Ryan Jordan

An Insulated Hat Need Not Be So Heavy

Why are insulated hats so heavy? Andy Skurka learned a lot on his 7,800 mile hike across the country. But sewing was not among the skills he mastered. As I work on this week’s BPL Newsletter, Andy descends from the BPL warehouse loft (location of sewing central, where all of our good designs are born […]

Backpacking Stoves for Melting Snow, Part 2: What About the Jetboil?

An interesting side show from my boil-water-from-snow time/fuel economy test was the performance of the Jetboil Stove. The Jetboil required 54 minutes to boil 2L of water from snow but used only 1.5 oz of fuel (compare to 20 minutes or so with an MSR XGK-II @ 2.8 oz, Simmerlite @ 3.2 oz, or Coleman […]

Backpacking Stoves for Melting Snow, Part 1: Coleman Xtreme vs. MSR Simmerlite

Leave it up to a company that considers Wal-Mart a key customer to invent the first backpacking stove that has the very real potential to usurp the veritable MSR white gas stoves as the highest performance liquid fuel stoves on the market. But that’s exactly what kind of potential the Coleman Xtreme has. Backpacking Light […]

Essentials are Not Always What “They” Say They Should Be

Which media channels do you trust? The news media is not particularly known for its sage advice about outdoor travel. They are, after all, "only journalists", or so it’s been said… Perhaps we should place our trust in a backpacking magazine that claims to be the authority in backcountry travel. A reasonable enough assumption, I […]

Born Again Rain Mitts

Something that was nearly ubiquitous on the early gear lists of our staff was the Outdoor Research Rain Mitt (a few were aficianados of the Lobster Claw style). These little beauties weighed 1.1 oz per pair, covered just the hands, and secured with an elastic cuff – a little short for mountaineering and full time […]