- Banned
- #21
It’s not on your list but check out the feathered friends Helios line.
I have the jacket and pants and they are extremely warm. Both weigh in at around 16.oz. I’ve been using the jacket for 4 years now and it’s very durable.
Mark
difference in size and it is lighter. Goosefeet has a cool product.Here’s a few pictures comparing Kuiu puffy pants to custom GooseFeet puffy’s. A picture’s worth a thousand words and as far as I’m concerned, these two pairs of pants aren’t even remotely comparable.
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Hey Trout, I'm curious about your Goosefeet Gear pants. What are the spec's, material weight, fill weight? Thanks.Here’s a few pictures comparing Kuiu puffy pants to custom GooseFeet puffy’s. A picture’s worth a thousand words and as far as I’m concerned, these two pairs of pants aren’t even remotely comparable.
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Hey Trout, I'm curious about your Goosefeet Gear pants. What are the spec's, material weight, fill weight? Thanks.
Agree 100%. Of all the backcountry trips I’ve taken and lead, I’ve never worn a synthetic (much less down) while moving. So the idea of moving through deadfall or traversing a mountain with a puffy (synthetic or down) - with my pack on - just isn’t something I have done or would recommend.Overheard inside the Kuiu outlet last month: Kuiu sales guy ranting to a customer about Pro/Ultra jacket users regularly calling in about repairs or durability issues, and how those items are meant for in camp or glassing ONLY, otherwise they should be inside your pack. Backpacking clothing is either "go" clothing or "stop" clothing, meaning some is active wear and some is not. Kuiu down puffies are NOT intended to be worn while hiking or backpacking. You'd be too hot anyways. They are designed exclusively for sitting and glassing etc.
That's from the Kuiu sales guy's mouth. Same general rule applies to backpacking, you don't wear puffies while hiking because they are too fragile, too warm, and you don't want moisture buildup from sweat inside a non-breathable down puffy.
If you really need a heavy warm layer for moving, go synthetic.
Wow, so much better specs than the Kuiu and lighter to boot!This is all my specs.
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Up until this year, I would have agreed with you. But with temps in the negatives, a 20 kt wind, and blowing snow, I needed my LPP while I was hiking through brush and trees. If I had been wearing a down puffy I would have had to worry about tears rather than focusing on the stalk. I was layered up pretty good underneath and I had to go slow to prevent sweating, but there are times when you need your puffy to stand up to mild abuse. The other time I really appreciated the LPP durability was sitting on my son's bull for 3 hours. We were camped out in some really nasty volcanic rock and crawling around glassing and trying to get a shot for hours. We needed the puffy to stay warm while we were stationary, but durability to not tear on the rocks. I've been looking and to my knowledge no one makes a down puffy with anything but ultralight outer fabrics, which are very delicate to pokes and tears. If someone made a treated down puffy with a more durable face fabric, I would like to give it a try.I gotta ask... @Kotaman eluded to it a bit already, but what is with folks wanting to beat brush in a puffy and then complaining when it rips? Its in every single puffy thread on RS.
Pick the right tool for the job.
easy fix, throw a hard or soft shell over a puffy when you need durability,it cuts the wind and provides the durability you desire, prevents the puffy from being destroyed in the brush. my arcterxy shell, for instance is 80d...not a puffy on earth that can compare to that durability and wind cutting ability. base layers, mid layers and a puffy is not a complete system...especially in zero degrees with snow and wind.Up until this year, I would have agreed with you. But with temps in the negatives, a 20 kt wind, and blowing snow, I needed my LPP while I was hiking through brush and trees. If I had been wearing a down puffy I would have had to worry about tears rather than focusing on the stalk. I was layered up pretty good underneath and I had to go slow to prevent sweating, but there are times when you need your puffy to stand up to mild abuse. The other time I really appreciated the LPP durability was sitting on my son's bull for 3 hours. We were camped out in some really nasty volcanic rock and crawling around glassing and trying to get a shot for hours. We needed the puffy to stay warm while we were stationary, but durability to not tear on the rocks. I've been looking and to my knowledge no one makes a down puffy with anything but ultralight outer fabrics, which are very delicate to pokes and tears. If someone made a treated down puffy with a more durable face fabric, I would like to give it a try.
Exactly. Plus you "should" have a hard shell as part of your system that's big enough to go over the top of everything. Another thing I'll often do is wear a windshirt over everything, same idea. Plus a hardshell and down will still probably be lighter and pack smaller than a lpp.easy fix, throw a hard or soft shell over a puffy when you need durability,it cuts the wind and provides the durability you desire, prevents the puffy from being destroyed in the brush. my arcterxy shell, for instance is 80d...not a puffy on earth that can compare to that durability and wind cutting ability. base layers, mid layers and a puffy is not a complete system...especially in zero degrees with snow and wind.
The Kifaru is the Carhartt jacket of the backcountry.... sure it is warm and tough but do you really want to carry it around?
I wear down when I am sitting and glassing or at camp. If I am moving and going through brush, it is in the pack.
The Large LPP is 23oz and the KUIU Superdown Pro is around 15oz for size large. (Advertised 13.4 is for a medium). so for 8oz are we really talking about a boat anchor? I don't have it but if I did and like the puffy its going in the pack even if its a 8oz weight penalty.
Damn thats a deal breaker for backpacking hunting. I'd being choosing the KUIU SDP easy decision.I haven't weighed my full zip lpp, but when I had the half zip in large iirc it weighed a lot closer to 30oz than 23 oz.