geospyder wrote:Last year the hydropack was convienent for carrying other items but it was definitely sweaty on the back. I'm thinking of just bringing a couple Camelback bottles this year and haveing a pouch that I can sling across my shoulders for carring my stuff (mask, goggles, camera, etc.). Still haven't decided.
geospyder wrote:Think I'll do it the low tech way - one bottle in the bike holder and use a carabineer to attach the other to my belt.
C.f.M. wrote:geospyder wrote:Think I'll do it the low tech way - one bottle in the bike holder and use a carabineer to attach the other to my belt.
I've done that, the swinging bottle got really annoying.
Savannah wrote:It sounds freaky & wrong, so you need to do it.
C.f.M. wrote:I really hated the bite valve. My jaw hurt, by the end of the week, from all the biting and sucking.
I love the camelback just for handiness and having some space to carry my bits...I would totally forget to drink water if it was in a bottle in my bag but when its just a tube on my shoulder there is a chance i will spot it.
I'm making a belt (linked to pics), so it will be handy - and I could never, ever forget to drink water. And there'll be plenty of pockets specially picked out/created for my "bits."
If you feel thirsty, you're already @ 40% dehydrated. I just drink it all day (IRL, too).
It was the...lid thing, that you screw on and off, that leaked, not the bag itself.
The Platypus bag I chose (pics in links in OP) won't have that problem.
I do know, if I was going with the bladder, I'd try to get the "big bite," or whatever it's called, and a cover for it.

Savannah wrote:It sounds freaky & wrong, so you need to do it.
C.f.M. wrote:That is huuuuuuuuuuuge, way bigger than anything I'd need. That's why I love my belt so much. Holds everything I need and then some, and I hardly know it's there - well, I will with the new once, because of the water weight, but still.
I'm thinking a bottle will also be much easier to ask for water for, in those situations (a pet peeve of mine last year) where I'm far, far away from home and out of water.
Savannah wrote:It sounds freaky & wrong, so you need to do it.
C.f.M. wrote:I really hated the bite valve. My jaw hurt, by the end of the week, from all the biting and sucking. ...
Lord Of Ruin wrote:C.f.M. wrote:I really hated the bite valve. My jaw hurt, by the end of the week, from all the biting and sucking. ...
Eek....Umm...I don't think you read the instructions on the CB if that's the brand!
You are supposed to slice the bite valve open a bit....they used to include a nifty little graphic on how to carefully do this.
A properly prepped CB with the air aspirated out of the bladder should require almost no effort to draw from. About the same as a drinking straw from a fast food soft drink cup...
Savannah wrote:It sounds freaky & wrong, so you need to do it.
C.f.M. wrote:You have to bite down on it, to open the valve to allow the water to flow through. I don't know how cutting the rubber around it would alleviate that...but I also don't really know why I should have to fix something to work better, after I buy it...

Savannah wrote:It sounds freaky & wrong, so you need to do it.
junglesmacks wrote:C.f.M. wrote:That is huuuuuuuuuuuge, way bigger than anything I'd need. That's why I love my belt so much. Holds everything I need and then some, and I hardly know it's there - well, I will with the new once, because of the water weight, but still.
I'm thinking a bottle will also be much easier to ask for water for, in those situations (a pet peeve of mine last year) where I'm far, far away from home and out of water.
Yes but you get to hold warm things, blinky things, food, random things, etc etc etc in addition to your water. You could leave camp for 24 hours and be self sufficient.

kman wrote:Pass on the pretty civilian models, and go for the military-issue packs that CamelBak makes.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest