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alpinejames

Camper/Hiker // Climber

alpinejames: #681 of 93,625 More Information

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G3 Bonesaw

June 29, 2008

It works reasonably well. The straps are the stiff rubber backwards-thumb-buckle type straps that you often find at ski mountaineering shops for strapping your skis together. Usually they strap tight enough around and most things aren't completely smooth (even probes have a bit of a bump at the end) to keep it from sliding off. The curved handle works well to help staying on too. But as with any saw-attachment, it can be sort of bulky (i.e. difficult if not impossible to push through the already-sawed slot) and hard to saw with from a pole-length away.

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Okay, if it fits your crampons

Petzl Fakir Crampon Carrying Bag

Petzl Fakir Crampon Carrying Bag

Rating for this product: 3 June 10, 2008

What can I say about a crampon bag? This one is pretty basic - no daisy chains or useful lashing loops so good luck strapping it to the outside of your pack if that's your style. Personally, I either use a crampon bag inside my pack, or strap my crampons bare-toothed to the outside of my pack so that doesn't bother me. However... the bag is a little small. Mine measures 10.5 x 5 x 4 inches, so if your crampons are any larger than that, no soap. The mesh is a little stretchy (at the cost of somewhat damaging the mesh) so I've managed 10.5 x 5 x 5 but that is about the max. My old CM 12's and CAMP's fit fine, my alumimum Stubai's barely barely fit (frustratingly tight), and my fixed rail ice crampons don't at all. And the bag weighs 7 oz (almost as much as one of my aluminum crampons) so I mostly only use this while packing my crampons in my luggage. But for that purpose, when crampons fit in it, it's bomber and has protected my gear quite well...

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Great chest ascender

Petzl Croll Chest Ascender

Petzl Croll Chest Ascender

Rating for this product: 5 May 19, 2008

Basic, lightweight, does its job. What more can I say? I use this ascender caving, and it indeed fits the advertised range (8-13mm) and sticks to muddy, grimy ropes (though not used on icy ropes...yet). Easy to manipulate with gloves, nice that the black plastic opening lever keeps the ascender in an open position when I'm changing over from descending to ascending. One gripe is that using webbing as a chest puller harness tends to rub against thick ropes and makes ascending a little harder. But the croll plus a handled ascender for frog ascending makes fast work of vertical ropes.

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Best canyoneering carabiner, bar none

Petzl Attache Locking Carabiner

Petzl Attache Locking Carabiner

Rating for this product: 5 May 19, 2008

This little beauty is great in a canyon. Non-bulky on the harness (thus slides through slots well), yet still HMS-ish shaped for tying a munter-mule or other contingency in a rappel. The keylock makes it easy to clip/unclip while a little bit weighted (while changing over, mid-rappel etc), and the red line makes an unlocked 'biner easy to spot from a distance. Plus, for its size, the gate clearance is pretty huge. However, it feels a bit small for my climbing style, but maybe I'm just used to larger locking carabiners.

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A better daisy

Metolius Personal Anchor System w/out Carabiner

Metolius Personal Anchor System w/out Carabiner

Rating for this product: 5 May 19, 2008

I cringed when I first dropped 2x the cash of a daisy chain on this, but it was worth it. I can clip in short, drop or add loops as I need more or less length, and not have to worry like with a daisy where a few hundred pounds can rip the stitching on the middle loops. It racks pretty easily, and the main longer first loop is great for extending my belay device. Great for working near or over an edge.

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Outdoor Research Crocodiles Gaiter - Women's

May 18, 2008

Not necessarily. If you are a medium shoe-sized person, a medium will probably fit fine, etc. However, for smaller/larger shoes, get a smaller/larger gaiter. For example, I wear a small gaiter with my running shoes (not this gaiter, a different Outdoor Research gaiter) and an XL with my big enormous plastic boots.

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Backcountry Access Tracker DTS Beacon

May 16, 2008

I agree that this beacon is pretty good. Pretty much all beacons have both transmit and receive ('locate'). However, this isn't a PLB (locator beacon) which alerts rescue teams to come find you. Its intent is to find someone within very short range (~30m) under avalanche debris. Also, keep in mind that if you're depending on rescuers to find your son, you're thinking the wrong way. Rescuers take hours just to arrive on scene, suffocation under avalanche debris takes minutes. Proper beacon use, irregardless of -which- beacon depends on education and trained ski partners, who, by virtue of skiing with you, will be there on scene (with their own beacons) hopefully in time to do something. Beacons have less than a 50% live find rate for recreational skiers. Almost better to spend the $300 to take a class, learn the basics, and rent a beacon instead.

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Marmot Couloir Sleeping Bag: 0 Degree Down

May 16, 2008

Probably not, unless you are normally soaked inside a sleeping bag. I have used bags covered in everything from Dryloft to Pertex to the 0F version of this bag (the Col) and have never really had a problem. Most of the moisture escapes through the stitching, I would guess. But the water resistance is nice to keep dew and frost from penetrating the majority of the bag.

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Tiny power

Princeton Tec Eos Headlamp

Princeton Tec Eos Headlamp

Rating for this product: 5 May 16, 2008

For its size, this headlamp has great distance. The beam is pretty focused, and the brightest setting can hold its own while moving/hiking in the dark. No other headlamp this size that I have compares in distance. However, despite its waterproof claim, I had it in my pack (which floats, so it was never deeper than a foot or so underwater) for 13 hours in a canyon, and water seeped in to short out the 'on switch' and burn out my batteries. After drying out, it was fine, but a real bummer when I actually needed it to be waterproof. Also, the light beam is not very wide, so combined with its exceptional brightness I tend to be able to see only one area of a trail/campsite and become pretty nightblind to the surroundings. Even when reading in a tent, the light seems almost too bright when on its lowest setting. But who am I to complain about a light that's too bright'? It's small and works great, bottom line.

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The best space blanket you can get

Adventure Medical Heatsheets Emergency Blanket

Adventure Medical Heatsheets Emergency Blanket

Rating for this product: 5 May 16, 2008

This blanket is very well thought-out. Compared to other blankets with similar purposes, this one is much less crinkly sounding, doesn't de-laminate into uselessness after storing it in my first aid kit for a year before unfolding (like others do, grrrr....), is quite fire-retardant (useful, as bivies and fires sometimes go together), and does what it claims, that is, reflect heat. It does it so well, in fact, that sitting next to a bivy fire I could feel warmth on my face and exposed arm areas, but not in the areas the blanket covered. Weird. The package claims it is re-usable and re-foldable which I agree with, but it never quite stuffs down as compactly as it began (it ends up being about 2x the size versus about 20x the size for other blankets). Well worth the extra $1.50 or whatever it ends up being vs the competition. Would be worth double, or even triple. Nice work, Adventure Medical.

Helpful Votes: 1 Yes | 0 No

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Beal Rando 30m Rope DryCover - 8mm

May 9, 2008

Depends on your skills and the glacier. Obviously, if you're navigating a glacier with huge crevasses (AK, Nepal) then it will be too short. But with a two-person skilled team in the Cascades, you'll have some left over at the ends to put in your pack or coiled around you (for resue hauling, if you need it). Biggest drawback seems that this rope does only glacier (low impact forces) and can't transfer to rock or vertical snow/ice on a route.

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The Patagonian Volvo

Patagonia Super Guide Jacket - Men's

Patagonia Super Guide Jacket - Men's

Rating for this product: 5 July 11, 2007

I've found this to be a pretty great workhorse softshell.

The jacket pattern is designed exceptionally well - it's quite stretchy, the pockets are in the right spots for a harness or pack, the waist comes down long enough for wearing tucked under a harness, the underarms are gusseted, the cuffs are clean (no Velcro) and mate well with gloves, and the neck is cinch-down-able.

Simple, basic, no frills design.

The weatherproofness and durability is also exceptional. The DWR lasted about 20 field days, where water just beaded up and ran off. Now, it's still fairly water-resistant, but not waterproof in heavy grinding rain.

On the downside, it's heavy. Most modern softshells clock in under a pound. This is closer to a pound and a half.

But it has proven itself as a workhorse shell, and I expect mine to last through harder use than most of my shells get, and for a longer time.

Helpful Votes: 3 Yes | 0 No

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Wow ...

GoLite Gamut Jacket - Men's

GoLite Gamut Jacket - Men's

Rating for this product: 5 July 5, 2007

Stretchy, waterproof, seam taped, lightweight, durable, breathability on par with a softshell ... and under $100, this jacket is amazing. How does Golite do it?

Be warned, this jacket is simple as simple gets. No wrist cuff closures (though the arms have adequate length and the cuffs mate with gloves well), very basic cord hood adjustment, tiny pockets that don't work under a harness, wimpy zipper pulls.

But all of the essentials are there - storm flap on main zipper, soft protector over where my chin hits the zipper, helmet-friendly hood, and of course fit and function. From 4 straight days of storm on Shasta to super-sweaty climbing in the Sierra, this jacket has done it all. Go Golite.

Helpful Votes: 1 Yes | 0 No

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Lightweight, comfy, what more can you want?

Pacific Outdoor Equipment InsulMat SL-Mtn Sleeping Pad

Pacific Outdoor Equipment InsulMat SL-Mtn Sleeping Pad

Rating for this product: 5 May 5, 2006

I bought this pad to be the 'frame' for a frameless pack. It works great! It weighs much less than a full length ridge/Z-rest and is also more comfortable. The orange soft foam around the torso area makes a huge comfort difference, and it is very warm and insulates well. The one thought for the potential buyer is that the bottom foam, though warm, is not super durable. I prefer to use a ground tarp/Tyvek under it, and when it's not in my pack being protected (i.e. when I need to strap it to the outside) I put it in a stuff sack. But overall, this is the best foam ground pad I've used (out of four others).

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