For the second year in a row, I have struggled with finding a pack that can handle the way I am hunting and not be horribly uncomfortable, ridiculously heavy, or fail. At the end of last season, I picked up a military surplus pack that I thought would work well for me. In some cases, it did. In other cases, not even close. With no frame, the heavier loads on the long hikes in weren't fun. Also, the strapping on the pack straight up sucked. I had a side compression strap rip out of the bag trying to cinch down on my climbing sticks this year. It literally ripped right out leaving a hole in the bag. The zippers could be heard from 3 miles away, I'm sure. Another hunt, as I was at my platform in the dark, transferring the bag from my shoulder to the hook on the tree, the strap pulled loose. The pack fell and nearly landed on my baby (custom recurve). I had also bought a cheap surplus framed pack, which I have alternated in and out of the rotation this season. My original plan for that pack was to be a meat hauler and nothing else, but failures on the first pack got me to using it. The second frame bag was way oversized for what I needed, and heavy (when it was empty).
I never thought I would ever jump on the high end pack bandwagon, but I jumped. I did a lot of research and found a pack that I thought would work best for what I am doing. Long story short, public land (mostly) hang and hunts, saddle hunting, packing most layers in with me, potentially packing meat out. I settled on the Kuiu Pro 2300. The bag size was great, I liked the organization, the frame is carbon fiber and really light, and I love the option to pack meat out between the frame and the bag. I also liked that, if I ever need a bigger bag on it for any reason, I can just buy the bag since the frame and suspension system will work with other bags. The first stimulus check basically got banked, but the second one went to my pack. It came yesterday, and so far so good.
I threw a bunch of weight in it and got it adjusted per the manual that came with it. It's crazy how light the pack and frame are to begin with. I had two big Athens Block Co bricks and a big piece of my steel bike rack in it to get it adjusted and I really liked how the pack distributed the weight. Sometime over the next few days I'll get my stuff transferred over and see how my "standard" pack load feels in it.
I'll add to this as I continue to play around with it. To be continued...
I never thought I would ever jump on the high end pack bandwagon, but I jumped. I did a lot of research and found a pack that I thought would work best for what I am doing. Long story short, public land (mostly) hang and hunts, saddle hunting, packing most layers in with me, potentially packing meat out. I settled on the Kuiu Pro 2300. The bag size was great, I liked the organization, the frame is carbon fiber and really light, and I love the option to pack meat out between the frame and the bag. I also liked that, if I ever need a bigger bag on it for any reason, I can just buy the bag since the frame and suspension system will work with other bags. The first stimulus check basically got banked, but the second one went to my pack. It came yesterday, and so far so good.
I threw a bunch of weight in it and got it adjusted per the manual that came with it. It's crazy how light the pack and frame are to begin with. I had two big Athens Block Co bricks and a big piece of my steel bike rack in it to get it adjusted and I really liked how the pack distributed the weight. Sometime over the next few days I'll get my stuff transferred over and see how my "standard" pack load feels in it.
I'll add to this as I continue to play around with it. To be continued...