All blogs

Every full length (longer than 60 seconds) video and accompanying blog post

Lenz Heat Glove 6.0 Finger Cap Review: Is This Glove Any Good for Climbing, Hiking, or Camping?

For the past two winters, I have been experimenting with battery-heated gloves as I've gone out camping, hiking, and climbing. Like all niche gear, they are good at some things and not so good at others. Here is a full review of the Lenz Heat Glove 6.0 Finger Cap.

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Are Battery-Heated Gloves Worth It for Backcountry Hiking, Camping, or Climbing?

When we go climbing, camping, or hiking in the backcountry during the winter, we tend to stay out longer and experience more extreme conditions. As advances in technology have improved battery-heated gloves, are they now able to perform well enough and long enough to make them worth having in your gear closet?

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How-To, How-To (03) Jason Kolaczkowski How-To, How-To (03) Jason Kolaczkowski

Keep Kids Hands Warm for Winter Climbing, Hiking, & Camping: Glove Systems Learned from Ice Climbing

Ice climbing usually demands a lot of different gloves. Different portions of ice climbing need more dexterity and therefore less insulation. Some portions are the opposite. Some portions expose your hands to a lot of water. Here's how the approach ice climbers use to pick gloves to bring can help us think through how different gloves, in combination, can help us ensure our kids have warm hands on their climbing, hiking, and camping adventures in winter.

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Locus Gear Djedi Tent Review: 1 Year of Ultralight Backpacking, Camping, & Climbing Trips

A cottage brand out of Japan, Locus Gear, has made a free standing, ultralight, dome tent with four-season toughness by producing a fabric combination of Dyneema and eVent. It's called the Djedi. After using it for a year on camping trips, backpacking trips, and alpine climbing trips, I'm providing a full review.

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Climbing, Backpacking, Camping, Apex Trips, Summer Jason Kolaczkowski Climbing, Backpacking, Camping, Apex Trips, Summer Jason Kolaczkowski

Mount Moran's Skillet Glacier Route: 6000 Vertical Feet of, Hiking, Bushwhacking, and Snow Climbing

A climbing partner from Denali (seven years ago) put together a trip for the Skillet Glacier route on Mount Moran (12,605') in Grand Teton National Park. She and I embraced hiking the long approach, bushwhack off trail, and 6000 feet of elevation gain to get our fill of summer snow climbing on a direct and impressive line.

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Climbing, Backpacking, Camping, Apex Trips, Spring Jason Kolaczkowski Climbing, Backpacking, Camping, Apex Trips, Spring Jason Kolaczkowski

Keep Going: a Short Film of Twin 7 Year Olds' Camping and Climbing Trip up their First Snow Couloir

Spring time in the Rocky Mountains means snow couloir season for climbers, and this year, we figured out how to get technical crampons to work on the boys' small feet. So, the boys and I took a short camping trip that culminated in their first real alpine snow climb, including a few small snow fields before a 500 vertical foot gully. They learned the mental and physical persistence that direct snow lines can demand, and I was admittedly in awe at their incredible capabilities while being so young.

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How-To, How-To (02), Family Dynamics Jason Kolaczkowski How-To, How-To (02), Family Dynamics Jason Kolaczkowski

Thoughtful Gear Substitutions for Your Climbing, Mountaineering Backpacking, Hiking, or Camping

Knowing which gear works best for your climbing, mountaineering, backpacking, hiking, and camping trips is harder than it seems. But lessons learned from the scientific method and the discipline of product development can help ensure that you are improving your gear systems each time you head out.

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How-To, How-To (02) Jason Kolaczkowski How-To, How-To (02) Jason Kolaczkowski

Ensure You Have the Right Gear on Your Mountaineering, Backpacking, or Camping Trip: Loadout Days

Mountaineering, backpacking, and camping trips require a lot of gear. If you are traveling across states, provinces, or even countries, the stakes of having too much gear can be costly, and having too little gear can even be dangerous. Here I present the single most important day of my travel/expedition planning process to help insure that I, and my team, don't make either of those mistakes.

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How-To, How-To (02) Jason Kolaczkowski How-To, How-To (02) Jason Kolaczkowski

Five Tips for Flying with Mountaineering, Backpacking, and Camping Gear

Hiking, backpacking, and mountaineering trips require a lot of gear as well as gear for which airline security policies add complication. As COVID restrictions ease up and trips for outdoor adventures become plausible, again, we provide five tips to make your air travel in-country or abroad more manageable and less stressful.

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How-To, How-To (02) Jason Kolaczkowski How-To, How-To (02) Jason Kolaczkowski

How and Why to Make Your Own Topographic Route Map for Mountaineering, Backpacking, and Hiking

Hiking, Backpacking, and Mountaineering trips can cover a lot of ground, and the longer the trip the more likely that contingencies will arise that force us to adjust. In those circumstances, having gone through the process of making my own topographic route map helps me better know options and recognize landmarks once I am out in the field. Here's the why and how of making your own maps.

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Mountaineering, Backpacking, and Camp Pillows: the Risk of Cheyne-Stokes Apnea Made Me Add This Item

I carry a camp pillow when mountaineering, backpacking, or alpine climbing at altitude. There are multiple reasons. One reason is that at high altitudes I can become susceptible to Cheyne-Stokes breathing, an apnea that impacts my ability to sleep. Find out why plenty of people get Cheyne-Stokes at altitude, and how a simple item like a camp pillow can alleviate this condition. Also discover how a camp pillow may contribute to a warmer and lighter sleep system, overall.

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Long Term Gear Review: Hiking, Backpacking, Camping, and Alpine Climbing in Lorpen T3+ Winter Socks

Winter hiking, backpacking, camping, and alpine climbing can create challenging conditions for keeping your hands and feet warm. And for your feet, then you need to add in the need to also not get blisters. I've used the Lorpen T3+ Inferno Expedition and the T3+ Trekking Expedition socks for several winter seasons, now, and I offer my long term review of what is the best winter sock I have ever put on.

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Split Fingertips When Camping, Hiking, or Climbing in the Winter: How to Fix It and How to Avoid It

Going on a backpacking, multi-day climbing, mountaineering, hiking, or a camping trip during the dry, winter months can lead to split fingertips. The dry air and other conditions of winter just make it more likely. Those wounds can make using your hands painful. Here's how I help prevent those splits from happening as well as how I deal with the injury if I don't follow my own advice well enough!

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Winter, Climbing, Backpacking, Camping, Apex Trips Jason Kolaczkowski Winter, Climbing, Backpacking, Camping, Apex Trips Jason Kolaczkowski

And Soon, Spring: A Short Climbing and Backpacking Film Dedicated to My Mentor, Lost Too Soon

The boys wanted to go on a "mini" expedition, complete with backpacking, camping, moving camps, and a mildly technical climb to a summit. But as the trip started, I received notice that one of my climbing friends and mentors was succumbing to cancer. As My trip ended, I received notice that she was gone. It struck me as fitting that, while all of this was happening, the lessons she taught me were being passed on to my boys. I dedicate this short film to Deb as a testament to a life well lived, full of impact which will carry on.

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Outdoor Vitals Ventus Active Hoodie Review for Hiking, Backpacking, and Alpine Climbing

I enjoy camping, hiking, backpacking, and alpine climbing, and I enjoy doing all of these things in all seasons. It is always a challenge to find clothing layers that can handle the different activities and conditions I face. This is a review of the Outdoor Vitals Ventus Active Hoodie. Can it handle all of the variables I throw at it?

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How-To, How-To (02), Sleeping, Camping Gear Jason Kolaczkowski How-To, How-To (02), Sleeping, Camping Gear Jason Kolaczkowski

Mountaineering and Winter Backpacking Sleep System for Below Zero Temperatures & Manageable Weight

Being someone who goes to high and cold places on mountaineering, winter backpacking, and backcountry winter camping adventures, I need a sleep system that can handle severe temperatures (below 0 Fahrenheit or below -18 Celsius) but also not fill up my pack and break my back with weight. Here's my personal journey from nearly 4.5 down to 3.0 pounds (1.4 kg) for a winter bag and sleeping pads along with the gear changes I made to get there.

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How-To, How-To (02), Clothes Shoes and Accessories Jason Kolaczkowski How-To, How-To (02), Clothes Shoes and Accessories Jason Kolaczkowski

Baselayer and Midlayer Combinations That Work for Winter Mountaineering, Hiking, and Backpacking

I've seen extreme temperature ranges in the winter. So, when I head out for a winter climbing, backpacking, hiking, or camping, I need to have the right clothing layers. And the same clothing that works for 50 degrees (10 Celsius) doesn't work for -35 degrees (-37 Celsius). And if I always have a down jacket and rain shell, then the difference in clothing needs to be made up by the baselayer and midlayer. Here's my four favorite baselayer and midlayer combinations I use to adjust to progressively colder days in the winter.

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How-To, How-To (02) Jason Kolaczkowski How-To, How-To (02) Jason Kolaczkowski

Three Hacks for Warm Winter Camping

Camping in winter - either for its own enjoyment or as part of a climbing, backpacking, or mountaineering adventure - can be done warmly. There are lots of little things you can and should do to keep everyone in your group comfortable as possible. But if you were to only do three things, I would make these three things the ones to do, as I have found they have had the biggest impact on my ability to control my temperature at night and make for a good night's sleep.

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How-To, How-To (02) Jason Kolaczkowski How-To, How-To (02) Jason Kolaczkowski

Stopping Lens Fogging: Hiking, Mountaineering, and Alpine Climbing in the Cold

Either poor vision, like me, or sun reflection off of the snow may drive the need for wearing glasses or goggles in the winter on hikes, climbs, while backpacking, and even camping. Unfortunately, glasses and goggles tend to fog up, as your breath and body heat mix with the cold air. Here is my journey of various attempts to solve this issue, moving from marginally effectively solutions to something that has finally worked for me on even the coldest mountaineering expeditions.

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