Like many recreational aerialists, I always dreamed of having a rig at home but never bought one in the past due to frequently moving for work/training. Plus, with a fair number of aerial gyms in most major cities, finding a place to practice was never an issue until the current quarantine situation.After a couple months of aerial withdrawal, I finally bought this rig which I later realized was a bit tall for my apartment (115" tall, my ceiling is just about 8 feet, or 96-97 inches). I was worried this would have to be an outdoor rig, but was pleasantly surprised when the package arrived that each leg of the rig is comprised of three separate telescoping parts (two identical pieces and one bottom piece, plus four stabilizing "feet", x 4 legs). I was able to forego one of the identical pieces, which makes the rig shorter, but it fits inside my apartment (its hard to measure tall things by myself but appears to be just shy of 7 feet).The rig comes with some accessories: straps to attach the hammock to the top of the A frame, two carabiners, a silk hammock. You'll have to be able to tie the hammock yourself, so a basic knowledge of safe rigging is required here. The silk is great and is what I'm used to working with. The carabiners were terrible, they are the screw top kind and they became stripped very easily, and I eventually had to use pliers to un-screw them (I didn't over tighten them or anything, they actually came stuck). However, I went to a hardware store and purchased a few carabiners which I used instead. The straps are OK, they are not daisy chain, which are the kind I've seen used at most gyms and are easier to adjust the silk height. I'm using them for now, but may eventually replace those too.TL;DR: Pros of the rig - fairly inexpensive, tall if you use at its full height, wide enough at its base (again when used to full height), silk is nice, pseudo-adjustable (as described above), shipped quickly also, fairly easy for me to assemble by myself, felt stab