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国产吃瓜黑料 Business Journal

Outdoor Retailer Has Wrapped. Here鈥檚 What You Missed on the Last Day.

Our final wrap-up from the show floor in Denver

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Aaaand, that鈥檚 a wrap on the 2022 Outdoor Retailer Snow Show. As attendees trickled in to hit their last meetings and squeeze in just a few more booths, conversations were upbeat. Coffee queue congratulations were plentiful coming off of last night鈥檚 fourth annual Innovation Awards ceremony, where 14 winners were crowned by an independent judging panel for their game-changing outdoor products and services.聽

Underscoring the awards was a buzzy kind of energy that had seemed muted until then. With each company that made its way to the stage to thank its collaborators, mentors, and pioneers, it was as if the spark we all crave from OR鈥攖hat celebration of outdoor innovation that fuels the industry鈥攇rew brighter and brighter. But beyond the product recognition, attendees were reminded of the progress we鈥檝e made in reimagining how we perceive and interact with our outdoor spaces. In fact, The Outdoorist Oath, a movement to promote social justice in the outdoors, is the first nonprofit recipient of 国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 Gear Up Give Back initiative (which, pardon our brag, was one of the Innovation Award winners.)聽

Outdoor advocate and environmentalist Pattie Gonia, one of The Oath鈥檚 founding members, summed it up: 鈥淚t鈥檚 been amazing to see people鈥檚 reactions to The Oath and to see their excitement in feeling that they can be a part of this, and that they really have a banner to stand behind the work they do in so many corners of the outdoor advocacy space. People are finally seeing that the tides have shifted to individuals needing to take action and shape the future of the outdoors. We鈥檙e grateful for the chance to bring The Oath to spaces where we can meet people where they鈥檙e at and help them succeed.鈥澛

With that, we bring you our final rundown of the show.

Cool New Products

E-bikes that help conserve wildlife: The Sweden-based OR Innovation Awards winner Cake introduced its new line of solar-powered AP (anti-poaching) electric bush bikes ($8,500鈥$11,500), which come in motorcycle, moped, and outback patroller models. Quiet, durable, clean, and efficient, the bikes are designed to tackle off-road missions for intrepid explorers, with a healthy dose of city functionality for zipping around town. The clamp-on frame design allows a mix-and-match approach to accessories (baskets, bags, and racks), and the juiced-up bike batteries also serve as portable power sources for your devices in need of charging. Three percent of every AP purchase goes to the Southern African Wildlife College, a conservation training institute in Kruger National Park. 鈥淲e can see that our bikes are really [serving] a good cause in a place we don鈥檛 usually work with bikes,鈥 said Klara Edhag on Cake鈥檚 marketing team. 鈥淯sing electric bikes instead of combustible bikes for anti-poaching activity is amazing for us. We can see we鈥檙e [doing] something good in a bigger scope.鈥

Cake’s new line of solar-powered anti-poaching electric bush bikes debuted at the show. (Photo: Courtesy)

Rab鈥檚 first line of ski packs: Rab鈥檚 new Khroma line of packs harnesses the durability and lightweight of Spectra without the big price tag by combining Cordura on the sides and back with a rugged Spectra front panel. The layup is streamlined and simple with all components and straps girth-hitched rather than sewn on, so users can customize without taking to scissors. Packs range from 25 to 38 liters ($200-$225) and come in two styles: ski and alpine climbing.

Notable New Exhibitors

Retro ski-wear with an eco-conscious twist: It was the full-body watermelon ski suit that first caught our attention. UK-based snowsports and swimwear brand Oosc Clothing made its OR debut exuding cheeky fun that translates to the hill without sacrificing functionality. 鈥淢y cofounder and I used to buy these [vintage] suits on eBay; they weren鈥檛 waterproof and they weren鈥檛 breathable and they smelled like ass,鈥 said Oosc鈥檚 Aaron McLaughlin. 鈥淲e decided we could make them better.鈥 Not only better (think: mega waterproofness, taped seams, and magnetic closures for easy glove handling), but more responsibly: more than 50 percent of every Oosc ski suit ($350), jacket, and pair of snow pants is made from recycled plastic bottles, and everything is shipped in biodegradable packaging. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not a gaper-day thing; it鈥檚 an all-season-long thing,鈥 McLaughlin says, noting that online sales in the U.S. have been growing 200 percent year-over-year and now comprise nearly a third of the brand鈥檚 online revenue. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why we鈥檙e here. We want to meet more stores to spread the love and make the customer journey a bit better until we can get a warehouse over here.鈥

Oosc Clothing was certainly one of the most attention-grabbing booths on the show floor. (Photo: Courtesy)

An easier way to tote skis: 鈥淭he Chuck Bucket鈥 is described by its creators as 鈥渨hat would happen if a roof box and a hitch rack had a baby.鈥 The idea is simple: it鈥檚 a trailer-hitch rack that鈥檚 easy to toss skis or snowboards (or golf bags, camping gear, etc.) into. No more climbing on top of your car to take out and put away your gear. The bucket fits eight pairs of skis or four snowboards, and is on pre-sale now through Kickstarter for $249. Planned retail when it launches outside of Kickstarter is $420.

The Chuck Bucket is like a roof box and hitch rack rolled into one. (Photo: Courtesy)

Hot Takes from the Show Floor

Appreciation for OR鈥檚 diversity efforts: 鈥淭he entire marginalized community was very well represented in having different people being able to share their stories and voices,鈥 said Necota Staples, cofounder, with his wife Sonya, of Staples InTents, an entity which documents and shares their overlander and adventure-travel lifestyle. Added Sonya: 鈥淔or a lot of people [representing] brands, they want to come here to sell. But I think if they took a step back and looked at what Outdoor Retailer is, everything that it stands for, and really [immersed] themselves in some of the [sessions] and not just focused on selling, I think they could have gotten so much more out of it.鈥

For Necota and Sonya Staples, the show is about much more than just selling products. (Photo: Courtesy)

The power of discovery: 鈥淚 run a motel gift shop and my son is a fly fishing guide who sells gear,鈥 said Liz Furman of Black Bear Inn in Dubois, Wyoming. 鈥淚 found an amazing African boot company [here at the show], Jim Green. They look really well made, thick-soled, and the price point is great. I would never have known about this brand and that鈥檚 why I come. Even though there are so few vendors here, there are some good ones.鈥

Liz Furman discovered the boot company Jim Green while at the show. (Photo: Courtesy)

A vision for future shows: 鈥淲e have to take the words 鈥榯rade show鈥 out of the equation and really think about what a community event looks like,鈥 said Nick Sargent, president of SIA. 鈥溾楾rade show鈥 has such a negative connotation. It speaks of yesterday; it doesn鈥檛 speak about tomorrow. We need to be thinking about how we can come together as an industry tomorrow with no walls or barriers. Look at what happens at the Sea Otter Classic. It is a must-attend event. It鈥檚 outdoors, it鈥檚 full of great panel discussions, great educational moments, and a powerful sense of community.鈥

SIA’s Nick Sargent thinks the term “trade show” is outdated. (Photo: Courtesy)

A louder voice for minority business owners: 鈥淢y biggest reason for still coming to the show are people of color,鈥 said Anthony J. Clark, a photographer with The 16,000 Studio in Denver. 鈥淭he BIPOC community is here. Outdoor Retailer has historically been that show to not really give the proper attention to a lot of our advocates who want to be on this floor, who want to get in touch with these major companies. [Now] it鈥檚 way more welcoming. You鈥檙e seeing way more people feeling comfortable about who they are and where they fit in. At a smaller scale, [the show] is giving so much room to minority owners to come in and make an introduction.鈥

Denver-based photographer Anthony J. Clark says the smaller show format has been good for the BIPOC community. (Photo: Courtesy)

Lesson of the Day

Dismantling silos is the key to climate justice progress: Climate change. Environmental justice. Policy. Advocacy. Accessibility. Diversity. Indigenous perspective. Inclusion. Partisanship. These are a few themes OR explored this year over a lineup of extracurriculars featuring a diverse range of experts, legislators, and thought leaders. It all culminated in today鈥檚 Outdoor Industry Association (OIA) panel highlighting federal climate-related initiatives like Justice40 (which funnels 40 percent of federal climate and sustainable transportation investments to disadvantaged communities) and America the Beautiful, a.k.a. 30 by 30, which aims to conserve 30 percent of U.S. lands and waters by 2030.聽

Bottom line: intersectionality. When we examine the Biden administration鈥檚 pending Build Back Better Act, we can confidently say that these problems, solutions, ideas, and goals do not exist in silos. To truly tackle climate change, we must discuss racial inequities. To pursue environmental justice, we must figure out how to bridge the political gap between left and right. To preserve the outdoors, we must change business operations. 鈥淲e have a climate crisis, a nature crisis, a Covid crisis, and a justice crisis,鈥 said Angelo Villagomez, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress and an Indigenous conservation leader. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 deal with those one at a time. We have to deal with them all together as one world, as one issue.鈥

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