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The Black Diamond Bbee is a tiny, ultralight backpack designed to carry the absolute minimum of essentials on long trad climbs and half-day trail runs. Thanks to its 210D SilNylon construction and tiny size, the Bbee Backpack weighs only 12.7oz. Use the Bbee as a stuff sack inside your regular backpack, and load it with a rain shell and some water before you head up that 1000ft alpine rock climb.
Bottom Line: When you barely need a backpack, carry your gear in the Black Diamond Bbee.
This might be a great pack, but for me the Magnum is a better fit. The extra space (it's a little bigger) and the compression bungee seal the deal. I'm planning to use it for multipitch climbing and I'm planning to carry shoes, water, snacks and a shell jacket. The bungee gives you that little bit of extra space if you need it, or compresses the whole thing if you don't. This pack won't fit water, size 9 shoes, and a shell - the magnum will.
It's so light and comfortable, you forget it's on. Small enough to stuff into your backpack on long trips to use for day hikes etc. On the Inca trail, it was large enough to carry my water, first aid kit, rain poncho, fleece, lunch, toothbrush, and extra shirts and underwear. (Yes, I was amazed too!) Much better than those poor sods lugging those huge packs up the passes!
Hi there... I am walking in the 3 Day Walk for the Cure and I need a back pack large enough to fit 2 water bottles, an extra pair of socks, some sun tan lotion, and a first aid kit, but small enough that I can carry it for 20 miles a day for 3 days without being a terrible burden. I want something that is no bigger than 12 or 13 inches. How does this rate and do you have any other suggestions?
I just got this pack today... it'll hold 2 (1 litre) water bottles, and everything else you mentioned easily. The pack its self is very minimalist and light weight, so it shouldn't be much of a burden. It has in internal pouch for keys and such. And it's hard to tell from the pictures but it also has a pouch for a hydration system with a covered hole at the top for the straw (which is better than carrying water bottles as you can drink while you walk, won't move around on you, and spreads the weight better.)... *this pack doesn't come with a water bladder and straw, just has room for one to fit in.... you might also want to check out hydration packs (camel packs) they might also fit your needs.
I got this backpack as an inbounds ski pack, and for day hikes and short trips. Now I use it for all this, and more. It has become my carry-on bag, my school pack, and my biking pack. My only real problem with it is the lack of back venting. It is only one solid piece of mesh, which really restricts the air-flow during high intensity activity.
I use this pack when snowshoeing, when toting a camera and lenses on vacation, and for my little one when she wants to carry her own "stuff". It is so lightweight that you can easily forget you have it on, but it's shape make it hold a respectable amount of supplies. Highly recommended!
I got this backpack as an inbounds ski pack, and for day hikes and short trips. Now I use it for all this, and more. It has become my carry-on bag, my school pack, my biking pack, and most recently, my approach bag. A Nalgene 32oz. bottle can fit on its side perfectly in here, and it has a hydration sleeve to hold any bladder up to and including 100oz. The little loops on the side are great for hanging your climbing shoes off of, or a couple quickdraws. My Patagonia R1 Flash Pullover, Nalgene and harness all fit in here, with room for a small first aid kit, and a light lunch. The fabric is very tough, and has held up great to the everyday abuse I have put it through and is pretty water resistant, holding up to heavy rains on several hikes. The small inside pocket is actually a lot bigger than I thought it would have been, easily holding a cell phone, keys, wallet and a camera! It is about 2/3s the length of the bag, and the material expands a bit to accommodate your possessions. The back padding is minimalist, but good protection from your books or water bottle. I actually can carry my Macbook (13") in the sleeve. My only real problem with it is the lack of back venting. It is only one solid piece of mesh, which really restricts the air-flow during high intensity activity.
This is a brilliant pack. For climbing, day hikes, and mellow rambles through the verdant realms of this world, this is a beaut of a day pack. The design is minimalist: I carry a 1L water bottle, a lightweight pile pullover, a lightweight rain jacket, a small first aid kit, and a small lunch. The shoulder straps are excellently contoured and comfortable, and the minimalist padding against the back really does work as a barrier between my spine and my waterbottle. What it is not: waterproof, spacious, and interestingly colored. What it is: incredibly comfortable, reasonably sized, feather-light, and brilliantly designed. What Ive used it for: multi-pitch climbs, day hikes, backpacking (ultralight daypack to bring along), cross country skiing, and international travel (day tours in foreign cities).
Great pack, sturdy, highly packable, so you can take it on long trip as a "daypack", but no extra pockets period and too small. Shell out extra $5 and get Magnum from same manufacturer.
Perfect 3-season day pack. Hydration bladder fit well and I managed to stuff a fleece pullover, vest, pant leg bottoms and snacks in the pack easily. I was forced to hang my soft shell from my waist, but that wasn't too big of a deal. The pack fits nicely in my Osprey Atmos 65 pack. Doesn't take too much room and definitely worth it for dayhikes on multi-day trips. Added bonus - the pack is water resistant. I was hailed on, snowed on and rained on during my last trip and the water slid off the pack like water on a duck's back. Would've liked pouches on the outside for a Nalgene. Two small rings on each side to hook stuff onto don't really cut it. Only reason for not giving this a five-star review.
I wanted the smallest, lightest pack I could find that would store the biggest load that I want to carry on a day hike -- viz. sandwich, juice box, apple, sweater, windbreaker, keys, wallet. The Bbee is the perfect size. The Bbee is basically just one bag that zippers at the top. Within this main bag, there is a pouch for hydration bladder and a small pocket for keys and wallet. The pocket has its own zipper and a key clip. I selected the Marigold color because I've learned that a light color (like yellow) captures more light within the pack, making it easier to see and locate items at the bottom of a pack. My only criticism has to do with the zippers. Because the pack is so light and insubstantial, one has to hold the pack down while operating the zippers. Only way to fix that, I think, would be to make the pack heavier and more rigid. But then the Bbee wouldn't be the very light pack that I wanted.
The pack was OK but I ended up getting the Black Diamond Bullet instead. I did not like how the there were no extra pockets nor how the main compartment zipper did not open more fully. I ended up returning and getting the Black Diamond Bullet which has the features I was looking for. Overall both backs are excellent quality just depends on what your needs are.
I've had this pack since 2004 (I think), and I've taken it all over the world and on all sorts of terrain. I take it on my daily hikes in the foothills in Idaho, and as a carry-on when traveling. My laptop even fits inside so I occasionally carry it for work. My only complaint is that the zipper tabs came off, but it looks like they've changed the design since I bought mine. I've given this pack as a gift numerous times.
This is an excellent lightweight version of Black Diamond's venerable Bullet Pack. I use mine on long rock routes to hold a water bladder and extra food and a windbreaker. I also use it as a pack for mtn biking, replacing my Camel Back. It's the do it all small pack. The material is pretty burly for how light it is. Another great well thought out, simple design from BD.
This pack doesn't suck, but there isn't a star for 'didn't fit my needs' which is the case here. I was looking for a small backpack to use every day in my city life -- something that would hold just a few things: big fat wallet, sunglasses, reading glasses, cellphone, book I'm currently reading, sun hat or gloves, etc. This backpack turned out to be much too big for my needs.
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