Here at 国产吃瓜黑料, we get to test a lot of fancy new gear. But many of our most cherished outdoor possessions are actually used pieces that came to us聽from our parents or friends. Here鈥檚 a sampling of our favorites.
Dome Tent

My parents don鈥檛 backpack regularly anymore, but they still have quite the arsenal of tents in their basement gear shed. When I visited them last summer, they 鈥渋ndefinitely loaned鈥 me their Dome tent, which my dad found at an REI scratch-and-dent sale. The only stipulation: should he want it back at any point, it鈥檚 his to reclaim. For now, it鈥檚 a symbol of all the memories I have from聽family backpacking trips in聽Mount Rainier National Park. 鈥擡rica Clifford, junior designer
Turtle Fur Hat

A staple in my winter gear closet is my mom鈥檚 30-year-old, salmon-pink ski hat made by Vermont-based . I found it while home from college one summer in a bin of old ski gear in the garage, most of which was smelly and falling apart. But this hat, which my mom must have bought when she was in her 20s, is still soft on the inside and keeps out the cold. 鈥Luke Whelan, assistant editor
Taylor Compass

I was 15 when I started venturing into the woods and mountains by myself. My dad told me there was no helping it: 鈥淭he woods are in your blood.鈥 He offered his support through a gift鈥攈is old compass. It鈥檚 a , which apparently was used regularly during World War II. It鈥檚 simple, but for rudimentary directions, it has saved the day many times. 鈥Charlie Ebbers, editorial fellow
Bike Trainer

Last year, a friend 鈥渓oaned鈥 me his trainer to use for winter triathlon training so I wouldn鈥檛 have to buy a brand-new one. Upon receiving the trainer, I was immediately covered in dust and spiderwebs鈥攁nd totally overwhelmed by its surprising weight. This thing seriously looks like the run-down insides of a mechanical Vegas bull: chipped paint, scratchy metal edges, a beastly frame, missing bolts. If it weren鈥檛 for an old yoga mat tucked underneath, my hardwood floors would be destroyed. But hey, it does the trick. I hop on my bike and have just as good of a workout as any cyclist who spends hundreds of dollars on an elite trainer. 鈥Olivia Harlow, editorial producer
REI Shirt

I have a large, gray, long-sleeve REI shirt that I always used to steal from my dad鈥檚 closet. I wore it as a sweatshirt in high school and as PJs on colder nights. I also took it with me on my first family camping trip. I consider it my first midlayer, and although it was way too big for me and didn鈥檛 trap enough heat, I really liked it. (Sadly, I could never find a women鈥檚 version.) Eventually my dad revealed that he knew I was always taking his shirt鈥攁nd that he had a second one exactly like it in his winter clothes bin. Dad told me I could have it, but I felt bad, so I kept putting it back in his closet post-use. When I moved out, though, I decided to take it with me鈥攚ith the intention of one day returning it. 鈥擩enny Earnest, social media editor
Mountain Bike

The summer after I graduated high school, my older brother and his friends helped me by basically stripping their old rigs of usable parts and slapping them onto a frame we found lying around our local shop. Bikes have come a long way in the decade since, and even though I now have bikes shoved into every nook and cranny of my tiny apartment, I just can鈥檛 bring myself to part with this one. 鈥Nicholas Hunt, assistant editor
K2 Skis

I have my dad鈥檚 old skis from the 1980s. They鈥檙e straight-edge 聽skis with bindings that have a brake facing toward the tip. Though I鈥檝e never skied on them, they are the one piece of gear that made me aware of snow sports as a child. For now, they serve as a good decorative reminder of where I come from. Maybe one day I鈥檒l get them remounted and ski on them myself. 鈥擟hris Thompson, visual producer
35mm Film Camera

When I signed up for a photography course in high school, my mom unearthed an old, fully manual 35mm film camera from the depths of a closet in our house. I don鈥檛 remember if it was even hers or if it came from my aunt, who holds the title of world鈥檚 best antiquer/yard-saler. I showed up in class, and everyone was holding their parents鈥 modern, fully automatic SLRs.聽I admit聽to feeling a bit envious鈥攖hat is, until we started printing our photos, and I realized the camera really doesn鈥檛 matter. , not the lens itself. Since then, I鈥檝e purchased my fair share of cameras, but there鈥檚 something, dare I say, magical about that no-frills 35mm camera. 鈥擬adeline Kelty, assistant photography editor