Outdoor Retailer at Salt Lake City can be an intense experience. It'll leave you
fried unless you practice a little moderation. There’s so much to see it’s
difficult to come away with a clear picture of what’s new, what’s for you, or how many friends you've caught up with! Here is a palette of summer 2014's offerings for 2015.
Approaching Salt Lake |
To
my delight I ran into Karl Kohegan at Kokatat. He showed me
Kokatat's new modular dry-suit, the Idol. It’s in two pieces, a top and bottom that simply zipper
together. No bulky roll of fabric, and no struggle to climb inside. The
challenge for such a system is sealing the meeting of the two ends of the
zipper so they don’t leak.
Kokatat solved this with an ingenious watertight locker box positioned
at the end of the zipper. Clamped shut it seals the gap.
Here is the locker box to seal the zipper ends |
So, gone are the days
when you torment yourself deciding whether to carry both drysuit and paddle
jacket on expedition to allow for changing weather. Now you can take both in
one. With the top half of your drysuit
functioning as a dry-cag, you can enjoy the freedom of bare legs whenever you
wish. Simply zip on the legs to have a full dry-suit when you need.
Complementing that revolutionary modular system, Kokatat also designed a fully modular accessory and pocket system for their Poseidon PFD. Look out for the Idol and Poseidon from January 2015.
Working with Point65 take-apart plastic kayaks and SUPs... modules
that clip together to form solo, tandem or longer kayaks, I know how easy it is
to throw the sections of a kayak into the back of the car for transport.
But
sometimes there is conflict for space when you need to carry camping gear too,
or fill your car with passengers. Then a trailer is the most energy efficient thing
to have so you don’t need to burn the extra gas to car-top your kayaks. Tom
Dempsy, who I have known since he became one of the founders of LiquidLogic
Kayaks, developed his own special brand of trailers, Sylvansport
These
extremely versatile trailers exploit Tom’s experience in the world of
roto-molded kayaks as well as his considerable engineering and design talent.
Watertight storage in roto-molded lockers are accessible via kayak-style hatches, and you can go for as
basic or as deluxe a system as you wish. Tom's full-comfort Go trailer blossoms into a luxury
tent with sleeping platforms in addition to loads of cargo space.
Together... Go Easy (left) and the Go trailer (right) |
The smaller GoEasy trailer can be fitted with bars to carry
up to four one-piece kayaks, or you can simply stack your modular Point65
kayaks in the trailer bed, and your kit in the watertight locker. This utility
trailer metamorphoses with the modular addition of the Roost Explorer 2-person
camping pod that adds as a top platform to the trailer, which hinges up as a tent like a wedge on top.
When not in use the trailer stands on end with tow-bar
detached for compact storage. These trailers are stylish, well engineered, ready for action, and made
entirely in USA. Very cool!
Returning to Point65 and a Swedish engineering perspective, the
new item in their line is a spine-protecting back-pack… or to be precise, a
whole range of them. Originally designed in Sweden as a way to protect your
expensive lap-top in case of a spill when cycling, the packs were safety-tested in
Germany to discover they perform to the highest rating of any purpose-built
spine protector on the market! So they’re used for motorcycling, skiing,
mountain biking, and skateboarding as well as just looking the coolest on the
city street.
Point65 spine-protecting backpacks |
Richard Ohman of Point65 could be seen at intervals
throughout the Outdoor Retail Trade Show beating volunteers across the back
with a baseball bat. The impact is spread so well you feel just a gentle push forward and you only feel about one-hundredth of the blow when wearing the
backpack. Without the backpack? No volunteers.
These backpacks have been hiding well for maybe fifteen years,
but now under Point 65 you will see them coming out and about from next spring, on the
backs of photographers and sportspeople as well as protecting precious
electronic devices on the road and in the office.
So…
today's summary, a great new dry-suit innovation, a look at some special trailers, a new
launch for a unique backpack from the company known for its and a sideways glance at take apart kayaks. A good show.
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