
Ahnu All-Terrain Shoe
Ahnu’s Firetrail Winter four-season shoe has a mesh outer that’s said to repel nearly every drop of water you encounter on the trail.
Ahnu’s Firetrail Winter four-season shoe has a mesh outer that’s said to repel nearly every drop of water you encounter on the trail.
An affordable option in the category of four-season shelters: Kelty’s $249 Gunnison Pro tent.
At just 5 ounces, Gerber’s bare-bones Crucial tool is the lightest butterfly-opening multi-tool in its line.
Leki’s ergonomic hand grips, like what’s found on the Thermolite AERGON Antishock model, help set the trekking poles apart from the competition.
The Cat’s Meow is touted as a “classic bag for three-season mountaineering treks.” Our tester tried it out below its temp rating last month in the Tetons.
South African explorer Mike Horn teamed with Wenger to create an expedition-oriented knife that now bears his name.
The Tundraline tent is touted as warm, waterproof, and easy to set up. It also has a feature rare in modern tents: The rain fly is stitched to the tent body.
The REI Half Dome 2 tent has been redesigned to have more interior room. Bonus: It’s lighter, too.
CamelBak designed a bug-zapper-like water purifier that kills bacteria with a dose of UV light.
Primus promotes the EtaPackLite as a carbon-neutral camp stove.
The Brooks Range Rocket tent is a four-season, two-person tent that weighs less than 2.5 pounds in the summer and 1.5 pounds in the winter.
Using a tent and sleeping bag or sleeping bag and bivy sack is so old school now that the Shield is on the market.
REI’s new Ace SW 2 tent is a single-wall design that uses breathable and coated fabrics to create a two-vestibule shelter with ample space inside. This is the Gear Junkie Field Test by Ryan Dionne.
The StoveTec GreenFire is a simple wood-burning camp stove created by an organization that regularly deals with humanitarian efforts from rural Asia to slums in South Africa.
Upon its release a couple years back, the SylvanSport GO was marketed at $8,999 fully loaded. A recent price cut has made the newfangled pop-up tent trailer more approachable.
The FireSteel lighter, originally developed for the Swedish Department of Defense, is marketed to “make fire building easy in any weather.” Hardly the case, says Gear Junkie.
This article highlights new tents for families of four or more. Be it in the backcountry or car camping, one of these tents is sure to fit your family’s preference for sleeping outside under the summer stars.
In the world of backpacks, there is a niche category of products that positions compartments and pouches over the chest. The RIBZ Frontpack is a new entry into this esoteric product realm.
As an alternative to a sleeping pad, the Luxury Lite UltraLite Cot weighs in at less than 3 pounds and keeps a camper “floating above rocks, sticks, roots, water and snow.”
You know that t-shirt you love so much because it fits just right? This top manages to channel some of that mojo. The fabric is silky smooth, and the fit is streamlined but not restrictive. And the Infini T wins extra design points for the angle-cut cuffs that keep your hands bunch-free, plus a soft baffle inside the neck zip that prevents chafing.
The Esbit stove was invented in 1936, and in the decades since its chemical-based flame has heated untold millions of meals for campers and backpackers in search of the simplest form of fire on the trail. . .
REI’s Cirque ASL 2 tent, a two-pole design, sets up quickly and provides the bare bones essentials needed in a backpacking model. This is my test. . .
A march toward making the world’s most minimal multi-tool has led Leatherman to the Freestyle, a bare bones blade-and-pliers.
Coghlan’s Survival Kit-in-a-Can is a quirky product. It is a fun gift, a tin of trinkets and outdoors doodads that pour forth out of a type of vessel most often associated with sardines. Inside, there are “38 essential items for warmth, shelter, and energy in life-threatening situations.” Indeed, in the tight space of the can… Read more »
The SOG PowerAssist is stocked with esoteric and useful implements, including a V-shape blade to use as a seatbelt cutter and switchblade-like action to fling open a knife at the touch of a finger. . .
In the world of outdoor adventure, weight can make the difference between a good time and an ‘I-wish-I-was-sitting-at-home-watching-college-football’ time. And Sierra Designs, a Boulder, Colo.-based company that specializes in tents, sleeping bags and clothes, knows that. So in the off-season (which, in the outdoors world, doesn’t exist) the company revamped its tents.
For most conditions in most areas of the country a three-season sleeping bag is a no-brainer. There are times when you need more warmth and insulation, and there are times when you need less, but usually the three-season setup — those three seasons meaning spring, summer and fall, but not winter — is just about right.
When you’re starving and don’t have much time to cook a meal, the Jetboil Group Cooking System is a good choice. It’s a stove ideal for a small group of backpackers who need an easy-to-use system that heats up fast, breaks down easily and requires minimal extra supplies.
The 5-ounce Leatherman Skeletool promises all the basic functions you need — but not a toothpick more. . .
The Skeeter Beater is a product made for people — and I’m included in this wayward group — who like to sleep inside their cars on occasion. . .
In a “quest for innovation and environmentally conscious design,” NEMO Equipment Inc. of Nashua, N.H., recently unveiled plans to manufacture thin tent poles made of bamboo for a pair of its lightweight tent models beginning in late 2009. . .
No, thanks.