国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

Image

We Asked Our Dads About the Oldest Gear They Still Use

Our editors asked their fathers about a piece of gear they鈥檝e held onto over the years, and what it means to them

Published: 
Image

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

Like many of our readers, we were fortunate enough to grow up with outdoorsy dads who helped guide us toward a lifelong love of playing outside. We took the time to call up our dads (hint, hint) to give them some love and chat with them about their favorite moments outside. Many of them are still rocking gear from their first excursions outdoors, and we thought we’d share some of our dads’ favorite pieces of outdoor gear that they still use to this day. We suggest you ring them up and do the same, you never know what gems live in your dad’s head鈥攐r his garage. To all the dads out there, happy Father’s Day!

鈥擳he Editors

father's day

I got this Osprey fanny pack in the 鈥70s. I have鈥攓uick count鈥攕ix other fanny packs around the house right now. I have used all of them. And then I come back to the Osprey one. Others are better for more urban things, and work well as slings as well as on my hips. But if I want to use a fanny pack vs a backpack, and I often do since I sweat less that way and prefer to carry things on my hips rather than shoulders, this remains the one I usually turn to for a hike, like I did in Santa Fe this past week; like I did when we went fishing in northern New Mexico two summers back.

Most fanny packs these days are too small to carry what I want, or too flimsy in the way they can be tightened to the back and hips. This one has water bottle bags where the elastic has worn and the holders sag by this point. But it can carry 10L (just a guess) and has a design that lets you slip clothes or extra soft stuff between the main compartment and the front small compartment (for sunblock, toothpicks, etc). It鈥檚 wonderfully ugly by now, but it still works. I have lighter ones, I have a heavier one, I have a slightly larger, less used version of this one but this is the one I come back to. I bought it when it first came out, from Down Works here in Santa Cruz (where Osprey packs began, and run by people involved with the packs when all of them were UC Santa Cruz students). They used a cinching system when they first started that still is about the best I鈥檝e seen. I鈥檝e used the pack for walks here in Pogonip often, on trips, hiking, and it鈥檚 still great. It does the job. 鈥擯aul Skenazy, father of features editor Matt Skenazy


A fly box. Silver, brushed aluminum, a sticker on the front showing how to tie fishing knots, green plastic interior with space for 100’s of flies鈥攚et and dry. Still in great shape despite its age and use, even the plastic and the clasp. It was brand new when I got it over 55 years ago as a gift from my father. I suspect it was a birthday gift, but he may have given it to me prior to a fishing trip.

The box is used to hold flies and be carried around with you while fishing whether it be in a boat, vest, chest pack, or fanny pack. I am sure I used it soon after I got it although I am not positive where I was. It was either on a local lake such as Lake Cushman or American Lake in Washington State, or in Canada at Decka lake. I was in love with the box as it made me feel like I was a legitimate fly fisherman and I loved the organizational aspect of keeping all my precious flies in one place.

I think in most ways my relationship with the box hasn’t changed, despite having many more fly boxes now. I still love the feel of the brushed aluminum as I open the box; still love the simple utility; love the memories it evokes of two of my favorite people, my dad and my brother, who have both passed away and were my favorite fishing buddies; and marvel how it has stood the test of time. I use the box every year, pretty much every time I go fishing in fresh water. I wouldn’t sell it, which makes it priceless to me. 鈥擜lan Barronian, father of senior editor Abbie Barronian


Father's Day

I bought this Gerry puffy jacket during a ski trip to Salt Lake City back in 1971 or 1972. My previous ski coat, which I鈥檇 had since the mid-sixties, had broken its zipper, and I needed to find a replacement. I forget where I bought it鈥擨 probably got it at the base area shop at Alta. This jacket was a huge upgrade from my previous ski jacket. It鈥檚 down with a nylon skin and the seams are all on the inside鈥攖his was cutting-edge stuff back then. Why do I still have it 53 years later? It still works and it鈥檚 still warm! 鈥擩ohn Dreier, father of articles editor Fred Dreier


father's day

It鈥檚 probably a bit trite, but my oldest piece of gear that鈥檚 still a fully functional part of just about everything I do outside has to be the Swiss Army knife my grandma gave me for high school graduation 46 years ago. Its facilitated hundreds of backcountry lunches and minor emergencies over the years, from the Canadian arctic to Morocco. But mostly it keeps the memory of my grandma fresh whenever I pull it out of my pack. 鈥擲teve Brown, father of 国产吃瓜黑料 contributor Meaghen Brown


When digital editor Jake Stern asked his father Richard Stern about gear that he鈥檚 held onto over the years, he seemed irritated, but recounted a pair of long underwear he鈥檚 had since the 鈥80s. We decided to omit a photo.

 

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online