Rt_nevada
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Aug 30, 2018
- Messages
- 111
I have an Exo K2 pack and absolutely love it. It’s the 3500 and can do 3-4 days no problem but would definitely go up to the next size for anything over that.
Great idea. Thanks.Go get a 40lb bag of sand, find as many cool friends as you’ve got who own various packs, and go carry as many different brands as you can. A 3 mile hike with moderate slope will tell you a lot. Different people with different builds, gaits, and strengths will swear by different brands. Try to find what works for you.
This.Buy once, cry once. Pay the extra 200 and save the hassle of having to sell and buy another pack.
Absolutely the Exo is worth it IMO, as others have said. Buy once cry once, if you're putting animals down and carrying lots of meat off the mountain I think you'll end up regretting the KuiuThanks everyone for the input!
I’m glad to hear the Exo works good for us thicker guys. I was really considering heading to the Kifaru showroom, but I just don’t think I could walk out of there spending anything less than $800. While doable, there is so more gear I need to purchase that I can’t justify it. Kuiu has a sweet veterans discount, and being a Navy special forces vet, I kinda want to support the company that supports our veterans. I think I am torn between the Exo and the Kuiu.
I can get the Kuiu Pro LT 5500 full kit for $450 with the vet discount.
The Exo has the K3 system rolled out and the 4800 setup will run $650 and the 6400 set up costs $675.
Is the Exo $200 better?
Got invited by some pro archery elk hunters to be the fourth on their trip to learn from them. I am 40 years old, just moved to Colorado and got into hunting. The plan is a 4-day hunt over Labor Day weekend and another 6-day hunt at the end of September. I do not have a tag, nor have a compound bow or know how to use one. I do have some lightweight gear and a nice backpacking pack, but not something to haul meat out with. I have spent numerous hours scoring the Internet watching/reading reviews. It seems that preference usually means to what body type somebody has. I haven’t seen any good reviews from guys with my body type. I am 5’11” & 250 lbs at the moment, plan to drop 15-20 lbs (very easy for me) before the hunt. The issue is, I am not a fat 250lbs. Extremely broad shoulders, big chest, type of guy. I’ve been described as a very large, dense human being. Very hard to describe yourself. I usually start showing signs of a six-pack around 230lbs, which is very weird, but might give you some insight to how dense I am.
I have been looking at numerous packs and wanted input from guys with larger frames like myself. I am really leaning toward a Kuiu pack. Exo Mtn Gear is right up there with it, and Stone Glacier is a close third. It is hard to justify the $200 difference between the Kuiu and the SG.
Also, my pack is really just my Hammock Gear Wanderlust setup with top and bottom quilts, Toaks pot with either my MSR Pocket Rocket 2 or Soto Windburner, Platypus 4 liter water filtration setup, and all the rest of the normal items.
if you could please be specific with the size of pack I would need that would be awesome.
We plan to hunt our way in to camp on the first day of each hunt, then set up a base camp deep in the mountains.
Kifaru has served me well handling heavy loads. Only complaint which echos other’s comments—the pack seems to slide down a bit on my hips. I guessthose a bit bulkier won’t have this issue. But the pack is durable and very well designed.
Love to see how you set it up since the seam in the middle I would assume would need to be removed to place the duplex lite frame in there.If you are sure you have the pack fit correctly, give the HPG Prairie Belt a try. Has solved my "slide down" issues with any pack I've tried it with. Currently running it on an Exo K3. Their K3 belt was better than K2, but it's still not the Prairie.