All-in Outdoor is a channel dedicated to the outdoors. My family and I love camping, hiking and being outdoors. These are our adventures. We'll also show you how to make gear, pack, plan trips and review products. #AvantLink
@@allinoutdoor If your foot is comfortable in a narrower toe box you could try Salomon Glide 2 or the Thunder Cross. The three shoes I’m running in the mountains and alpine here in Colorado are: Saucony Peregrine Trail 13 Really nice feel, nice lugs, really comfortable. Mid-width toe box imo. Best all-rounder for the $$$. La Sportiva Prodigio Looks amazing, snug(narrower) at first and loosens up. Soft, like running on gel. Less aggressive tread for dry, roads and smooth trails. A couple trail runs a week and beatin’ around town. NNormal Tomir 2.0 The shoe I take into the big mountain trail days that will be long, dry, wet, roots, rivers, snow, scree fields, massive boulders to the summit and back down. Durable foot protection for moving fast in massive, complex terrain. The king if the mountain.
For sure, there is a good amount of people from other countries that come over just to hike the trail. We met 6 people in this hike. Germany, Sweden, Austria were a few countries
Don't think your wife or kids are going to be able to assemble this - you need to apply massive force to get the tension rods installed and as you do that, the cot will attempt to swing away in the opposite direction, so you need to sit on the ground with both feet up against the end and side to hold it in place.
Hi! You must have to be a linebacker to get the top metal over the end tabs on the tension bar. Definitely NOT for a slightly built person. Do I sound frustrated?
Once I had Solomon hiking shoes, the sole grib pattern was like yours', I found it was very slippery especially on rock or hard marble surfaces when there is a little bit wet, I thrown it away immediately, it is rubbish, good luck man!
That’s a great point. Terrain definitely needs to be considered. Most of my hiking is in the woods. I did hit some pretty rocky areas in the PA section of the Appalachian trail. The shoes did well but if it had been wet, I could see that being a challenge.
I haven’t had that issue. I used there for several spartan races and hiking. They wore out from use but lasted for a season. I really like them. I also like the saucony trail running shoes
"Best Hiking Shoes on the Planet"? IMHO, clickbait and totally subjective...Hey, it worked on me. I clicked in! As for myself, since I have a wide foot with a high instep, I went with the Oboz Bridger Low Hiking Shoe, and am quite pleased with their extremely rugged outsole, proteective uppers, and overall quality construction.
I like Merrell Moab 3 non-waterproof, hiking shoes with Dr Scholl's Heavy Duty Work insoles, instead of the Merrell insoles they come with. They fit true to size, need no break-in and they're light and very comfortable. They also dry out faster than waterproof footwear, that always gets wet anyway.
The fold in the middle looks like the pad would eventually have a divit in it from being compressed. Otherwise, super simple, easy and cost effective cot.
Seems like you are your child had a great trip. Not for me, but looks like a memorable trip. People forget how wide open and beautiful the United States really is. Glad you had a great time.
Quick and to the point. Nicely done. I like the tip on sitting down and using your foot for leverage to get the final tensioning bar in place. You are the first person I've seen on RU-vid do that.