Description
Got a question about backpacking gear as you assemble your ’23 kits and gear lists? Now’s the time to ask it – this live event will be all about gear.
In addition, Backpacking Light Publisher Ryan Jordan will discuss some of the gear he’s using in ’23, with updated recommendations in the categories of minimalist, high-performance, comfortable, and budget-friendly gear across the following categories:
- Backpacks
- Shelters
- Sleeping Bags & Quilts
- Sleeping Pads
- Cooking & Stoves
- Hydration & Water Treatment
- Rain Jackets
- Insulating Clothing
- Footwear
- Trekking Poles
We’ll close the event with a live Q&A. Submit your questions in the live chat below.
About the Event & Access Info
- Event Description: The Gear Show (Q&A)
- Livestream Date and Time: Tuesday, May 23, 2023, 4 PM US Mountain Time
Access Info
The live version of this event will be available to the public. The recorded version of the event will be available to the public the week following the event. After that, Unlimited Members will have access to the event as part of their membership.
Watch the Recording of the Live Event:
Product Mentions:
Shelters
- Durston X-Mid Pro 2 – space:weight ratio for the dog or companion, ease of pitching
- Tarptent Dipole 1 Li – storm resistance
- Slingfin NFT – storm resistance, fabric strength & UV resistance, catenary edges, straight ridgeline, lots of tieouts
Bivy Sacks
- MSR Pro Bivy – weight and simplicity
- Katabatic Pinon Bivy – for tarp or cowboy camping in buggy conditions
Sleeping Bags & Quilts
- Enlightened Equipment Enigma Apex – 50 °F, Wide, for use as a synthetic overquilt in a 2-layer bag/quilt system for cold temps
- Feathered Friends Tanager – 3-season staple, simple design, very high warmth:weight ratio
- Hyperlite Mountain Gear 40 °F Quilt – 1000 FP down, very soft 7d lining fabric, generous dimensions (equivalent to a regular/wide)
- Feathered Friends Lark 10 °F – winter use, wind- and water-resistant shell, full-featured mummy
Sleeping Pads
- NEMO Switchback – budget, durable, reliable
- Therma-a-Rest NeoAir XLite NXT – now quieter, warmer, more stable
- Sea-to-Summit Ether Lite XT – regular wide insulated, max comfort
- Gossamer Gear Thinlight 1/8″ – for sleeping on snow
Backpacks
- McHale Wind Sauk – custom, max comfort:weight ratio, modular & extensible
- Hyperlite Mountain Gear Unbound – organization, access, comfort at light weights
- Hyperlite Mountain Gear Porter – packrafting
- ULA Equipment Ultra Catalyst – fundamentally sound design, large enough to pack a bear canister sideways, now 1/2 lb lighter in Ultra
- Durston Kakwa 55 – heavy load hauling
- ZPacks Nero 38 Ultra – frameless, ultralight
Footwear
- Scarpa Zen – technical mountain shoe (scree & climbing)
- Scarpa Mescalito – technical desert/mountain scrambling with trekking
- Scarpa Ribelle Run – off-trail trekking
- Altra Lone Peaks – trails
- Inov-8 Trailfly Ultra G270 – formerly “Terraultra” – minimalist
Cooking
- Banks Alpine Pan – for cooking fish, frying, baking
- Vargo Bot 700 – doubles as additional water carry storage and cold-soak container
- MSR Pocket Rocket Deluxe Stove – storm-resistance upright canister stove
- MSR Reactor Stove – rapid winter boiler
Hydration
Clothing Systems
- Outdoor Vitals Tern Merino Hoodie
- Patagonia L/S Sun Stretch Shirt
- Patagonia Capilene Cool Long Sleeve Tee
- Farpointe Outdoor Gear Alpha Duo Hoodie
- Timmermade SUL 0.75 Down Sweater
- Enlightened Equipment Torrid Apex Jacket
- Montbell Versalite Rain Jacket
- Patagonia Airshed Pro Pullover Wind Shirt
- Saxx Kinetic Light-Compression Mesh Boxer Brief
- Patagonia Quandary Pants
- ZPacks Vertice Rain Pants
Trekking Poles
Other
- Tenkara Hane Fishing Rod
- Garmin inReach Mini 2
- Nitecore NB10000 Portable Battery Charger
- REI Flexlite Air Chair
- Nitecore NU25 UL Headlamp
- GoPro Hero 11 Black Camera
- Garmin Fenix 7X Sapphire Solar Watch
- Ursack Major 2XL Food Storage Bag
- Alpacka Refuge Packraft
DISCLOSURE (Updated April 9, 2024)
- Product mentions in this article are made by the author with no compensation in return. In addition, Backpacking Light does not accept compensation or donated/discounted products in exchange for product mentions or placements in editorial coverage. Some (but not all) of the links in this review may be affiliate links. If you click on one of these links and visit one of our affiliate partners (usually a retailer site), and subsequently place an order with that retailer, we receive a commission on your entire order, which varies between 3% and 15% of the purchase price. Affiliate commissions represent less than 15% of Backpacking Light's gross revenue. More than 70% of our revenue comes from Membership Fees. So if you'd really like to support our work, don't buy gear you don't need - support our consumer advocacy work and become a Member instead. Learn more about affiliate commissions, influencer marketing, and our consumer advocacy work by reading our article Stop wasting money on gear.
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