acen said:
Honestly, I can't speak highly enough of the Jetboil. I can only speak for the Sol, but it's been steadfast and has worked brilliantly. If you need hot water fast, that's your ticket. The Sol comes with a stove plate adapter too, so you can use traditional pots with it as well. Where the Jetboil shines is as a system, everything is made to work together with an almost Germanic attention to engineering detail. I can pick up my just boiled cup, throw a freshly roasted course grind coffee in, and use the french press attachment and voila, coffee. I dont even have to use another cup to drink it out of, the pot works just beautifully for it and no risk of it burning or spilling. If you want some ramen, just throw it in there and strain it with the lid. Again, the system shines. I could have boiled my water for some Mountain House meals and brewed some coffee (all ready at the same time) by the time friends have a WLI set up and primed.
I know loads of people who use them, I am just not sold on it for all of the reasons mentioned previous. To each their own. Mountain House meals are next to verboten with niner hence why my dreams of getting the stove/bear scare device have come to fruition.
I don't really knock anyone's gear choices, unless I think they are really silly or I have seen a massive failure with my own eyes. But I do choose to speak about the stuff I have owned and/or tested. I wish I had have been more patient when buying a tent...that's one big letdown on my gear shed and so I am pretty upfront about what I like and why.
Insofar as wasteful canisters, just get the Jetboil Crunch-it and puncture the empty canisters. You can throw them in any recycling bin afterwards. I generally keep track of how much fuel is in them by their weight, but again, a second canister's weight is negligible and a nice bit of security to have. Different tools for different applications.
I hear you, I just don't agree. I've been using white gas for so long that it would be hard for me to switch, and I just don't see the need to add a third stove to my mix. The girl who lives beside us, and who makes the majority of our hikes, has a canister stove and quite likes it. In fact, she abhors using my liquid fuel jobby. Again, to each their own. So long as I just have Krakatoa (WLI) we will use her canister jobby for cooking anything that requires a function other than BOIL. But when the Dragonfly hits my mailbox methinks she might become a convert.
I haven't had the chance to try to Bora out on any jaunts, so this is purely anecdotal at this point, but the pack seems bomb-proof. Everything is built to a high standard and it seems like it is worth the money. I'm not too crazy about the side Nalgene pockets, as they are hard to get to and hard to put the bottle back in (in comparison to a Gregory's sideways mounted pockets), and I wish they had some more modern features like small pouches on the waistbelt, but it is what it is. I expect this thing to last me a good chunk of my life. I'm already appreciating the size of the sleeping bag compartment, as I can fit all my sleeping gear in there (including my thermarest prolite, silponcho, etc.), which leaves me tons of room for the bear barrel in the main compartment. The kangaroo pocket should work just dandy for the tent, any wet gear, or the Hennessey A-Sym. It's comfortable. Really comfortable. I haven't slogged with it yet, but in a side by side comparison to my Gregory Triconi (which is no slouch in this department either), it's evident.
The bottle sleeves are a pain in the balls for water. If I have others with me, and can get away with it, I'll have someone else carrying the water in their pouches and I'll put my fuel in mine. Not ideal, but a good compromise.
The Roo pocket is ideal for a tent and some other stuff that suits it. Don't be fooled, it's HUGE.
I hate having things hanging off the front of me so I am fine with the belt setup as is. But it would be nice to have some options. That said, if you're a fan of them, Outdoor Research has some excellent options - specifically for water bottle holders.
Scott: What have you been using instead of the bivy bag/ranger blanket combo since you ditched it?
My wife. ;D
I have an Asolo Silva. I also have an old MEC down barrel bag for warmer temps. The Silva is synthetic and I find it much better at handling the temps that winter throws us on the east coast. I may get an overbag at some point but no longer see the need for Gore-Tex as my ultra light days are long over.