North Pole Ski Expedition
One morning this winter, after waking in a tent pitched near the top of the world, Tyler Fish will check a compass and ski north toward mist undulating over open water. He will pull two sleds, each more than 100 pounds, to the water’s edge and gaze at a swath of Arctic Ocean deep and black between ice floes on route to the North Pole.
Fish, 34, of Ely, Minn., will then put on a waterproof suit. He’ll zip it up and ease into the ocean, the crush of cold closing in as he swims through saltwater, air pockets buoying a body backstroking across a void.
Gear Review: Sugoi Majik shell jacket
Sugoi, a Vancouver-based apparel company, calls its pricey new Majik shell “an elite waterproof jacket that offers amazing breathability.” But after testing this aerobic-sports jacket for a month, I call that an exaggeration that verges on fib.
To the point: No other comparable jacket I have tested keeps so much moisture inside, collecting droplets of sweat along its smooth inner fabric to actually pool in the sleeves after 20 minutes on a run.
Bergson Winter Challenge 2009 - Roadunner in the Snow
Gear Review -- Somnio Custom Running Shoes
“Don’t just sell shoes. Solve Problems.” That’s the pitch Somnio Running, a new company in Santa Cruz, Calif., gives retailers when talking about its line of high-end running shoes, which will be available in May 2009 for about $125.
Touted as the world’s first “truly customizable” running shoes, Somnio’s three debut models can be tweaked and adjusted in a shop to match a runner’s unique anatomy and biomechanics. “It’s like a bike fit for your feet,” said Sean Sullivan, the company founder and a bike industry veteran.
Iditarod Trail Invitational - Marco's Out of Greyling
La Sportiva Olympus Mons boot
A Swedish Monster
Gear Review -- Patagonia Nano Puff Pullover
The PrimaLoft-packed Nano Puff Pullover from Patagonia will not be available in stores until August 2009. But last month the company shipped me an early version of the lightweight coat to try out during a mountaineering trip in the Sierra Nevada Range.
Scrunch and squeeze this quilted coat down and it will compress inside its own chest pocket to create a grapefruit-size package that weighs less than a pound (10.3 ounces on my scale). But unfurl the top and it is a mid-weight insulating sweater/coat that is wind- and water-resistant and can be worn as a layer under a shell or alone as outerwear.
New Field Test Reviews (3-09)
- Field Test: Pearl Izumi SyncroSeek III WRX
http://thegearjunkie.com/gear-review-pearl-izumi-syncroseek-iii-wrx
World’s Greatest Diving Spots
My story this week for Travel+Leisure — “World’s Greatest Diving Spots” — covers pristine coral reefs, kelp forests, and sunken battle ships from Mexico to the Marshall Islands.
I polled 10 veteran divers like Dan Orr, the CEO of Divers Alert Network, to pick their favorite dive spots around the planet. Orr’s choice, Fathom Five National Marine Park, is a preserve on Lake Huron four hours north of Toronto, where icy waters keep sunken ships for decades with little disturbance.
RBH Designs VaprThrm insulated sock
Gear Review -- SIGG Retro Heritage Bottle
Its design comes via inspiration from a bottle made almost 80 years ago. But in hand, the new SIGG Retro Heritage bottle, available next month for $24.99, is strangely similar to aluminum water bottles made today.
Indeed, save for its ribbed exterior and an old-fashioned cap, the Retro Heritage acts like a common one-liter aluminum bottle. It uses the same “water-based, non-toxic liner” as other bottles in the SIGG line, and the cap screws on and off with plastic threads when you need a drink.
Ironman New Zealand - In at the Deep End
Mark Webber Challenge Takes a Breather in 2009
Although there are still over two months til the start of Spain's ARWS qualifier Bimbache Extrem Castillo y León...
Cloudveil Women's Run Don't Walk Zip T
Mountaineering Gear Test on Alta Peak
For three days last month I wallowed in the snows of Sequoia National Park in pursuit of Alta Peak, an 11,204-foot pyramid of rock in California’s Sierra Nevada Range. The trip, organized by REI Adventures, served as a proving ground for several new pieces of outdoors gear as my group kicked and trudged, ice axes in hand, to the top of the mountain.
Snowshoes allowed locomotion through new powder snow on the six-mile hike in, where we wore heavy packs heading toward a basecamp. Except for me, the group — a guide and five clients — choose MSR’s Denali Evo Ascent Snowshoes, which are about 22 inches long and 8 inches wide. The MSRs worked well on wind-blown snow and crust, but broke through in the powder, forcing the group to inefficiently plod and post-hole along.
Westcomb Bravo men's jacket
Gear Junkie Scoop -- Leatherman Freestyle
In the march toward making the world’s most minimal multi-tool, Leatherman last year unveiled its Skeletool, a compact model with just three implements: A blade, a pliers, and a bit driver. This spring, the company will unveil a tool even more pared-down.
The Leatherman Freestyle includes a blade and a pliers — and nothing else. It is slightly smaller and lighter than the Skeletool, and it has a similar look. But the handle has been changed and the company removed the screwdriver feature and the carabiner clip.
Gear Review -- Boa Technology Inc.
Push in the small black knob and twist. That’s all it takes to operate the Boa Lacing System, a tightening mechanism that employs a reel and clicking gears to retract and cinch a thin cable in a tactile procedure touted to “render shoelaces obsolete.”
Indeed, over the past five years, Boa Technology Inc. (www.boatechnology.com), which has offices in Denver and Tokyo, has partnered with companies to add its namesake technology to products ranging from snowboard boots to bike shoes.
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