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April 28, 2022

Best Dog Gear for Camping, Hiking, and Outdoor Adventures

Filed under: Fitness,Outdoors — Tags: , , , , — admin @ 10:44 pm

Bringing your pet along on excursions is a great way to bond with your adventure pup, but you need to ensure you’ve got the right dog gear for camping, hiking, fishing, and more. Just like the right essentials keep you comfortable, well-fed, and prepared for the unexpected, so does specialized dog gear for camping and outdoor adventures.

From sleeping bags and life vests to multi-function leashes and protective goggles, there’s a whole assortment of cool gear designed specifically to help your dog get the most out of any outdoor experience. We selected some of the newest products to chase any adventure.

Best Dog Gear for Camping, Hiking, and Outdoor Adventures

The Wilderdog Sleeping Bag is a great choice for keeping your pup warm on overnight adventures.
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1. Wilderdog Sleeping Bag

Durable and water-repelling on the outside, soft and micro-fleecy on the inside, Wilderdog’s canine-specific sleeping bag will help you get a good night’s sleep by giving your dog a dedicated space that’s cozy and warm without being confining. The sleeping bag unzips flat and zips three-quarters of the way around so your pup can snuggle inside. Loops hang the bag for drying and airing out. And when it’s not in use, the extra short sleeping bag packs into a stuff sack.

[$59; wilderdog.com]

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The Whyld River dog sleeping system rolls three cozy pieces into one.
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2. Whyld River DoggyBag

This three-in-one travel bed, quilt, and sleeping bag will keep your canine comfy on cold nights. The baffled quilt is stuffed with synthetic insulation and attaches to a durable base with plenty of options to stick a head or paw out. Size it to fit your curled-up pup, and slip a pad into the base for extra insulation.

[From $79; whyld-river.com]

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Keep your dog close and safe in the outdoors with the Kurgo Dog County Harness.
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3. Kurgo RSG Dog County Harness

Kurgo’s backcountry-ready dog harness’ molle and Velcro attachment system lets you attach panniers, a hydration pouch, a dog treat dispenser, a first aid kit, and more. The base harness has a padded back and a broad chest to disperse weight and minimize strain. Dual haul handles give you options for grabbing your pup in case you need to give a boost.

[From $59; kurgo.com]

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Your dog will never stray far when using the Garmin Alpha dog tracker system in the wild.
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4. Garmin Alpha 10 Tracker and TT15X Collar

Losing a dog on the trail is stressful. Garmin’s compact Alpha 10 tracker and TT15X collar keep tabs on your pup if it takes off. The nine-mile-range Alpha is a phone-compatible GPS that also shows your dog’s precise location and can recall it remotely. The TT15X collar has 80 hours of battery and easy-to-spot LEDs.

[Alpha 10 Tracker, $400; garmin.com]

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[$350; garmin.com]

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Ruffwear Hitch Hiker Leash
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5. Ruffwear Hitch Hiker Leash

The most innovative dog leash on the market, Ruffwear’s Hitch Hiker is a 12-foot-long line for your pup that stores in a mini-hip pack. When you want to give your dog room to roam, squeeze the belay device-like camming mechanism to let the lead out. And when you need to bring Rover back to base, pull the cord, which locks like a climbing rope in an auto-belay device.

[$65; ruffwear.com]

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Dog leash on white background
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6. Fable Magic Link Leash

Designed to offer a bunch of options for hooking your dog up to you to keep them safe and secure, the Magic Link can be worn as a belt or shoulder bandolier, used as a wrist-strap and it simply convert to a slip-on collar with leash, or just be set up as conventional leash that you attach to a collar or harness. It’s made from an industrial strength cord that’s waterproof, mold-proof, and strong—it’s rated up to 350 pounds of pull force. High quality, matte black aluminum hardware handsomely sets off the nine available colors.

[$65; fablepets.com]

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The Ruffwear Float Coat will keep your dog swimming high and having fun in the water.
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7. Ruffwear Float Coat

Ruffwear’s Float Coat, a buoyant harness/life jacket, helps your dog feel safe and confident in the water, and it gives you total control. The foam-filled PFD has an adjustable neck, and easy-to-operate buckles that won’t irritate your pup and a sturdy haul handle for lifting your dog out of the water. The well-padded jacket will easily keep a 75-pound dog afloat—attach a light to the loop on the back to make your pup visible in low light.

[$90; ruffwear.com]

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Yellow lab wearing goggles
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8. Rex Specs V2

Rex Specs’s curved lens goggles will protect your canine’s corneas from snow blindness and irritants like bugs, dust, sand, and wind so they can comfortably accompany you on adventures. The goggles come with easily changeable clear and smoke lenses, and have better fit, greater stability, a wider field of view, more streamlined design, and better range of motion than previous versions. There’s a learning curve, and your dog will look like an astronaut wearing them, but they work.

[$85; rexspecs.com]

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Hydrate your dog no matter how far flung the location with the Vapor EZ Lick Bottle.
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9. Vapur EZ Lick Bottle

Conserve the water you’re carrying with Vapur’s 0.7 oz. BPA-free, wide-mouth “anti-bottle.” Flip open the three-layer flask’s dust cap and an oversized roller reminiscent of a gerbil water bottle lets your dog get a drink without drips or spills. An integrated clip keeps it convenient, and the roller clicks off for cleaning. And as the dishwasher-safe flask drains, it folds to take up less room in your pack. Also available as a pet and owner two-pack.

[$20; vapur.us]

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Keep close tabs on your dog in the dark with the Nite Ice LED Dog Collar.
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10. Nite Ize LED Collar

Make your dog visible for six hours on a charge with this Nite Ize ultrabright collar. Push a button for glow or flash, and two ultra-bright LEDs illuminate an integrated optical fiber that’s consistently bright all around the dog’s neck and easy to spot. The rest of the time the highly water-resistant, metal belt buckle-close collar is low chafe, secure and an all-around great collar. The collar recharges in 1.25 hours via micro-USB.

[$25; niteize.com]

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All your doggy supplies will be close at hand with the Orvis Chuckwagon Dog Tote.
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11. Orvis Tough Trail Chuckwagon Dog Tote

Keep your pup organized on their next play date, car trip, or visit to the grandparents with Orvis’ Chuckwagon. With everything your dog needs in one spot, you can grab the bag and go for impromptu adventures without forgetting a thing. The Cordura Eco tote comes stocked with dog-on-the-go essentials—collapsible food and water bowls, a zippered food carrier held in place with removable internal dividers, and stretchy pockets for toys, meds, and more. Poop pickup bags live on a dispenser cord in an outside pocket, while treats are easy access when stored in the outside pocket on the other side. The tote has a reinforced bottom that’s also water-repelling and zippered opening makes everything inside easy to reach.

[$149; orvis.com]

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February 18, 2022

Camping With a Dog: Essential Gear to Keep Your Pet Safe and Comfortable

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , , , , , — admin @ 12:54 am

My new puppy loves the outdoors even more than I do, so I’ve been spoiling her with gear to guarantee she has the best possible experience. As warmer weather approaches, I’m adding items to her camping kit to make sure she’s ready for a full summer of road tripping in our camper van. If you’re considering camping with a dog, you’ll want to grab a few canine-focused camping essentials, too.

Camping with her is an adventure for both of us, but a little preparation really makes trips smoother. The right gear setup will keep your pup from wandering into the woods, ensure they’re getting the right nutrition, and help them get a good night’s sleep and plenty of rest throughout the day.

From plush cushions to slip-free water bowls to a collapsible crate, keep your pet safe and comfortable at camp (and en route) with these 10 items for camping with a dog.

Camping With a Dog: All the Gear You Need

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September 27, 2021

Our Campgrounds Need an Overhaul

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , , , — admin @ 8:20 pm

California’s New Brighton State Beach broke me. With every campground around Big Basin redwoods full, I dropped $35 for the park’s last vacant site only to find myself “camping” behind someone’s house in a residential subdivision. The glow from their TV, not my fire pit, lulled me to sleep.

California is extreme, but my experience illustrated a coast-to-coast crisis: We’ve outgrown our national and state parks campgrounds.

The “Meinecke System” of public campgrounds—one-way loops with parking spurs—was laid out in the 1930s. In the 1950s, the National Park Service (NPS) undertook the $2 billion “Mission 66” program to upgrade the system “to the new age of automobile tourism.” Since then? Zilch.

“Mission 66 was the last ‘consistent, ambitious, system-wide development program,’ ” reported the NPS in 2020. What’s changed since the ’50s? Start with RVs, trailers, trucks the size of toolsheds, generators, bikes, portable loungers, full kitchens and myriad apparatus produced by the $890 billion camping industry that’s buffaloed the average camper’s footprint beyond John Muir’s worst nightmare.

Oh, yeah, people. According to an NPS study, 2014 to 2018 saw a 22 percent increase in annual camping households and a 72 percent bump in those who camp more than three times a year. That was before the COVID-inspired surge in outdoor recreation.

The NPS system spreads more than 6 million annual overnight visits across just 502 “front-country campgrounds” (i.e., car camps) with 16,648 campsites. More than 40 percent of those sites are located in six marquee parks (Yosemite, Glacier, et al.), leaving parks like Arches in Utah with just 50 sites. No wonder campgrounds have become such cheek-to-jowl zoos that 11 percent of people recently surveyed said they simply opted not to camp rather than face the hassles at NPS campgrounds.

The 2020 Great American Outdoors Act won’t build new campgrounds—it’s devoted to backlogged maintenance. President Biden has asked for $2 trillion in infrastructure funds and in June proposed $2.8 billion for outdoor recreation. Part of that should be used on a well-funded national program that isn’t afraid to knock down a few trees on the way to expanding a 20th-century idea to meet 21st-century growth. Airports, highways, bridges? Absolutely. But while we’re printing money, let’s not neglect those places accessed by the roads less traveled.

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June 15, 2021

New Research Reveals What Makes the Perfect Campsite

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , , — admin @ 9:42 pm

You might think when people are picking campsites, they’d be influenced by views or distance to bathrooms. And, if you asked them, that’s what they may say, too. However, a new study in the Journal of Environmental Management says the biggest factors in picking the perfect campsite are price and the availability of electricity.

 

Camping is in the midst of a renaissance, much of it due to the COVID-19 pandemic. According to the KOA’s 2021 North American Camping Report, 48 million households went camping once in 2020. That’s about 10 million households more than went camping in 2019. In addition, more than 50 percent of those 48 million say they’re going to camp more in 2021. Of course, this increase in interest also means greater demand on available outdoor resources. And that’s where the new study comes in.

The study is the work of Will Rice, an assistant professor of outdoor recreation and wild land management at the University of Montana, and Soyoung Park, an assistant professor of hospitality and tourism management at Florida Atlantic University. The researchers went through 23,000 reservations at the Watchman campground in Utah’s Zion National Park. Variables such the nearest dump station, number of neighboring campsites, and river access were used to sort campsites. In addition to electricity and price, proximity to Virgin River, and ease of access were also big motivators.

In an article on the University of Montana website, Rice says the data they gathered should be relatable to many Americans who camp. “For instance, anyone who has ever picked a campsite within a campground has certainly dealt with the dilemma of proximity to the restroom. I mean, we want to be close enough to make navigation easy in the middle of the night. But not so close that we’re smelling it and listening to the door open and close all night.”

Rice says what sets this study apart is the emphasis on revealed preferences (what people do). Previous research on recreation decision-making relied on stated preferences (what people say). According to Rice, a “big data” approach can help influence how outdoor resources are used in the future.

“Since the 1960s, park managers—in collaboration with researchers—have been trying to figure out how people make decisions when choosing campsites, trails, or any number of recreation facilities,” Rice says. “This information is vital for recreation planning, not only for improving visitor experiences, but also for ensuring the protection of ecological resources and fair allocation of recreation opportunities.”

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