Archive for the ‘Gear’ Category

February 17th, 2010

Win the Gear Backpacker Mag Tested

kelty lakota reviewEver wonder what major gear review sites such as Backpacker do with the gear after they’re done putting it the test? This year, the editors of Backpacker’s April 2010 Gear Guide have managed to convince most of the manufacturers to allow them to give their wares away. Good news for us!

This week’s giveaway is Kelty’s new Lakota pack. Read the review and enter to win the pack here.

February 13th, 2010

100+ Gear Lists For Every Type of Trip, Ever

A benefit of paid membership sites like BackpackingLight.com is they keep most of the spammy riff raff away, leaving room for only highly-enthusiastic, and (mostly) intelligent discourse.

Fortunately for us, there’s portion of BPL that’s both FREE of charge AND riff raff: The Community Section.

There you will find over 100 PDF-downloadable ultalight backpacking lists compiled by members of the community. Then, through the magic of crowdsourcing, the lists are ranked and discussed on the forums so that you can easily identify which lists are credible enough to assist in your own pack planning.

Head on over to BackpackingLight to check them out!

100 plus gear lists

February 1st, 2010

This Backpack Generates Electricity

energy backpackUsing the same principles as wave generators, U of Pennsylvania biologist Lawrence Rome has created a backpack that generates about 7 watts of electricity. It works by harnessing the kinetic energy of your body’s movements with shock absorbing parts (and some other complicated stuff).

Amazingly, it’s not much heavier than a normal pack — maybe a few ounces — and early testers say it’s actually more comfortable than normal backpacks.  This is great news for the gadget gear hiker. Hit up TreeHugger for more details.

January 26th, 2010

A Free Odor-fighting Shirt For All You Smelly Hikers

Stink much? Head over to Agion Active to get a FREE “odor-eliminating” shirt. One half is treated with their special sauce (which includes “dual action” antimicrobial properties among other innovations), the other without, so you can smell the difference.

Sign up to test the stink-less tee here.

(via The Daily Dirt)

January 20th, 2010

Target To Sell Kelty Brand Outdoors Gear

target kelty hiking gearAccording to SNEWS, the go-to outdoor industry news source, Target has added Kelty to their list of partner brands and will begin carrying camping and other outdoor gear beginning January 31st.

Props to Target for giving shoppers more than just Coleman crap to buy, and I’m glad they’re bringing a better brand to the masses, but part of me dies a little every time a big box store starts selling more niche-type brands. It’s like loving a band for years, hoping they make it big enough to earn a nice living and thus churn out more music, only to have them explode into heavy rotation on the local Top 40 station. Then, the next show you see is inundated with 17 year-old douches who only know that one song and act bored the rest of the set (cough–Kings of Leon–cough). But I digress…

December 30th, 2009

3 Trusted Winter Gear Lists For Your Upcoming Trip

BackpackingLight

As its name suggests, BackpackingLight takes lightweight backpacking seriously.  Much of the site requires a paid subscription to view, but their gear list and tools section is free and awesomely thorough.  This winter backpacking checklist is specific, easy-to-read and print.

Section-Hiker

The blog’s author used this list when preparing for a winter trek up Mount Washington in NH. Many of the recommended gear links lead to his own reviews of said gear, making this list doubly useful.

Backpacker

The Backpacker editors put their hiker-heads together for this comprehensive list. Be sure to read the comments section for even more great winter gear advice.

What items would you add or subtract? Suggestions welcome!

December 9th, 2009

Hiking in Crocs. Really.

Dave over at Compass Points wrote a eloquent account of a recent backpacking trip we took through Northeastern parts of Shenandoah National Park in VA.  I’d like to expand upon one passage in particular, as I think my readers might find it interesting:

We discovered a sandbar on the opposite shore, and when our shoes sunk there, we knew we had made it. On dry trail, we returned our boots to our feet – except Chris, who would continue this strenuous hike in, of all things, Crocs.

Yes, you read that right — I walked the next 10 miles in Crocs.  Eagles Crocs (go Birds!).  Here’s my review after trudging up the side of the ancient, stony Appalachian mountains, then steeply descending — headlamp-assisted — to our perch at Bird’s Nest Shelter: The Crocs…well…they ROCKED.

As any hiking buddy of mine within complaining distance knows, I have temperamental feet.  When they’re not cramping, they’re cracking, when they’re not cracking, they’re rubbing.  Seriously, my feet are jerks, often forcing me to give up hikes or cancel them before they’ve even begun.

We all know Crocs are great camp shoes because of their soft sole, relative durability, light weight, and carbon nanotube supermolecular (or something) rubber material that keeps microbes and their associated smells at bay.  Crocs aren’t thought of as a hiking shoe for several good reasons, not the least of which is the total lack of ankle support, or the fact they they’re only held to the foot by a tenuous rubber strap above the heel, which will probably give you a blister if you give it enough time.

HOWEVER, I needed footwear immediately.  My gorgeous Patagonia Drifters, which normally fit like warm apple pie, were now frozen blocks, and I was not going to hike 10 more miles to the shelter in frozen blocks, dry moisture-wicking wool socks be damned.  So I slipped on some socks, then the Crocs, got laughed at and chided the rest of the day, but I made it.  The Crocs made it.  My feet felt better at the end of the day than at any other time in my backpacking life.

Perhaps it was because the Crocs are so flexible that they allowed my foot to stretch fully while walking over boulders and roots, like if I were barefoot, and thusly prevented any sort of cramping issues.  Or perhaps what I should have done at that first river crossing was to take my boots and socks off, worn the Crocs through the river, then put my warm-apple-pie Patagonias back on and saved the Crocs for camp.

So, to recap, we’ve learned two lessons:

1. I’m an idiot whose river-crossing footwear decision-making abilities are lacking

2. Crocs excel as a hiking shoe in a pinch