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Backpacking Gear & Clothing
Let's see a list of "What's In Your Backpack"
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<blockquote data-quote="ssssnake529" data-source="post: 1272116" data-attributes="member: 92079"><p>Some comments on your list:</p><p></p><p>Get sunglasses with photochromatic lenses that darken and lighten. They're good for all day long. Julbo's Zebra light lenses are my favorites because they change quite quickly and in low light, they aren't dark at all. The lens material provides excellent eye protection as well. </p><p></p><p>It looks like you are doing a base camp/spike camp approach rather than a "move your camp every day approach." Your gear seems appropriate for that, and you've got more room for comfort items using that strategy. </p><p></p><p>Merino boxer briefs stink less than poly. </p><p></p><p>Sierra Trading Post is a great place to get trekking poles at steep discounts.</p><p></p><p>I used to carry a Garmin GPS. My smartphone makes a great GPS, and the screen is better than any GPS I've seen. Add a GPS/Map app to your phone and you could leave the GPS behind.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ssssnake529, post: 1272116, member: 92079"] Some comments on your list: Get sunglasses with photochromatic lenses that darken and lighten. They're good for all day long. Julbo's Zebra light lenses are my favorites because they change quite quickly and in low light, they aren't dark at all. The lens material provides excellent eye protection as well. It looks like you are doing a base camp/spike camp approach rather than a "move your camp every day approach." Your gear seems appropriate for that, and you've got more room for comfort items using that strategy. Merino boxer briefs stink less than poly. Sierra Trading Post is a great place to get trekking poles at steep discounts. I used to carry a Garmin GPS. My smartphone makes a great GPS, and the screen is better than any GPS I've seen. Add a GPS/Map app to your phone and you could leave the GPS behind. [/QUOTE]
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