Usage question on the super light bipods:
I live/hunt/etc mostly in the east. Grass/weeds/etc usually make it hard for me to often find prone shots. I've found a tripod (or even shooting sticks, monopod, etc) to be much more flexible as a shooting aid - to the point that I haven't ran a bipod on anything but heavy rifles for a long time now. That's not even getting into using a tripod for glassing and such.
You guys running these cool lightweight bipods... are you also running a tripod in conjunction? Are you foregoing a tripod specifically due to weight? What's the use case where having a bipod in the field really shines?
Obviously the hunt and terrain will dictate priorities.
All my backcountry western hunts are going deep with a backpack on, and I mostly run just an RRS 24L to pull double duty with shooting and glassing. But there's a certain place we go where the terrain lays just right, with minimal vegetation, to where a modified prone is the norm and not the exception. In that area, I will bring an ultralight bipod and lighter tripod, because weight savings. This happens to be our mule deer hunt, so usually all weight savings go into as big of spotter as you feel like carrying.
Another option with spot and stalk and light bipods: ditch the 13oz atlas in favor of the 5oz bipod for 8oz of weight savings, ditch the 3lb tripod for the 2lb or less, and suddenly you have the option of carrying a chair to use at camp and glassing. Or upgrading the 65mm to 77mm+ spotter, which may be the thing that equals success that year.
Gotta love the options we have these days..