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#11
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![]() "Scott Seidman" wrote in message .4... daytripper wrote in : /daytripper (8 in the morning, 11 at the end of the day ;-) You're not losing enough flies! Or spending enough time astream. Wolfgang who knows that a vest that gains only three pounds in a day ain't no proper vest at all. ![]() |
#12
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daytripper wrote:
On Tue, 1 Jun 2004 15:15:40 -0400, "Louis Owen" wrote: Lou "JR" wrote in message ... Louis Owen wrote: I'm taking a trip down into civilization later this month and plan on visiting some outfitters to try some vests but it seems to me that the vest in the shop and the same vest with 10-14 pounds of gear stuffed inside might be very different experiences. Which is one reason it's good to try on a bunch of vests in a shop rather than one-at-a-time, hit-or-miss by mail order. A good shop (one that trusts you, anyway g) will let you fill the vest with a bunch of FFing impedimenta and see how it feels. But "10-14 pounds"??? Sure you need a vest and not a Sherpa? ![]() A couple of water bottles, a rain jacket, fly boxes, tools, lunch, wading staff and before long 10 pounds is achieved Most of the places I fish right now are "between the bridges where few trouble to go and are good long hike in from the nearest passable logging road so if you figure walking in and out plus time on the rivers a few pounds of gear isn't so bad. I often tote a GPS and since a heart attack a couple of years back and a broken leg last year I tote a cell phone. They seem like a good security blanket. I'll take your advice. I'll be in GrandRapids MI, later this month and they have an Orvis shop in town and a outfitter called the Great Lakes Fly fishing Co. 20 miles out of town, I look both over. Any opinion on Orvis vests? I've been using the shorty version of the Orvis "Super Tack-L-Pack" (or something like that) since they came out a couple of decades ago. About as comfortable as seriously over-loaded vests go, no neck chafe (important!) otherwise no big whoop. Just for grins I just put my vest with a typical load (net attached, but no rain gear stashed inside the back, and I tuck my water bottle in my wader pocket) on the bathroom scale and it's reading around 9.5 pounds, so figure somewhere between 8 and 11 anyway... /daytripper (8 in the morning, 11 at the end of the day ;-) I have the same vest and it works well for me. I lug around way too much stuff, but the Tac-L-Pac has room for more. I assume Tac-L-Pac means kitchen sink and then some. One of my smartest buys last year(besides the 2wt T&T :-)), was a water purifier bottle. Now I don't have to carry the extra weight of water around. Mine is the squeeze bottle type, and fits nicely in the spare reel pouch in the back of the vest. brians |
#13
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![]() "brians" wrote in message ... daytripper wrote: On Tue, 1 Jun 2004 15:15:40 -0400, "Louis Owen" wrote: Lou "JR" wrote in message ... Louis Owen wrote: I'm taking a trip down into civilization later this month and plan on visiting some outfitters to try some vests but it seems to me that the vest in the shop and the same vest with 10-14 pounds of gear stuffed inside might be very different experiences. Which is one reason it's good to try on a bunch of vests in a shop rather than one-at-a-time, hit-or-miss by mail order. A good shop (one that trusts you, anyway g) will let you fill the vest with a bunch of FFing impedimenta and see how it feels. But "10-14 pounds"??? Sure you need a vest and not a Sherpa? ![]() A couple of water bottles, a rain jacket, fly boxes, tools, lunch, wading staff and before long 10 pounds is achieved Most of the places I fish right now are "between the bridges where few trouble to go and are good long hike in from the nearest passable logging road so if you figure walking in and out plus time on the rivers a few pounds of gear isn't so bad. I often tote a GPS and since a heart attack a couple of years back and a broken leg last year I tote a cell phone. They seem like a good security blanket. I'll take your advice. I'll be in GrandRapids MI, later this month and they have an Orvis shop in town and a outfitter called the Great Lakes Fly fishing Co. 20 miles out of town, I look both over. Any opinion on Orvis vests? I've been using the shorty version of the Orvis "Super Tack-L-Pack" (or something like that) since they came out a couple of decades ago. About as comfortable as seriously over-loaded vests go, no neck chafe (important!) otherwise no big whoop. Just for grins I just put my vest with a typical load (net attached, but no rain gear stashed inside the back, and I tuck my water bottle in my wader pocket) on the bathroom scale and it's reading around 9.5 pounds, so figure somewhere between 8 and 11 anyway... /daytripper (8 in the morning, 11 at the end of the day ;-) I have the same vest and it works well for me. I lug around way too much stuff, but the Tac-L-Pac has room for more. I assume Tac-L-Pac means kitchen sink and then some. One of my smartest buys last year(besides the 2wt T&T :-)), was a water purifier bottle. Now I don't have to carry the extra weight of water around. Mine is the squeeze bottle type, and fits nicely in the spare reel pouch in the back of the vest. brians Gawd,,, I have a larger size for hiking and camping. How do I explain to the wife I need a second one but smaller? Lou |
#14
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![]() "Louis Owen" wrote in message ... "brians" wrote in message ... daytripper wrote: On Tue, 1 Jun 2004 15:15:40 -0400, "Louis Owen" wrote: Lou "JR" wrote in message ... Louis Owen wrote: I'm taking a trip down into civilization later this month and plan on visiting some outfitters to try some vests but it seems to me that the vest in the shop and the same vest with 10-14 pounds of gear stuffed inside might be very different experiences. Which is one reason it's good to try on a bunch of vests in a shop rather than one-at-a-time, hit-or-miss by mail order. A good shop (one that trusts you, anyway g) will let you fill the vest with a bunch of FFing impedimenta and see how it feels. But "10-14 pounds"??? Sure you need a vest and not a Sherpa? ![]() A couple of water bottles, a rain jacket, fly boxes, tools, lunch, wading staff and before long 10 pounds is achieved Most of the places I fish right now are "between the bridges where few trouble to go and are good long hike in from the nearest passable logging road so if you figure walking in and out plus time on the rivers a few pounds of gear isn't so bad. I often tote a GPS and since a heart attack a couple of years back and a broken leg last year I tote a cell phone. They seem like a good security blanket. I'll take your advice. I'll be in GrandRapids MI, later this month and they have an Orvis shop in town and a outfitter called the Great Lakes Fly fishing Co. 20 miles out of town, I look both over. Any opinion on Orvis vests? I've been using the shorty version of the Orvis "Super Tack-L-Pack" (or something like that) since they came out a couple of decades ago. About as comfortable as seriously over-loaded vests go, no neck chafe (important!) otherwise no big whoop. Just for grins I just put my vest with a typical load (net attached, but no rain gear stashed inside the back, and I tuck my water bottle in my wader pocket) on the bathroom scale and it's reading around 9.5 pounds, so figure somewhere between 8 and 11 anyway... /daytripper (8 in the morning, 11 at the end of the day ;-) I have the same vest and it works well for me. I lug around way too much stuff, but the Tac-L-Pac has room for more. I assume Tac-L-Pac means kitchen sink and then some. One of my smartest buys last year(besides the 2wt T&T :-)), was a water purifier bottle. Now I don't have to carry the extra weight of water around. Mine is the squeeze bottle type, and fits nicely in the spare reel pouch in the back of the vest. brians Gawd,,, I have a larger size for hiking and camping. How do I explain to the wife I need a second one but smaller? Mmmmmm.......call it a "clutch". She'll understand. Wolfgang |
#15
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I really like the William Joseph Coastal vest pack that I got my girlfriend.
If you are carrying as much weight as you've indicated, I think you'd like this vest. It is well padded and infinitely adjustable. You won't need water bottles because you can put a water bladder in the pack and still have room for your rain jacket, etc. -John "Louis Owen" wrote in message ... John I'm taking a trip down into civilization later this month and plan on visiting some outfitters to try some vests but it seems to me that the vest in the shop and the same vest with 10-14 pounds of gear stuffed inside might be very different experiences. Cost is really not a problem, I just want a good vest. I have a good chest pack already,,, Thanks for the advice and sharing your experiences. Lou "JohnR" wrote in message link.net... I have the Simms Mesh Vest (old style with large vertical pockets) and the Cabelas Deluxe Chest Vest. I also have a small chest pack that was made locally by a friend. I like all of them. I got my girlfriend the William Joseph Coastal chest vest and was most impressed. It was a fine piece of work. However, if money is an issue, then I'd go with the Cabelas Deluxe Chest Vest which is on sale now for $30. My suggestion is to try on a number of vest at a fly shop and see how you like them. Alternately, you could borrow a friend's vest which you like to see how it carries the weight. -John |
#16
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![]() "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... "Louis Owen" wrote in message ... "brians" wrote in message ... daytripper wrote: On Tue, 1 Jun 2004 15:15:40 -0400, "Louis Owen" wrote: Lou "JR" wrote in message ... Louis Owen wrote: I'm taking a trip down into civilization later this month and plan on visiting some outfitters to try some vests but it seems to me that the vest in the shop and the same vest with 10-14 pounds of gear stuffed inside might be very different experiences. Which is one reason it's good to try on a bunch of vests in a shop rather than one-at-a-time, hit-or-miss by mail order. A good shop (one that trusts you, anyway g) will let you fill the vest with a bunch of FFing impedimenta and see how it feels. But "10-14 pounds"??? Sure you need a vest and not a Sherpa? ![]() A couple of water bottles, a rain jacket, fly boxes, tools, lunch, wading staff and before long 10 pounds is achieved Most of the places I fish right now are "between the bridges where few trouble to go and are good long hike in from the nearest passable logging road so if you figure walking in and out plus time on the rivers a few pounds of gear isn't so bad. I often tote a GPS and since a heart attack a couple of years back and a broken leg last year I tote a cell phone. They seem like a good security blanket. I'll take your advice. I'll be in GrandRapids MI, later this month and they have an Orvis shop in town and a outfitter called the Great Lakes Fly fishing Co. 20 miles out of town, I look both over. Any opinion on Orvis vests? I've been using the shorty version of the Orvis "Super Tack-L-Pack" (or something like that) since they came out a couple of decades ago. About as comfortable as seriously over-loaded vests go, no neck chafe (important!) otherwise no big whoop. Just for grins I just put my vest with a typical load (net attached, but no rain gear stashed inside the back, and I tuck my water bottle in my wader pocket) on the bathroom scale and it's reading around 9.5 pounds, so figure somewhere between 8 and 11 anyway... /daytripper (8 in the morning, 11 at the end of the day ;-) I have the same vest and it works well for me. I lug around way too much stuff, but the Tac-L-Pac has room for more. I assume Tac-L-Pac means kitchen sink and then some. One of my smartest buys last year(besides the 2wt T&T :-)), was a water purifier bottle. Now I don't have to carry the extra weight of water around. Mine is the squeeze bottle type, and fits nicely in the spare reel pouch in the back of the vest. brians Gawd,,, I have a larger size for hiking and camping. How do I explain to the wife I need a second one but smaller? Mmmmmm.......call it a "clutch". She'll understand. Wolfgang I can hope.....Lou |
#17
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JohnR
Who sells that? Lou "JohnR" wrote in message link.net... I really like the William Joseph Coastal vest pack that I got my girlfriend. If you are carrying as much weight as you've indicated, I think you'd like this vest. It is well padded and infinitely adjustable. You won't need water bottles because you can put a water bladder in the pack and still have room for your rain jacket, etc. -John "Louis Owen" wrote in message ... John I'm taking a trip down into civilization later this month and plan on visiting some outfitters to try some vests but it seems to me that the vest in the shop and the same vest with 10-14 pounds of gear stuffed inside might be very different experiences. Cost is really not a problem, I just want a good vest. I have a good chest pack already,,, Thanks for the advice and sharing your experiences. Lou "JohnR" wrote in message link.net... I have the Simms Mesh Vest (old style with large vertical pockets) and the Cabelas Deluxe Chest Vest. I also have a small chest pack that was made locally by a friend. I like all of them. I got my girlfriend the William Joseph Coastal chest vest and was most impressed. It was a fine piece of work. However, if money is an issue, then I'd go with the Cabelas Deluxe Chest Vest which is on sale now for $30. My suggestion is to try on a number of vest at a fly shop and see how you like them. Alternately, you could borrow a friend's vest which you like to see how it carries the weight. -John |
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