Stitched and constructed by hand in the USA, and made for backwoods abuse, a Duluth Pack is likely the last canoe backpack you’ll ever have to buy. Its retro styling is an unforeseen bonus.
A short-term review of the Duluth Pack #51 Deluxe doesn’t do it justice. This is a bag that’s better suited for a 30-year review. But we did our best to shove some use and abuse into a two-month test period.
Duluth Pack has been manufacturing canvas bags and backpacks since 1882. Yes, 1882. And the company’s products come with durability that is legendary in the outdoors world.
We got our hands on what is the company’s medium-size utility pack and put it through its paces. This is a smaller version of the kind of Duluth Pack you may have used in the BWCA, Quetico Provincial Park, Algonquin, or portaging in the Adirondacks as a kid.
First Impressions
It should be stated right from the start that the #51 Deluxe — or really any of the Duluth Pack bags — have nothing to do with “performance” in the modern sense.
These bags are built the same way they were in 1882 — by hand — and the company has largely ignored the upgrades made to backpacks over the past 100 years or so in favor of its time-tested design.
Canoe Trip Test
Long-Term Use
Duluth Pack #51 Deluxe Specs
- Made In: Duluth, Minn.
- Dimensions: 20H x 18W inches
- Capacity: 1,640 cubic inches, or 26.87 liters
- Materials: 15 oz. canvas; leather straps; brass buckles; cotton webbing
- MSRP: $145
- Links: Product Page / Buy Now