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How many packs do you own?


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Home Forums General Forums General Lightweight Backpacking Discussion How many packs do you own?

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Viewing 25 posts - 51 through 75 (of 77 total)
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  • #1773779
    Ryan Teale
    BPL Member

    @monstertruck-2

    Locale: Almost Yosemite

    Racking my brain….

    Camelback MULE

    Golite ION

    ULA AMP

    ULA OHM

    BPL/ULA Arctic Pack

    BPL/ULA Prototype Arctic Pack

    Osprey Aether 60 (2003)

    I like them all and wouldn't get rid of any of them. I would like to update the OHM to the newer hipbelt. The Amp shoulder straps aren't my favorite but I'll use it till it wears out.

    #1773790
    Mike W
    BPL Member

    @skopeo

    Locale: British Columbia

    #1774807
    Eric Blumensaadt
    BPL Member

    @danepacker

    Locale: Mojave Desert

    LARGE PACKS:

    Dana Designs Terraplane
    REI Cruise UL 65
    Camelback Commander (backcountry ski pack MUCH modified)
    Tough Traveller Day-and-a-Half (Given to all us Nordic Patrollers who patrolled the '80 Winter Olympics)

    DAY PACKS:
    Vaude
    Outdoor Products camo hunting pack
    National Ski Patrol day pack
    REI Flash convertable (from stuff sack to UL day pack)

    FANY PACKS:
    Five of various sizes. Two are Ski Patrol 1st Aid packs.

    #1774834
    Bobby Pack
    BPL Member

    @piddler

    Locale: West Virginia

    Oh, I do have a pile of packs, they are beside the pile of shelters and under the pile of bags.

    It all still fits in one closet and I only have two packs on order.

    #1775115
    larry savage
    Spectator

    @pyeyo

    Locale: pacific northwest

    I'm going to use your sales pitch to sell my better half, "it all fits in one closet"

    #1775553
    Mike M
    BPL Member

    @mtwarden

    Locale: Montana

    my biggest pack is a Golite Pinnacle- almost exclusively used for winter trips

    ULA Ohm – 3 season general use

    modified Ion- short SUL trips

    Opsrey Talon 22 long day hikes/winter day hikes

    Osprey 5.5 short day hikes/trail running

    Marmot Kompressor- when I plan on a lot of day hiking out of a base camp

    Kifaru Scout- big game hunting

    Dana Designs Gallatin lumbar pack- big game hunting when I don't need as much pack as above

    on my wish list a MLD Burn and if I ever draw a goat tag- Kifaru KU3700

    #1775601
    Craig Savage
    Member

    @tremelo

    Locale: San Jacinto Mountains

    I don't know, you tell me… I'd have no BPs if it were not for you

    thanks Dad, I'll strive to do the same for mine

    #1775609
    Anthony Weston
    BPL Member

    @anthonyweston

    Locale: Southern CA

    I have a damaged blast (quite a bit of duck tape), a zero (to replace the blast when the duck tape no longer works or it just gets too heavy from all the duck tape), a zpacks exo on the way (to use when it's a cross country bushwacking route so I don't have to duck tape the zero)and a Nimbus ozone which was such a comfortable backpack I could not bring myself to sell it.

    I have a marmot zephyr and a marmot garmsal that are my beat to death training packs
    and are both extremely comfortable 2 lb day packs that can be used for weekend trips if need be.

    #1776289
    sun thechip
    Member

    @sunthechip1

    Zero :(

    One is on the way though

    #1776291
    drowning in spam
    Member

    @leaftye

    Locale: SoCal

    ULA Catalyst
    Kelty Yeti 4300
    REI Great Star
    Dana Designs Astralplane
    And soon one of William Zila's packs

    I have a couple other packs that I'd use for day hikes and cycling, and more for motorcycle and computer.

    #1776342
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    An OHM meets all my needs.

    I also have a first generation ULA Circuit I loan to friends and an old Mountainsmith Gray Ghost that hangs in my basement to remind me of epic trips in the misty past.

    #1776344
    Jake Willits
    BPL Member

    @trailsavvy

    Locale: Arkansas Ozarks

    ULA CDT
    Osprey Exos 46
    1993 North Face Indri (9 bazillion c.i.) family gear hauler
    Mountainsmith bladder pack
    Millet prolite 24
    Some military Cordura thing
    Military issue camelback
    2 external frame packs at my folks house. Saving them for the pack museum.

    The point is that each pack has a specific use. No, I don't have a problem.

    #1776364
    Chris Morgan
    BPL Member

    @chrismorgan

    Locale: Southern Oregon

    MLD Burn – 1-3 nights.

    Golite Jam – 4 or more nights. Or bearcan. Or winter.

    Golite Ion – the Burn replaced this, but it was only $25, so I'm keeping it for now.

    Osprey Stratos 24 – daypack. The ventilation is great – making me think about getting an Exos.

    #1776398
    James holden
    BPL Member

    @bearbreeder-2

    3 not including rope bags

    1. osprey mutant with some duct tape n seam grip ….

    2. marmot alpha that is holding up surprisingly well … just a few minor holes … too bad it weights 900g or so …

    3. a MEC 16L 1000D bullet back that i have not been able to damage substantially at all despite hauling it … costs like $20

    now i did have a dead bird cierzo nice UL pack … but that got a big hole quickly in less than 2 months despite not doing anything more crazy than running up easy multipitch with it … back to mec it went

    'the question to ask is how many packs do you own that you dont or rarely use, and dont really need, and are still shiny an new enough to put "as new" in gear swap =P

    #1776403
    Cesar Valdez
    Member

    @primezombie

    Locale: Scandinavia

    My wife and I own seven backpacks.

    Everest travel backpack – My SUL and dayhike pack, just got this a few weeks ago and am very happy with it after going on a few dayhikes. On my scale it is only 350g.

    Generic cloth backpack – Wife's dayhike pack and my old SUL pack. Have no idea the brand, just a simple pack with straps, a main pocket, and one small pocket.

    Golite Jam – Go to 3 season pack.

    MYOG pack – If I am not going through thick woods and just sticking to trails I will swap this in for my Jam, as it is a bit fragile, but only 450g with about the same volume (maybe slightly less) than the Jam.

    Osprey Kestrel 48 – For winter or if I am going with a group and we are doing fancy meals, i.e. fresh veggies/fruit, bottles of wine/whiskey, etc.

    Two generic backpacks – Again, don't know the brand, both were bought on sale for cheap, and both are very tough. I am guessing they are both about 30l and around 1kg each (never weighed them), lots of padding and thick hip and sternum straps and very comfortable. These are our urban and roadtrip packs mostly, and I also use mine all the time for school. My wife uses hers for backpacking (I used to use mine before the Jam replaced it), as I am the one that hauls our shelter, cook kit, FAK, and lots of other gear we share, so she does not need a high volume pack and does not give a hoot about going UL (mostly because I am the one hauling the lion's share of gear, I think).

    I am proud to say that while we may own "a lot" of packs, they all have their place and all get used.

    I would think about buying a GG G4 or a ULA CDT if I had the cash to throw around (always nice to have more options), but right now I am very happy with my set up.

    #1778977
    Randall Johnson
    Member

    @tsunami

    Locale: Southern Nevada

    Camelbak PeakBagger 1-2 Nights

    Osprey Exos 46 2-5 Nights

    #1779065
    Brian Austin
    Member

    @footeab

    Locale: Pacific Northwest

    1) For weekend to 10 day trips BD Shadow 55L for mountain climbing. Bro and I switch between that and ULA P2 as both are different, but the shadow is superior for rock climbing and attaching tat/pro/harness/crampons/iceaxes/ice screws/pickets

    2) Overnight backpack have my ancient school bag that somehow hasn't been destroyed yet. Don't ask me how I have managed that one.

    3) Superlong trip McHale Alpiner for 3-4 week + mountaineering trips.

    4) Dana Designs Astraplane? Someone want to buy it? Going cheap… I stupidly bought it at a super deal because I couldn't find a used McHale Alpiner. Its garbage in comparison. Same with Gregory Denali Pro which I sold off thankfully.

    5) Frame Backpack use for hauling firewood out of our ravine and muscle training. My dads ancient 1960's frame backpack I ruined doing this.

    6) Travel airline bag, that has shoulder straps on it that converts to a backpack. No danged handles and wheels and I don't have to bring a backpack when I want to go hiking when I fly to Denver! No external straps to get stuck on conveyor belts like normal backpacks. Its also tough as nails and can be tossed around, laid on, sat on with impunity. A must for a travel bag.

    #1779149
    Elliott Wolin
    BPL Member

    @ewolin

    Locale: Hampton Roads, Virginia

    Lost count after a couple of dozen, including old external frame packs and lots of daypacks (some near worn out).

    I outfitted a family of five, including three kids from birth to graduating college, and through two revolutions in backpacking gear (from traditional external frame packs to internal frame packs, then to lightweight/UL).

    My old Gregory Snow Creek is a work of art, but I doubt I'll every use it again at 5 1/2 pounds. But I do lend it out on occasion. Maybe I'll use it to climb Everest one day…

    #1779171
    Dale Wambaugh
    BPL Member

    @dwambaugh

    Locale: Pacific Northwest

    I'm down to two, one for day hikes and another for multi-day.

    I do have a small collection of small rucksacks we use for commuting and travel– thrift store and garage sale stuff I bought for $1-$5. I go through and clean them out once a year or so and have my own garage sale or donate them, along with other household stuff. I have developed more discretion over the years with my thrift-store and garage sale leanings. My First Rule of Acquisition is: Don't create another garage sale.

    #1779216
    Mike M
    BPL Member

    @mtwarden

    Locale: Montana

    ^ what two packs are they Dale? :)

    #1779219
    Dale Wambaugh
    BPL Member

    @dwambaugh

    Locale: Pacific Northwest

    Mike asked, "^ what two packs are they Dale? :)"

    ????

    I sold the Talon 22 if that is what you meant.

    The packs du jour are an Osprey Exos 46 and an old-style Stratos 24. I've given up on the truly UL unframed packs in favor of ventilation and weight transfer. I do wish I could sit down with the Osprey design team for an hour and talk to them about straps and gee-gaws! That Exos looks like the hardware rack at Seattle Fabrics ;)

    #1779225
    Justin Baker
    BPL Member

    @justin_baker

    Locale: Santa Rosa, CA

    4 packs.
    A cheap jansport pack (that has held up for 15+ years), a golite peak, a gregory tarne 36, and a 70-80's era german military canvas pack.

    #1779243
    Mike M
    BPL Member

    @mtwarden

    Locale: Montana

    was just curious what two packs you are using

    I really liked my Exos, wanted even lighter and went w/ the Hornet- another great pack but just too darn small for a M/L- I (and others) wrote Osprey about the short torso length, but don't think they changed it :(

    #1779247
    Dale Wambaugh
    BPL Member

    @dwambaugh

    Locale: Pacific Northwest

    Yeah, I was all hot and bothered about the Hornet until I ran into the torso length issue. [Dale snaps the Osprey design lead in the head]

    #1785175
    Jeff Fox
    Member

    @jeffbfox

    Mike,
    Actually we did make changes to the torso length on Hornet. The Hornet 24 and 32 received some in-line changes to make them better fit longer torsos. The Hornet 46 will be available in S, M, and L sizes in Spring 2012 instead of the current S/M and M/L torso sizing. This will cover a broader range of torso sizes and allow the taller users to have a better fit.

    Jeff Fox
    Osprey

Viewing 25 posts - 51 through 75 (of 77 total)
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