Consumers know Patagonia mostly for high-tech apparel and softgoods. But its latest product announcement is decidedly old-school and named simply the Patagonia Wood Burning Stove.
Small, wood-burning cookstoves are a longstanding mainstay of hikers, bushcrafters, and general outdoor adventurers. In the right climates, where burnable organic material is plentiful, they work well. Simply collect some dry wood, leaves, or other flammable biomass and start a fire to boil water or cook over.
This type of stove usually uses simple engineering to increase airflow and improve secondary combustion. And there are quite a few on the market already. But Patagonia took a nice angle on this traditional design, resulting in a stove that weighs just 7.5 ounces.
But there’s more to this stove than meets the eye. It’s the center of the Untethered Kit, which one could look at as the brand’s most minimal kit to date. It’s one that Patagonia founder Yvon Chouinard asked for and designed to, as the brand says, “go simple and get deep.”
Patagonia Untethered Kit
At the heart of this kit is the Patagonia Wood Burning Stove. But it also includes a Patagonia x MiiR Quantumiir Pot with a heat exchanger and silicone lid (weighs about 12 ounces), a Lightweight Sleeping Bag (to add warmth for those sleeping in their clothing), and lightweight Middle Fork Pack, meant to carry the bare essentials in a tough nylon bag made of 50% post-consumer recycled content.
Patagonia Untethered Kit
- Wood Burning Stove: $99
- Patagonia x MiiR Quantumiir Pot: $49
- Lightweight Sleeping Bag: $199
- Middle Fork Pack: $149
- Available: Late spring or early summer 2020
It’s something of an odd kit for a brand most associated with high-tech fabrics, sustainability stories, and apparel meant for pursuits like skiing, ultrarunning, and mountaineering.
But the Untethered Kit aims for a different type of exploration. A longtime project for Chouinard, the kit encourages wandering exploration, uncoupled from mealtimes.
