Free: Contests & Raffles.
One thing to remember with pack discussions is the fast majority of folks have only ever used one upper end pack and it's always the greatest because that's what they have :chuckle:then take into consideration that a good portion of the ones who have used multiple, dont have them adjusted correctly
I'm not too worried about weight going in +or- a few pounds. I think the light weight pack obsession us a bit overrated as you will be hopefully packing out the biggest animal you can find. How many pass on the biggest animal and go for the smallest, lightweight one? If it can haul a big load and is comfortable, go for it. If you are just hiking, go lightweight.
Hi All,New to the community and thought I'd lob a question over the bow. I went back a couple of years here in the Backcountry board and didn't see a general discussion about what pack, what size and why. May be this topic has been exhausted to death in another area. If so please point me in the right direction. If not, what do you guys like and why? How many days you usually going into the BC for? AVG weight for that trip? What size pack do you bring for that? What brand and why has that frame system worked well? You packing a bow or rifle? Setting up a base camp or bivy hunting with a loaded pack on your back all day? Really looking to get a detailed breakdown of what pack systems work well, what they work well for, and why that brand pack pulls it off. Not just a "can't go wrong with insert brand name " Should probably also describe build as that will have an impact on what fits well for certain folks. I'm 5'11 173, medium build. To kick it off my top contender right now is the Exo 5500. Will be doing 2-7 day trips and can't afford two packs. Figure I'll go bigger and take advantage of how well they compress down. Pack should come in between 35 and 65 pounds depending on trip length. I like the idea of the flexibility and range of movement they have created with their frame which is why I'm headed that way. Still need to actually try it on and compare with others before forking over that kind of cash. Hence why I'm looking for your guidance. Thanks in advance!
I like my KUIU 3200. Big enough if I were to do a 2-4 day hunt bivy style. It will carry a heavy load, and no matter what pack you have there is no magical pack that will make carry 100 pounds comfy. So you just suck it up. I also prefer a pack that isnt so big that I cannot sneak through the woods with it on. squeezing between trees and brush quietly. The diff between 2-3 days in the woods and a week is food. Compression sacks work wonders for clothing and sleeping bag. So a 3200 would be as small as you want to go.