sturdy enough. They work well for help in puck handling practice and speed. They definitely don't have much bounce to them which is good. You get a set of 4 which is nice and I'm still on the 1st one.
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