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Joshua Keith

Climber // Trail Runner // Skier // Nordic Skier // Mountain Biker // Mountaineer // Ice Climber // Backpacker // Whitewater Kayaker

Joshua Keith: #119 of 91,775 Top 200 Gear Guru More Information

30 Reviews:

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  • Stomping Grounds:

    Switzerland

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P4 in action

P4 in action

Scott P4 Alpine Ski

January 26, 2009

Crans-Montana Switzerland, off piste

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Golite is the generic version

GoLite Den 2 Shelter 2-Person 3-Season

GoLite Den 2 Shelter 2-Person 3-Season

Rating for this product: 2 October 20, 2009

Go for the original... http://www.tarptent.com/ ... lighter, roomier, better in storms, more versatile, BETTER.

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Petzl Aztarex Ice Tool

April 26, 2009

The adze is useful if you plan on doing 'alpine' style routes, longer less vertical routes where you can take the time to prepare screw placements and even cheat by cutting steps to steady yourself while placing a screw. On vertical ice you really don't have the time (strength) to chop screw placements so many people have shifted to climbing with two hammers, or even 'blanks' which are neither hammer nor adze to save weight. P.S. Don't hammer in screws.

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Patagonia Heavyweight Mountaineering Sock

April 25, 2009

While I've never minded a 'warm' sock, these may be a overkill for Rainier in August. I climbed Rainier in June and found that a medium weight sock was sufficient. Heavy weight won't be uncomfortably warm, but you could get by with a lighter sock.

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Marmot Alpinist Tent 2-Person 4-Season

March 23, 2009

Much to the disappointment of Marmot... I would build your own. It's cheaper and lighter. Take 5mm plastic available at any hardware store and cut it to fit your tent exactly. Then add packaging tape reinforcements to the edges (you can get super fancy and add tie out points using p-cord and packaging tape). In general, I've found these homemade jobs to be more waterproof, cheaper, and lighter than the 'officials'. Also, the provide plenty of protection. I've used this system with a sil-nylon tent, think crepe paper, for 5 years and the tent's floor is still without damage. Also, if you do happen to tear the "footprint"... well, it will cost you about $0.17 to build a new one. Light, functional, durable, cheap...

Helpful Votes: 1 Yes | 0 No

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ALPS Mountaineering Extreme 2 Tent 2-Person 3-Season Tent

March 23, 2009

Any tent that has a full coverage fly, such as this one, can have condensation problems. Essentially, we put out a tremendous amount of water vapor at night. As the temps drop, that vapor condenses on the interior of the fly, or possibly even the inner wall of the tent, and then can be a problem. A few thoughts, avoid bringing wet gear into your tent... any added moisture will make this problem worse and leave your door open if there isn't a danger of rain. While some tents avoid issues by placing vents in key locations, this ALPs doesn't have those features and the large flat area on the top can encourage drops to collect and fall on the upper mesh, which may eventually lead to a few drops inside the tent. This doesn't mean it's a bad tent, just part of the game. If you really want to avoid the moisture problem, look for a tent with steeper walls (to allow the condensation to run down the sides) or vents in the fly.

Helpful Votes: 1 Yes | 0 No

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Buyer be ware...

Outdoor Research Alibi Glove

Outdoor Research Alibi Glove

Rating for this product: 2 March 2, 2009

I've climbed in these gloves for several seasons. In my opinion, they're more of a novelty item than a serious piece of equipment. They're not warm enough unless the temps are 20+ and the sun is shining. For steep mixed routes on warm days, they're fun to pull out of your pack and watch your friends sneer. The grip with them is better than the grip bare handed. I picked up 3 pair when they went on sale for $15. I tried all kinds of things- like taping heater packs to my wrists- to use them in a wider range of conditions. On top of that, the gloves durability is not great. I suppose for fall/spring dry tooling they may be excellent- but for true winter conditions, expect to loose digits.

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Tips and tricks

Snow Peak GigaPower Fuel 110 IsoPro

Snow Peak GigaPower Fuel 110 IsoPro

Rating for this product: 3 February 27, 2009

Gas is gas... so long as you avoid coleman brand canisters. During the summer the ease and control of canister stoves make them my choice, but in the winter these little bundles of joy can perform very poorly- decreased temps cause lower pressures, lower pressures cause poor performance.

A few tricks to help with the problem: tape a hand warmer to the bottom of the canister, insulate the canister from snow, use your hands to keep it warm, get an MSR reactor stove that regulates the gas pressure.

Helpful Votes: 1 Yes | 1 No

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ALPS Mountaineering Crescent Lake Sleeping Bag: 20 Degree Synthetic

February 25, 2009

If you're not backpacking, get the heaviest (most durable) compression sack that you can find. Don't worry about waterproofness, save your money. Think about the Granite Gear or Outdoor Research products. They're durable and inexpensive, BC has a few for around $25. If you plan on "risking" rain, then drop the extra 10 bucks and get a waterproof one like the Sea to Summit event stuff sack.

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Hiking shoes, not trail runners

La Sportiva Ultranord GTX-XCR Trail Running Shoe - Men's

La Sportiva Ultranord GTX-XCR Trail Running Shoe - Men's

Rating for this product: 4 February 23, 2009

I bought these shoes as hikers not runners and have found them well suited to the job. The sole is stiff and supports well. The gaiters are worth much but they do keep scree and snow out of your socks. They're durable- after several months of use only the 'La Sportiva' lettering is falling off. I've tried running with them- imagine strapping a pair of bricks to your feet. If you were doing adventure races- ie jogging- then maybe these would work, but they're just not nimble enough to handle anything else.

Helpful Votes: 1 Yes | 0 No

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Marker Duke Ski Binding

February 12, 2009

Looking for compatible crampons for the Marker Duke binding with Scott P4's... any thoughts?

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Black Diamond Bombshelter Tent 4-Person 4-Season

February 11, 2009

I used a tent, Bibler Tempest, with Todd-tex for 4 seasons in everything from -30F winter storms to 40F fall deluges... never once did I get wet from condensation or water from the outside... stuff is unstoppable. Only downside it it is bulky and heavy. It doesn't compress well.

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Rockin' little lamp/heater

Primus MicronLantern w/ Self Igniter

Primus MicronLantern w/ Self Igniter

Rating for this product: 5 February 10, 2009

For cold winter camping, this thing is great. While not recommended, one could light this lantern inside a tent and realize that the tent quickly becomes a warm dry haven despite the sub-zero temperatures outside. One would have to be careful, but it is a nice way to warm up for the change to or from the sleeping bag. Otherwise, this little lantern provides a great deal of light. It takes a beating, travels light, and performs well- just keep it away from flamable stuff, it doesn't play nice with nylon.

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Over-priced, but cool as hell

Sea To Summit eVent Compression Dry Sack

Sea To Summit eVent Compression Dry Sack

Rating for this product: 5 February 10, 2009

This is a great stuff sack that I picked up on a super sale. It does exactly what is says, allows air to pass out of the bag while compressing... and remains waterproof. My sleeping bag went swimming on a canoe trip (along with the rest of my gear) and emerged dry as a bone. Durable, light, simple... just not cheap.

Helpful Votes: 2 Yes | 0 No

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Backcountry Access Tracker DTS Freeride Package

February 7, 2009

This is a very functional and value oriented package. It gets the job done without any bells or whistles. I like the beacon and the probe... the shovel leaves something to be desired... it seems too small and ricketty... nothing more than opinion though. I like building a avi kit from scratch with all the bits and pieces that I like- you only buy it once and it last for years, get the good stuff.

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Swix Red Quick Klister

February 6, 2009

Speaking from a racer/coach perspective, Klister is never a good thing. It's messy to apply and messy to clean up. No matter how careful you are it gets everywhere... that said, in the right conditions it will perform well and last longer than traditional hard wax. I would recommend a universal -5/+5 klister. In general, if you have fresh snow klister is not the correct choice- a hard wax will bind to sharp, well formed snow crystals and is easier to use... also, fluffy snow will stick to klister no matter how thin of a layer you put on. I would recommend sticking with one company... either Swix, Star, or Toko... in general, each line performs predictably, but if you start mixing lines their properties get blended and it gets more difficult.

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Bluebird Wax Marc Frank Pro Wax

February 6, 2009

From an ex-racer who used lots of high-end waxes, for recreational use there is absolutely no difference. If you are very, very critical, some waxes will last longer, work at a wider range of temperatures, offer slightly better performance, but if what you want to to protect your base and offer a slightly silky smooth performance, any wax will do the job. Of course, Swix, Star, Dakine, and Toko will all sputter at this answer... but I happily use the cheap stuff now that a team isn't paying for my wax anymore. Do I notice the difference, slightly, but that's with years of high fluoro experience- Do I care... not at all.

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Black Diamond Sabretooth Pro Crampon

February 5, 2009

Sabertooth is a great general purpose crampon. It will climb ice, but it is more designed for multi-purpose mountaineering. Double check on the BD website for compatibility.

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Single quiver ice tool

Black Diamond Viper Ice Tool

Black Diamond Viper Ice Tool

Rating for this product: 4 February 4, 2009

I've climbed on them for the past 4 seasons and stand by the performance. They're a bit heavy as Scott mentioned, but after 4 seasons I'm in better shape and the tools are still workhorses. If you only have 1 set of tools, this is a really good choice. You can play on long alpine routes with a mixture of snow and ice, but the tools are equally at home on vertical ice. With a good variety of picks, mixed pick, lazer, and titan, you can really customize the tool to the type of climbing you enjoy or plan on for any given weekend.

The android leash also provides some of the benefits of leashless climbing, ie easy screw placement and switching tools, without committing to leashless climbing. If you are interested in climbing with these tools leashless- save yourself the frustration and buy a leashless tool. With some add-ons they might look leashless, but they are a leashed tool- that's their strength.

Helpful Votes: 1 Yes | 0 No

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Black Diamond Viper Ice Tool

February 2, 2009

they're a bit heavy, but with the mixed pick (not the lazers or titans) the tool performs well. Angles are solid, placement is steady, put some grip tape on and they perform well... don't expect them to out perform a leashless tool though.

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CAMP USA XLC 490 Universal Crampon

February 2, 2009

any crampon with a set of horizontal front points will work for glacier travel. While crampon companies would complain with this answer... they're all pretty much the same. Grivel and BD tend to be slightly more technically oriented while Camp seems to go light weight. For glacier travel, you don't really need technical performance so 'light is right'. The only consideration that I would make is 'bot plates'. Basically these are plastic sheets that prevent "balling", snow collecting into 3" stilleto heels for your crampons. Funny when it happens to your buddy, not so enjoyable when you're having to smack your crampons with your ice ax every two steps.

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Osprey Packs Ariel 65 Backpack - Women's - 3800-4200cu in

January 30, 2009

really depends, if you're sacrificing 'comforts' an experienced hiker can slim down to a 15lb bag. With careful packing and a moderate comfort level, you can swing 30lbs easily, but shaving weight takes experience. Also, hiking solo you have to carry most of the things that 2-3 people can split between each other... so hiking with a group you can go lighter. The nice thing about this pack size is you have a great flexibility of trip length. With careful planning you could easily travel for 5-8 days, but at the same time you could simply do a 2 day trip and not feel like you were carrying alot of floppy bag space. If you are weight conscious, check the weight of the bag itself, 4lbs is kinda heavy. That's 4lbs that you can eat and won't keep you warm... something to think about.

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Effective, simple, quick, but bulky

Backcountry Access Tracker DTS Beacon

Backcountry Access Tracker DTS Beacon

Rating for this product: 3 January 30, 2009

Hey it's a great unit. Simple operation and very provides a very quick search time, albeit I've only practiced with it. The unit does take up space underneath your jacket and leave you feeling like you've gained a small tumor.

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Sierra Designs Navassa Bivy

January 29, 2009

speaking from experience, there's not much long enough in N.H. to warrant a bivy. Bivies are fairly miserable. After owning a Wild Things Bivy for four years, I can count the number of times that I used the thing on one hand and all of them (besides trying it on my porch) were out west or in Europe. In the summer, bivies are stuff and claustrophobic. In the winter, well, I'd carry the extra 2 pounds for alittle more space to wait out storms. If you're still gung-ho for a bivy, take a look at the Wildthings Bivy. It has a full strength tie-in that allows you to sleep tied in... and it's made of a great fabric. Enjoy the whites, I miss the ice.

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Freestyle USA Shark Buzz Sport Watch

January 29, 2009

call Backcountry directly... if they can't help you, which I doubt, they'll let you know who can... their customer service is great... if calling is a problem, chat with one of their gear gurus.

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Sierra Designs ASP 2 2-Person 3-Season Tent

January 29, 2009

The difference between the number of seasons typically relates to the structural strength of the tent... can it handle a snow load, will it tolerate wind, etc... summer tents also tend to have larger mesh areas to deal with night time heat. Hope that helps

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Single pad solution

Big Agnes Dual Core Sleeping Pad - Mummy

Big Agnes Dual Core Sleeping Pad - Mummy

Rating for this product: 5 January 28, 2009

I led trips in Northern Maine for the past 10 years and was constantly searching for a sleeping pad that could handle the extreme cold, -30F, that we suffered through up there. Before this pad I had to carry a thermarest and a ridgerest- otherwise you could feel the cold seep through. With this pad, I have never felt the cold. It literally adds a few degrees to your bags comfort rating. I don't roll around much, so I can't really comment on how easy it is to stay on... you're pretty high up with the pad fully inflated. Using the pad with a regular sleeping bag worked great- using it with a Big Agnes bag I found the pad so big that there was hardly room left for me... and I'm only 5'8" 160lbs... a friend borrowed my gear and literally couldn't zip the bag shut. If your a small individual, Big Agnes also stands for BA gear... it performs well and is super durable. Considering that I could only carry one pad, this system saved weight. For summer or fall travel, it's overkill and heavy.

Helpful Votes: 1 Yes | 0 No

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Heavy, but durable

Black Diamond Contour Elliptic Shock Trekking Pole

Black Diamond Contour Elliptic Shock Trekking Pole

Rating for this product: 5 January 28, 2009

This is not a delicate pole... after a disappointing experience with a set of Leki's I tried these puppies out. I wish they offered a cork grip, but the locking mechanism is glove friendly and reliable... unlike the Leki's... the poles are strong and durable. Whether you're using them to hold up a Kiva shelter or you while you're crossing a stream, they will stay exactly where you set them.

Helpful Votes: 1 Yes | 0 No

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Fall, Summer, Spring... NO WINTER

Therm-a-Rest ProLite 4 Sleeping Pad

Therm-a-Rest ProLite 4 Sleeping Pad

Rating for this product: 5 January 27, 2009

I own a Prolite 4 3/4 length pad and love it for simplicity and light-weight traveling. It rolls down to nothing and is super durable... mine is several years old and has never "popped". (FYI, don't leave yours near a stove closed. A buddies popped when the air expanded and had no where to go... amusing so long as it isn't yours). Unfortunately, I've found that the cold seeps right through this pad in the winter... either carry two pads or consider the Big Agnes Dual core... it's heavier, but you only have to carry 1 pad, at the end of the day it is lighter.

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Poor durability, go Black Diamond

LEKI Super Makalu COR-TEC PA Antishock Trekking Poles - 1 Pair

LEKI Super Makalu COR-TEC PA Antishock Trekking Poles - 1 Pair

Rating for this product: 2 January 27, 2009

LEKI is the big name in poles, but honestly, I was disappointed. The cork grips were nice, but the locking mechanisms are not user friendly in the winter and broke after a short period of time. Look at the Black Diamonds... better locking system which is glove friendly and doesn't break/collapse without warning.

Helpful Votes: 0 Yes | 1 No

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Easy, light weight, reliable, GREAT!

MSR MIOX Purifier w/ Batteries

MSR MIOX Purifier w/ Batteries

Rating for this product: 5 January 27, 2009

I've used these professionally for the past 4 years. Whether on a personal jaunt or guided trip, the Miox is simple and light weight. It is similar to iodine in that you need to wait for the ionized solution to treat your water, but it's treat a go unlike a pump. So stop, fill, treat, and 20 minutes down the trail go ahead and drink. Battery life is affected by the cold- and the batteries aren't easy to find so if you're traveling off the beaten path you may want to think about extra batteries or another system. Otherwise, I carried 1 set of batteries and treated enough water for a group of 10 for 12 days.

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NEW SARKENs !!!

Petzl Sarken Crampon

Petzl Sarken Crampon

Rating for this product: 5 January 27, 2009

Ignore the 'recall' comment. These crampons were recalled two years ago because a few climbers were breaking the extremely long front points. I climbed on the crampons and loved the performance. I grudgingly turned in my crampons when the 'recall' notice came in. Now that the crampons have been redesinged- I can't wait to buy a set. They are amazing at holding in anything- this is the ultimate mixed mountaineering crampon... the front points are long enough to puncture through aerated ice/frozen moss or anything else and give you reliable purchase. The twin tips also provide a very stable platform for placing equipment. Love em.

Helpful Votes: 1 Yes | 0 No

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Therm-a-Rest Trail Sleeping Pad

January 26, 2009

No. Thermarest will absorb water into the outer fabric. That said, water will not penetrate through the pad- it does hold air so water won't get into it. So you can sleep on the ground and expect to stay dry, your pad may be damp but they dry quickly. Hope that helps.

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Heavier than spacious

Mountain Hardwear Hammerhead 2 Tent 2-Person 3-Season

Mountain Hardwear Hammerhead 2 Tent 2-Person 3-Season

Rating for this product: 3 January 26, 2009

This tent weighs quite a bit for the space it provides. If you want a small, durable, and bombproof shelter... it's great. The fabric is indestructable and the design is sturdy. Set up is very simple... basically one pole. I've had it for two summers and endured several soggy canoe trips and a few weekend backpacking trips with it. For one person, it's spacious. For two people be prepared to cuddle. I would look at other tents that provide more space for their weight- unless durability and stability are critical factors, there are other products on the market.

Helpful Votes: 0 Yes | 1 No

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Mountain Hardwear Hammerhead 2 Tent 2-Person 3-Season

January 23, 2009

The tent is a tank- super durable, very stable in winds, great dual vestibules... if you were 'thru-hiking' then I wouldn't suggest this tent... but for canoe camping, car camping, and a few weekend backpacking excursions it isn't a bad choice. Be prepared to snuggle with your hiking partner though... it's tight inside for two. Having two doors is nice, and each person gets their own vestibule space...

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uncomfortable without a liner/hat

Giro 2008 Omen Wireless Audio Helmet

Giro 2008 Omen Wireless Audio Helmet

Rating for this product: 2 January 20, 2009

Looks great, but it rubs unless you have a hat on... you end up with a sore head by the end of the day.

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Sold Out

Petzl Altios Climbing Helmet

January 15, 2009

These light weight helmets, like the Altios and Elios, are one shot helmets. Petzl outlines several "retirement" scenarios on their website, but essentially, check your helmet after any impact. If there is any obvious damage or the impact was very significant, retire the helmet. I've had an Elios for 4 years and taken several good wallops from falling ice while ice climbing. The helmet took the blows like a champ and I don't hesitate to keep using it. If I ever took a substantial hit, or if the helmet reaches 10 years old, I will retire the helmet. These helmets aren't like the heavy artillery helmets that people used to climb in... they're more like bike helmets... one "significant" hit and they should be retired... no one wants to define "significant" because no one wants to be liable to an exact definition of when to retire equipment.

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5 days off piste and still not pissed off

Black Diamond Alias with Avalung Pack - 1831-1939cu in

Black Diamond Alias with Avalung Pack - 1831-1939cu in

Rating for this product: 5 January 12, 2009

This pack rides like a shadow and carries everything you need (plus some) without hampering your style. I spent 5 days skiing everything from groomers to chutes and cliffs. The pack excelled at steep back country terrain. Two areas which were problematic: bumps and "tucking". In bumps, I noticed the pack more than I would like and needed to tighten the straps... which solved the problem. When "tucking" I found the top lid prevented me from really lifting my head, so if you want to drop into a tuck this pack really isn't for you. Otherwise, BD hit a homerun in my opinion. 1800 cubic sounds large, but the pack zips down to a manageable size. The pack does exactly what it is designed to do with out the 'bells and whistles' of the airline luggage models.

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Powerful, stable, and aggressive

Scott P4 Alpine Ski

Scott P4 Alpine Ski

Rating for this product: 5 January 12, 2009

I just spent the past 5 days on these boards. I brought my old skis along incase I didn't like the P4's on groomers. It took me 3-5 runs to get accustomed to the width, but once I dialed that in... these skis screamed. They smooth out inconsistent conditions, float on powder, land drops soft, and love big lazy turns on groomers. They are much more responsive at speed, but they will negotiate technical terrain at slower speeds as you become more familiar with them. They felt 'stiff' in tight bumps, but that could simply be the time of year (and my poor conditioning). They immediately improved my confidence in 'off-piste' conditions and glade skiing. Great ski.

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Solid performer

Marker Duke Ski Binding

Marker Duke Ski Binding

Rating for this product: 5 January 12, 2009

The duke does what it is meant to do, provide a solid platform for off-piste skiing and allow some AT performance. This is not a weight shaving all day touring binding. If you're taking lifts to the top and then making long traverses to reach chutes, it's a great binding. A friend and I went off-piste and took these off some big drops. His traditional alpine bindings kept blowing up on hard impacts; even with my dins set low, the markers held on and gave a solid platform. The extra height, because of the AT design, actually helped with carving by acting like a riser plate. I skied these bindings hard on and off-piste for 5 days and never had a problem... always lift serve though. I used them just to make long traverses.

Helpful Votes: 1 Yes | 0 No

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10 years of professional use

MSR WhisperLite International Multi-Fuel Stove

MSR WhisperLite International Multi-Fuel Stove

Rating for this product: 5 January 12, 2009

I worked for 10 years in a wilderness program and this is the only stove that we used for any length of time. Super durable and field repairable, the stove is a reliable performer. We tested several other stoves but always returned to the ease and performance of the Whisperlite. I would spend the extra money and get the international version. In all the years that I used the stove I never used a fuel other than white gas, but we found that the "white gas" only versions clogged easier and required more maintenance. The only issue with the stove is it melts into snow if you're using it in the winter, while slightly amusing to watching your cook pot sink into the snow, a stove board or shovel blade fixes the problem quickly enough.

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your basic brain bucket

Petzl Elios Climbing Helmet

Petzl Elios Climbing Helmet

Rating for this product: 3 January 2, 2009

no frills, light weight, fairly comfortable. I've taken a few good wacks from falling ice- probably grapefruit size, results... no pain, lots of adrenaline, and nothing but good feelings for the helmet. It gets the job done. I like the helmet much better for winter/alpine pursuits than I do for summer rock trips. It's less comfortable/streamlined than other helmets on the market. With a hat, the comfort issues aren't important.

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Solid performer

Black Diamond Blizzard Harness

Black Diamond Blizzard Harness

Rating for this product: 4 January 2, 2009

I've used the harness for 2 seasons of alpine and vertical ice. It does the job well.

Pluses: racking options, full strength rear tie in point, adjustability, and comfort

Minuses: not a nimble rock harness, 'ice clipper' interferes with traditional racking,

Overall, pretty solid harness if you want a winter workhorse.

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Summer Only like most canister stoves

Snow Peak GigaPower Stove Manual Ignition

Snow Peak GigaPower Stove Manual Ignition

Rating for this product: 4 January 2, 2009

Great summer stove, good performance, light weight, small size... more durable than the MSR Pocket Rocket and in field tests the stoves boiled water in approximately the same amount of time. Surprisingly, the stove has excellent 'simmer' levels. Don't expect to balance a big pot on this baby- it's a backpacking stove, not for large groups, but for 2 or 3 people it's one of the best of it's class.

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Not up to MSRs reputation

MSR SuperFly Stove

MSR SuperFly Stove

Rating for this product: 2 January 2, 2009

I used these stoves in the field for 3-4 years. They are capable of handling a larger pot than most 'small' stoves, but they are also moody and fragile. If you are willing to nurse the stove and need a stove to handle a larger pot this will do it, but I think MSR missed the mark on this product. If you want to cook for a group, accept that you need a liquid fuel stove. If you want to cook for yourself and a climbing partner, there are better stoves on the market. Consider the Snow Peak Giga Power for summer trips or the MSR Reactor for winter trips.

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Petzl Elios Climbing Helmet

December 31, 2008

I took several grapefruit size ice chunks last season. The ice came from a climber approximately 60' above me. The ice ricocheted down onto my head, net result... no injury and lots of adrenaline. Helmet is sound, even after the impacts. Hope that helps.

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Quick, simple, and efficient

MSR Reactor Stove

MSR Reactor Stove

Rating for this product: 5 December 18, 2008

I've brought this stove out on mountaineering trips with temps ranging from -10 up. Where as most canister stoves crap out in cold temps, this one still performs well. It's quick. It's easy. And it only boils water. Seriously, this stove isn't designed for gourmet backpacking- don't try to get all Wolf Gang, it's a climbing stove. It melts snow and boils water. That's it.

An add on that would be nice, a hanging system.
alittle less CO2, this stove puts out quite a bit. I think 3x the normal amount so be careful.

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Start with the best tool on the market

Petzl Nomic Leashless Ice Climbing Tool

Petzl Nomic Leashless Ice Climbing Tool

Rating for this product: 5 December 16, 2008

Best tool currently on the market. While I'm climbing in Switzerland now, I've spent most of my time climbing mixed and water ice in the northeast US. These tools are absolutely amazing for leading. The swing is fluid and confident. They stick on a single swing even in cold conditions. At first I was worried I would drop the damn things, but I've had cold days where I couldn't feel my fingers and bad falls where my junk got re-adjusted... I never dropped a tool. Once you switch to leashless you will wonder why you didn't make the transition earlier- switching tools and placing screws suddenly got a lot easier.

I've also climbed with BD Vipers, BD Cobras, Ergos, Ta-ka-toons, tech wings, etc... they've all got there strengths. If you want an alpine or "do everything tool" get the Vipers... if you want mixed and water ice, bite the bullet and buy the Nomics- they last forever and you won't be drooling over them after you bought some cheaper tool.

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Too much, and yet not enough

Black Diamond Sensei Glove

Black Diamond Sensei Glove

Rating for this product: 3 December 16, 2008

Solid glove, but it splits the difference between warmth and dexterity, effectively missing both. While I'm in Switzerland now, I spent most of my time climbing in New England- warm roadside at 20 degrees and cold alpine at sub 10. This glove seemed to over very little dexterity for the roadside days and not enough warmth for the alpine days. It gets the job done, but I definitely prefer a thinner glove with a big over mitt.

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Black Diamond Alias with Avalung Pack - 1831-1939cu in

December 15, 2008

Covert vs Alias vs Outlaw... how do these packs ski when they're not entirely full? Any opinions on performance differences or are they primarily stylistic choices?

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Super warm, no dexterity

Black Diamond Mercury Mitten

Black Diamond Mercury Mitten

Rating for this product: 4 December 11, 2008

Stupid warm, but be prepared to loose all dexterity. This is not a climbing mitt- think of it like a warm happy place for your hands- you 'can' hold onto ski poles, but don't plan on knowing whether you're holding onto them or not.

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La Sportiva Trango Extreme Evo Light GTX - Men's

December 10, 2008

I used these boots on a 2 day approach to Gannet Peak, WY. While not the trail shoes that I typically hike in, these boots did surprisingly well on several long days. If I was ever to do Gannet again I would wear running shoes for the hike in and pack these boots for the climb, but if you need the support of a full mountaineering boot I don't think you'll find a much better all-rounder that is lightweight as well.

Helpful Votes: 2 Yes | 0 No

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Summer Mountaineering Boot

La Sportiva Trango Extreme Evo Light GTX - Men's

La Sportiva Trango Extreme Evo Light GTX - Men's

Rating for this product: 5 December 10, 2008

I've climbed in La Sportiva K4S, Koflach Verticals, Degrees, Invernos, and Scarpa Alpha's. This boot excels in warm weather technical exploits. It handled the long approach to Gannet Peak fairly well. On the mountain the boot is light, nimble and warm. If the temperatures dipped below 20 degrees I wouldn't want to spend much time standing around in it... that's not really what the boot is designed for. If you want cold temperature performance, this is not your boot. If you have a narrow foot and want a precise crampon compatible boot, this boot will serve you well. If you have a wider foot consider the Aku Spyder.

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sturdy speed hikers, not really "runners"

La Sportiva Ultranord GTX-XCR Trail Running Shoe - Men's

La Sportiva Ultranord GTX-XCR Trail Running Shoe - Men's

Rating for this product: 4 December 10, 2008

Great shoe if you want to speed hike a rough section of trail. The shoe is on the heavy and stiff side for "running". If you want to lope with a pack or cover lots of distance the shoe is great. Gaiters are more gimicky than helpful.

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Scott P4 Alpine Ski

December 7, 2008

Mounting questionI've seen everything from +5cm, 0, -1cm, to -2.5cm. Haven't found many answers only other people asking the question. Any thoughts? I plan on riding off piste in Europe- no crazy switch landings, just good powder, steep slopes, and crud.

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