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When on the water, it's important to make sure all essentials remain dry.
When on the water, it's important to make sure all essentials remain dry.
Gear Guy

The Best Waterproof Bags and Boxes for Your Gear

I tested eight options to find out which will actually keep your stuff dry

Published: 
When on the water, it's important to make sure all essentials remain dry.

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I鈥檝e been 国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚聽Gear Guy for four years now, but for a decade聽before that,聽I was a river guide in California and Oregon. Living on the water meant I had an obsessive relationship with all kinds of bags and boxes and contraptions designed to keep my gear and food from getting soaked. Nowadays, even though I spend less time on the water, I still use many of these devices for extra insurance when I鈥檓 kayaking,聽camping, or hiking. If you have gear you want to protect, here are eight聽solid options.


Pelican 1450 Medium Case ($90)

(Courtesy of Pelican)

Best For: Camera equipment

Most of the professional photographers I know store their gear in during adventures, not only because they鈥檙e fully waterproof, but also because the plastic exterior is so tough you could run it over with your Tacoma. A friend of a friend once told me he saw a roadside bomb in Iraq go off and destroy a Humvee. The Humvee had a Pelican case like this in it that came through unscathed.聽Inside, there's a customizable foam lining that keeps your electronics safe even if they get jostled around. as well as a purge valve that keeps your precious gear cozy in the unpressurized bowels of an airplane. You can also padlock the whole thing shut. 聽


Ammo Can聽(Around $10)

(Courtesy of Midway USA)

Best For: Weed paraphernalia

Like the pop of a champagne cork聽or the crack of a beer, there is something really special about the sound of an聽 when it opens. As long as they鈥檙e in good shape, these cans are watertight, damn聽near indestructible, and modular, so you can easily stack them in the back of your truck聽or on a raft. Heads up: ammo cans do not float, so avoid using them for your most precious gear.


NRS 110L Bill鈥檚 Bag ($140)

(Courtesy of NRS)

Best For: Extended river trips

This bag, or one like it, is overkill if you鈥檙e car camping or traveling internationally. But it鈥檚 for a trip through the Grand Canyon, where everything you own is in danger of being soaked. I like this size in particular because it can swallow a tent, sleeping bag, and enough clothes for a week. The shoulder straps also make it easy to schlep on and off the boat. Pro tip: stuff your gear in a duffel and throw that inside the bag. That way you don鈥檛 have to dig through the top of the drybag to find gear buried at the bottom.


Watershed Ocoee ($112)

(Courtesy of Watershed)

Best For: Electronics, maps, and first-aid kits

If you don鈥檛 want to rummage through a big drybag to find your band-aids, store them . I鈥檝e also seen people toss in a mirrorless camera聽and shove聽it in the front of a kayak. The reason it鈥檚 so expensive: the top has a locking zipper and roll-top closure, so you can know it will never leak, even if it鈥檚 fully submerged.


Fishpond Thunderhead Large Submersible ($400)

(Courtesy of Fishpond USA)

Best For: International travel

If I鈥檓 going to strap a bag to the top of a Land Rover in Africa聽or a yak in Nepal, I want it to be . Unlike some of the other durable duffels out there, the Thunderhead聽is 100 percent waterproof. (Many聽others leak eventually.)聽To test that claim, I聽sprayed it down with a power washer and dunked it in my hot tub, without a drop getting through. (Another editor put it through a car wash,聽with similar results.)聽Oh, and it鈥檚 just as tough聽or tougher than the duffels you usually see strapped yaks. I dragged it behind my car and it barely saw a scratch.


LifeProof FRE iPhone 7 Case ($90)

(Courtesy of Lifeproof)

Best For: Protecting your phone at all times

I have beat the living shit out of , even dunked it in the ocean and in several rivers, and it has always managed to keep my screen safe and my phone dry. Like any rugged case, it can make interacting with your screen a little harder, and connecting headphones is a pain in the ass. But those are inconveniences I鈥檓 willing to put up with for peace of mind.


Ziplock bags ($4.50 for 28)

(Courtesy of Ziploc)

Best For: Backup

I鈥檓 sure many of you reading this have a story about how, on its own, a failed to keep something dry. But using them as a second line of defense within聽a聽drybag can be effective. I make sure I have at least a dozen when I鈥檓 in the field, and I聽use them to wrap food, electronics, and anything else I want to keep extra dry. I also use them to store maps while rafting or backpacking, because they鈥檙e easy聽to access, unlike a drybag.


Trash-compactor bags ($19 for 12)

(Courtesy of Hefty)

Best For: Organization

I鈥檝e lost count of the number of times I鈥檝e suggested in this column. But here I go again. When I鈥檓 living out of a drybag on a river trip, or聽a backpack in the woods, they allow me to segregate wet or sandy gear so it doesn鈥檛 contaminate everything else. I prefer compactor bags over standard trash bags because they鈥檙e considerably more puncture-resistant.

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