Join this community!
› Share page: Email Digg del.icio.us Reddit icon StumbleUpon Technorati
Go
Search posts:

Rick McCharles's Twitter Updates

Iao Valley day hike, Maui: The easiest walk you might call a “hike” on Maui I would still recommend.. http://bit.ly/sInZA 10 days ago
getting Nepal trekking permits: If you sign up with a trekking company, they take care of your permits. But if.. http://bit.ly/1YJW1m 11 days ago
best of the Bibbulmun Track, Australia: The Bibbulmun Track is a long distance walk trail in Western Australia,.. http://bit.ly/4u4Kl 12 days ago
Waianapanapa State Park, Maui: There are a number of day hikes, short and long, out of uber popular Wai?anapana.. http://bit.ly/3zR9W 13 days ago
Sliding Sands trail, Maui: Trip report by site editor Rick McCharles. I’m happy to report that the most .. http://bit.ly/1Lm46S 14 days ago
 

expensive European hiking gear

Posted Oct 25 2009 11:03pm

Before I traveled in Europe, I vaguely thought of their gear as … nice. Way overpriced. Gaudy. And sometimes completely goofy. (Especially the tents.)

Then I toured the huge Sportler store in Bolzano, Italy.

Later I was overwhelmed with the even bigger Schuster store in Munich.

Brands like Salewa, Kaikkaalla, Meru, La Sportiva, Mammut, Vaude, Deuter, Hilleberg, Vango, And more appealed. Quality is generally very high.

Mammut-t-shirt

Also more familiar brands: The North Face, Salomon, Mountain Hardware, MSR, Primus, Therm-a-rest, Marmot, Arc’teryx.

Arc’teryx? How has that Canadian company become so HUGE worldwide? What a success story. They fit right in with the expensive European brands.

Actually, Arc’teryx was bought by Adidas in 2001. Then sold to Amer Sports of Finland in 2005. It’s a multi-national now.

My advice to every European hiker coming to North America: Buy your gear in Canada from Mountain Equipment Co-op. Or check prices on Amazon.com and comparison shop in the USA.

Europeans will get sometimes twices the value for their Euro currency in North America as compared with European prices. Especially on American brands.

My CAD Mountain Hardware Scrambler daypack is always CAD$50 back home. In Europe it’s normally €55. That’s CAD$86.40.

An MSR Hubba tent on Amazon.com is US$250 . At Schuster in Munich it’s €329.95 (US$468.14)

Yet there’s some gear available in Europe that I can’t get at home.

Want to take a Cheeseburger in a can hiking? They are available widely in Germany.

cheeseburger-in-a-can

Taste Test: Cheeseburger In A Can

Post a comment
Write a comment: