Showing posts with label backpack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label backpack. Show all posts

Saturday, October 20, 2012

What she Carries


Boo’s 5th birthday is coming up, and we were discussing what she would like. After going through several categories, I asked if she wanted anything for backpacking. “No. I just want to carry more of my stuff.” 

So when we went on an overnight, she carried most of her stuff. 

Her Pack

·        

  • Backpack
    • ~3/4 L of water
    • 2 hankies
    • Whistle
  • Complete  change of clothes – both for sleeping or in case of complete destruction of what she’s wearing. In a stuff sack that is used as a pillow.
  • Z-bar and a bag of trail mix
  • Chap stick
  • Wildlife ID pamphlet
  • Park map
  • Cord (to practice knots)
  • First Aid kit (a few bandages, sometimes alcohol wipes)
  • Squishy bowl and cup, collapsible spork
  • Headlamp
  • Cut-down blue foam sleeping pad (not pictured)

With the sleeping pad strapped to the pack, she looked so overloaded. We didn’t weigh it, but it felt heavier than I expected her to be comfortable with. I expected to have to lighten her load pretty early down the trail. 

Shows what I know.

Packed Up


I think we checked in with her 4 times in the first 50 yards. “How is your pack? Is it too heavy? Do you want us to carry anything for you?”

She kept insisting, “It’s fine, it’s light!” 

And she carried it. It was only maybe 1.5 miles on a slight downhill. But she carried it. 
.
Packing up in the morning, she added her paperback chapter book, and tried to put the tent stakes in her pack. She carried everything the ~mile back to the car. Then we hit a different trail in the park, and she suggested that we should all carry our packs on that trail, too, to build up our muscles.

Lesson Learned
  •  The cord that comes on the backpack  is not long enough to regularly hold the sleeping pad. 


What do your kids carry at what age?

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Review: REI Sprig 12 Backpack


Boo has wanted her own water bladder and tube since forever. For Solstice she got a 1/2L Platypus. Only problem? Her orange bag was about an inch too short for it to fit well, so we had to not fill it fully and roll the bottom end a bit. So Lee was shopping in Chicago (a tea- seeking trip I believe), and Boo and I were plotting her next backpack, when the phone rang. 

“Hi, Lee. How’s it going?” 

“I have an REI Spring in purple on major clearance in my hands. Should I get it?”

We discussed. Her hands-on impression, my looking at the website and reviews. 

“Yes, do it.” 

Boo was immediately thrilled. “There’s room for so much more stuff!!” Of course, the thing we were most concerned about was this bag is big enough to carry more weight than she should carry all day. 


Inside

12L holds her first aid kit, field guide, binoculars, bike gloves (protection against scraped hands), bandana, hat, raincoat, snack, and water easily. If we stuff her sleepingbag directly into the pack it fits, but nothing else will. 

It’s shaped so it’s deeper at the bottom (below the zipper), and tapers to the top. If your kiddo, say, wears her backpack backwards and opens the zippers while bouncing down some stairs, much less than half the stuff will spill all over the trail. It has a two-way zipper. 


The hydration pouch is just like a larger pack. Nothing fancy. The hanger loop is just a loop, not a clip like our big packs. There is one tube hole on the right. 

The seams are all finished like you’d expect from a quality pack. It has good hand-feel. 

Harness

The shoulder straps are cut in, so they don’t fall off tiny shoulders. The right has 2 elastic loops for a hydration hose. They are nicely padded and backed with mesh. 

The sternum strap adjusts up and down with sliders, and has a whistle built in. That kind of whistle is too small for her, at 4, to blow without covering up the noise hole, but it’s a nice touch. 

The hip belt is just 1” webbing, but it has a double-pull. It does carry some load if she wears it actually tightened down, but she generally just clips it. She likes to be like the adults. There are little pockets the hip-belt can tuck into if your kid doesn’t want it. We could probably cut a foot off each strap and it'd still fit her until she outgrows the pack.

The back is a foam board with a nubby surface toward the wearer. This is covered in mesh. There’s a gap between the lower and upper back area. 

The top grab loop is smaller than on an adult pack, but still large enough for an adult to grab easily. 

As a bonus, the straps have enough webbing to lengthen enough for an adult to carry it. I put some shockcord loops for it on my pack. 

Exterior

There are two roomy mesh side pockets. Boo generally puts found items there, as she can reach them with the bag on. I’ll often put her hankie there so I can get to it quicker. They haven’t been damaged by snagging yet. 

There is a shock cord on the back. It runs through 4 loops and one grommet. This arrangement has the cordlock on the bottom and you can’t turn it over without cutting off the pull-tab. But it is a nice place for her jacket or a stuffed animal. 


Fit

She's 4-years-old,  ~35 pounds and 41" in the pics. The harness has a lot of room to grow. The pack is a bit long for her yet. It's got lots of room to grow.  It can fit her clothes and snacks and her "essential" hiking gear for a weekend.

Cons

The purple color  is not highly visible. The red is not much better. I much prefer bright orange or construction yellow for better kid visibility.

While this isn't a con for me, this is a hiking pack, not a school pack. It would be a really bad school pack for a myriad of reasons.

I'd like the shockcord to pull tighter on the top, instead of the bottom.

Overall

Boo likes it a lot.  She willingly carries it all day. I expect her to outgrow it before she wears it out. She took a picture of it on our last backpacking trip.





What pack do your kids use?