Buying Hiking Clothes
By Steve Gillman
Hiking clothes and backpacking clothes need to function to a higher
standard than everyday clothes. That's why they're often more expensive. BUying hiking clothes is an investment so
become knowlegable before you buy hiking clothes.
Consider what you really need for the trips you have planned. If you'll be scaling peaks in
Patagonia for a month, you may have to stick with the best sales you can find on the high-quality stuff. If, on the
other hand, your trips are fair-weather overnighters, a two-ounce, two-dollar plastic poncho isn't out of the
question.
Even on the more extreme trips you can often find cheaper alternatives. Did I take a $400
waterproof/breathable rain suit to the top of 20,600-foot Mount Chimborazo?
No, I took my papery Frogg-Toggs rain suit. You'll find these at golf shops, and yes it's waterproof and
breaths well too. It cost me $49 for the set, and I have used it for years, on many
rainy trips, with only one duct-tape repair.
Buy Used Hiking Clothes
The only hiking clothes I won't buy used is footwear. Other potential backpacking clothes are worth checking out
whenever I find them at a rummage sale or thrift store. I've found a Goretex rain jacket and North Face vest at a
thrift store for a few dollars each. My thrifty used wool sweater weighs just 11 ounces, and is almost as warm as
the newest models.
Making Hiking Clothes
I can't recommend sewing your own hiking and backpacking clothes, but I have made a few simple things. The
sleeve from an old thermal shirt became a one-ounce ski mask with scissors and three minutes of sewing. Socks with
finger-holes make nifty hand warmers. As an insulating layer, I wore a four-ounce piece of poly batting like a
tunic under my Frogg Toggs, to the top of Chimborazo and other mountains. Finally, without too much sewing, you can
often modify clothes to make cheap hiking clothes.
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