jake.king
FNG
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2022
- Messages
- 3
Forloh is based out of Whitefish, MT. 100% made and sourced in the US, with very high quality gear!
Yea I don't understand everyone saying they'll be all in to support made and sourced in the USA and Forloh has literally been around a while. I also like the patterns better than what Origin has showedForloh is based out of Whitefish, MT. 100% made and sourced in the US, with very high quality gear!
Yes i agree! and i am willing to bet that origin's materials will absolutely not be as technical as forlohs lol. Hopefully im wrong and they surprise me, it sure would be great to have more options made here. Forloh is doing things literally nobody else is doing with hunting clothes, on top of sourcing and making them here at competitive prices. Im not a fan of the origin camo pattern but id try a piece in solid if they made some that looked interestingYea I don't understand everyone saying they'll be all in to support made and sourced in the USA and Forloh has literally been around a while. I also like the patterns better than what Origin has showed
Yes i agree! and i am willing to bet that origin's materials will absolutely not be as technical as forlohs lol. Hopefully im wrong and they surprise me, it sure would be great to have more options made here. Forloh is doing things literally nobody else is doing with hunting clothes, on top of sourcing and making them here at competitive prices. Im not a fan of the origin camo pattern but id try a piece in solid if they made some that looked interesting
That and brands that brag about being 100% American made and then use camo that’s made overseas. I have a hard time wrapping my head around that one.Yea I don't understand everyone saying they'll be all in to support made and sourced in the USA and Forloh has literally been around a while. I also like the patterns better than what Origin has showed
I'm not crazy about the pattern but don't hate it either...may not be ideal for the east. Interested in the fabric tech that they'll be using. On their IG live thing they did last night they said that some of the materials have never been made available to public before, only used in the military.
As someone who tests things for the military, this is not exactly blowing my mind.I'm not crazy about the pattern but don't hate it either...may not be ideal for the east. Interested in the fabric tech that they'll be using. On their IG live thing they did last night they said that some of the materials have never been made available to public before, only used in the military.
Not enough celebrity hunters and leg humpers pushing it to the masses.Forloh is based out of Whitefish, MT. 100% made and sourced in the US, with very high quality gear!
I'm not crazy about the pattern but don't hate it either...may not be ideal for the east. Interested in the fabric tech that they'll be using. On their IG live thing they did last night they said that some of the materials have never been made available to public before, only used in the military.
It is .Pnuma is made in china and Vietnam from what ive heard
The clothing he makes comes with a built in alarm to make you get up at 0400 everyday and takes zero days off.I was listening to the Jocko/ Joe Rogan podcast and it was mentioned that Origin, a company that Jocko is invested in, is working on technical hunting gear that is all made and sourced in the USA. Jocko mentioned he is hoping to have it out by Aug of '22, in time for western big game seasons. It will be interesting to see how it compares to the current dominators in the market such as sitka, kuiu, first lite etc. Did anyone else listen to that podcast? Would you buy the product given it was in line with or a little higher priced with what's on the market today? Jocko has been wearing sitka so I'm assuming whatever he comes up with will be as good or better. If this has already been brought up my apologies.
I'm not sure I follow your comment. More demand for wool would increase the demand for domestic farmers to raise in order to sheer. I do not think that sheep conservationists would be against increased numbers of sheep, unless I am misunderstanding.American-sourced wool is a problem if you fancy yourself a sheep conservationist, considering the majority of wool comes from sheep in the Rocky Mountains.