Fifteen Percent Discount on Gear Ties

You will get a 15% discount off of your order when you purchase from www.geartie.com, now through December 31st.

The code is HOLIDAY1 that you will need at time of checkout.



I use these and they are great. They are a rubber coded twist tie that come in five sizes. You can use them to tie anything up, down, together or apart. Use them to keep cables organized, hang items, or just keep handy in your car for what every you may need.

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Ortovox CheckandRide

I have an Ortovox
CheckandRide. I’ve spent hours looking at it trying to “figure it out.” Like a lot of life, why it is a valuable piece of winter backcountry equipment and how it works was a lot easier to understand when I quit working to understand it and just started to use it.

The CheckandRide is a cylinder. The cylinder has different sections that twist or rotate. By following the components starting at the first one you spin the risk factors for an avalanche for the day and terrain you are getting ready to hike or ride. At the end by scanning the entire cylinder you have a good idea of the risk, for that day, sort of.

When I would work my way through the cylinder I kept waiting for it to say, go or don’t go or give me a reading on a scale, 1 is low risk 5 means you are going to die. It doesn’t do that. Day after day I worked the CheckandRide and did not get an answer.

But the CheckandRide works beautifully! It works in two ways. First to make the Ortovox
CheckandRide work it makes you check all of the factors to determine if you are going into Avalanche terrain. It needs information and you have to find the information for that day and that trip. It is a checklist that makes you check every factor. How often have you gone to terrain that you have hiked and ridden in the past, looked it over and made a mental decision based on past experience and what things “look like” today? The CheckandRide makes you look at all of the factors every time you go out, not just making a guess based on the last trip, a sunny day and desire.

The second way is the CheckandRide does give you a final evaluation. By using the CheckandRide, when you are done you know whether you should go or not go. It makes you think about every factor and makes you understand what you are doing so you know what you need to know. You can’t gauge an avalanche based on a scale. You need to factor in several other things. What is your risk scale? How much risk are you willing to take on? What about your friends you are riding with that day? Or maybe you are riding alone that day? All of that has to be factored into your day and the CheckandRide makes you do that.

I attached the Ortovox
CheckandRide to my ski pack with a small carabiner in a way that makes it swing and rattle when I grab the pack. Right away I’m reminded to work through every factor. It continues to rattle and thunk on things until I take it off and work through the eleven risk until I know where I am going and what I am getting into. The Ortovox
CheckandRide will safe your life because you have to understand the risk factors of your trip. The CheckandRide makes you find them before you go out the door.

Thanks Ortovox.


Sea to Summit eVent® Compression Dry Sacks

When things don’t just go right, means perfect product testing time; In this case a march Grand Canyon raft trip. (See Thank Heaven for SD last week) March, high in the 80′s low in 50′s from obviously a broken thermometer. In 18 days we never saw 80′s and some days we barely saw the 50′s. It rained and it snowed on my sandaled toes. But that is great weather for testing product.

I took three Sea to Summit
eVent® Compression Dry Sacks with me. These stuff sacks are extremely light weight, 5.9 oz for a large one and they work. I took a large Sierra Designs® Wild Bill 200 Extra Long sleeping bag (Which is another story!) and put it in a large Dry Sack. The sack worked. It compressed the bag down to a small size (8″ x 9″ round), easily and kept the bag from getting wet.

But that is not the real test. I also put a wet tent into a medium stuff sack. Five days later I used the tent again and I pulled it out of the stuff sack dry. No mildew no water a dry tent. The eVent® compression sack had compressed the tent to a small bag, and allowed the water vapor to escape.

Stuff sack looks like any other stuff sack till you look at the opening. Instead of a drawstring there is a roll down closure to seal water out. The eVent bottom allows air to escape as the bag is compressed.

Features of the eVent® Stuff Sack from the website are:

  • Unique compression idea – allows air to be pushed out to compress, but water can’t get in because of the waterproof, air permeable eVent® fabric base
  • Rugged 100 D nylon body & lid
  • Waterproof seams – double stitched and tape sealed
  • Roll top Hypalon™ closure with lid and 4 straps evenly compresses and maintains compressed size
  • Reinforced stitching on all stress points
  • Pull handle on the bottom
  • Super compact and very light

Thanks Sea to Summit


Thank Heaven for SD

I own two Sierra Designs Tents and three Sierra Designs Sleeping bags. One of the tents and two of the bags are over fifteen years old. The tent was just used in April, 2009 and the older sleeping bags in June of 08. But that is not the story. The story is a new bag I got to review. Sierra Designs
Wild Bill 200 Extra Long sleeping bag. Thank heaven for my Sierra Designs
Wild Bill 200 Extra Long sleeping bag!

I was on a March-April Grand Canyon River trip. That time of year historically in the canyon the highs are in the 80′s and lows in the 50′s. On this trip the 80′s were never seen and the fifties were a rare sunny day. During the day you are rowing an 18′ boat so keeping warm is not hard. At night things were different.

Three of the nights fronts came through, three mornings we had snow less than a thousand feet above us. It was also windy. So windy that some tents had several inches of sand in them in the morning even after being buttoned up tightly all night. I slept in the open all except one rainy night, when I used my 15 year old Sierra Designs Tiros Pro. (A fifteen year old tent that has done more than ten Grand Canyon River trips, 2 trips to South America, and lots of stuff in between.) All other nights as usually I throw down my Jack’s Plastic Welding Pack Pad (Silverback, I am decadent) and throw down a sleeping bag. As I said earlier, thank heaven for Sierra Designs
Wild Bill 200 Extra Long sleeping bag. One night I finally put on a bivy sack because it was so windy. But light rain, sleet, snow and wind did not keep me from staying comfortable and warm. And no sand came through the bag or the zipper.

And it fit. I’m big and the extra long bag had plenty of room. I could pull me knees up (if the boat was rocking to keep me from rolling off) with plenty of room. The hood covered me up as much or as little as I wanted and on many nights included my full size pillow. (I told you I was decadent.) At the same time I was able to fit it easily into a large stuff sack which squashed it down to an 8″ by 9″ sack.

What a great sleeping bag. I got to looking forward to going to bed at night. As the evenings grew chilly I knew I could be nice and warm in a few minutes. The Snag Free Zipper Tracks worked great. I tried several times to zip up the inner liner of the bag in the zipper with no success. The bag was a left hand zip and I’ve never used one before. For a few nights getting out of the bag was an exercise in route finding and zipper control (or mind control). But not matter what I did the zipper worked easily.

Not sure what the liner was but it did not make you shiver when your skin touched it and it did not crinkle and wake you up when the boat moved. Some nights I was in and out of the bag 3-4 times as I checked on boats and each time the bag was wonderful to crawl back into as well as easy.

Thanks Sierra Designs.