Outdoor adventure gear should make the trip better while giving you a real safety layer when weather, terrain, daylight, or equipment doesn't cooperate. Our Outdoor Adventure collection includes camping gear, survival equipment, portable stoves, compact shelters, fire-starting tools, multi-use utensils, lighting, and field-ready essentials for hiking, camping, backpacking, bushcraft, vehicle kits, and emergency outdoor preparedness.

Carry the right gear, know how to use it, and have the basics handled before the trail tests them. Every product here was selected for packability, durability, weather resistance, simple operation, and real value when conditions change.

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  • Pingora Lucid 25L Hiking Backpack
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    $139.95 - $155.00
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  • Pingora Impulse Hydration Pack
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  • Wolf Men's Heated Jacket (Final Sale)
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    $199.00
  • Wolf Women's Heated Jacket (Final Sale)
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    $199.00
  • The Howl R1 Carry Bag
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    $134.99 - $149.99
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    $149.99 - $164.99
  • Starlink Safari Window Mount Bag
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  • Pingora Radia Travel Duffel Bag 35L, 55L or 75L
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  • Vivid 27 Liter Backcountry Ski Pack (SC)
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    $132.96
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    $189.95
  • 4 ft Tall x 2 ft Wide Steel Firewood Rack Woodhaven
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    $130.00 - $216.00
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  • SLEEP DELUXE | ALL IN ONE MATTRESS AND QUILT (SC)
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    $129.99
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    $129.99
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    $199.99
  • Pingora Focus 25L Climbing & Hiking Backpack
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    $129.95
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    $129.95
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  • CULLA MAXX | 3 PERSON INSULATED INNER TENT (SC)
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    $119.99
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    $299.99
  • CULLA HAMMOCK WRAP | 1 OR 2 PERSON INSULATION FOR HAMMOCKS (SC)
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  • Poseidon Pro: The Ultimate Family Emergency Power Bank
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    $119.99
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  • Pingora Lucid 20L Hiking Backpack
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    $119.95 - $135.00
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  • Sierra Heated Knit Vest - Men's
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    $119.00
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  • Crest Women's Heated Beanie
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    $119.00
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  • Summit Men's Heated Beanie
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    $119.00
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    $119.00
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  • Sierra Heated Knit Vest - Women's
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    $119.00
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    $119.00
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  • SLEEP | ALL IN ONE MATTRESS AND QUILT (SC)
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    $118.99
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    $118.99
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    $179.99

Outdoor Gear Should Cover the Problems the Trail Creates

Outdoor adventure gear covers the problems that show up when weather changes, daylight runs out, gear breaks, water runs low, or a short hike turns into something longer than planned.

  • Fire-starting tools: A lighter fails in the rain. A ferro rod doesn't. If you're cold, wet, and losing daylight, fire is what changes the situation. Carry a ferro rod, waterproof matches, and prepared tinder so you're not depending on one method when it matters most.
  • Portable stoves and cooking gear: In a fire-restricted area or after a day of rain, a campfire isn't an option. A compact stove means you eat a hot meal regardless of conditions. On longer trips, hot food keeps energy and morale up in ways that cold snacks don't.
  • Compact shelters and weather protection: Weather moves faster than most people plan for. An emergency blanket, poncho, or bivvy in your pack weighs almost nothing and can keep you alive if an overnight situation develops unexpectedly. The difference between discomfort and a real emergency is often just shelter.
  • Multi-use utensils and camp tools: Every ounce in your pack has to earn its place. A blade that also works as a saw, a multi-tool that handles gear repairs, cordage that builds shelter - choose tools that solve more than one problem so you carry less and cover more.
  • Lighting and visibility gear: When daylight runs out and you're still on the trail, a headlamp keeps both hands free for navigation and camp tasks. A phone flashlight points one direction and dies with your battery. Carry a dedicated headlamp and spare batteries.
  • Navigation and communication support: Cell coverage disappears on the same trails where you need it most. A map and compass don't need a signal. A whistle carries further than your voice. Know where you are and how to call for help before you need to.

Carry the right tools, know how to use them, and make it back. That's the whole job.

What to Carry for Hiking, Camping, and Backcountry Trips

A useful outdoor kit changes with the trip. A short trail hike, a weekend camping trip, and a remote backcountry route don't need the same loadout. Match your gear to distance, weather, terrain, group size, and how long help would take to reach you.

For day hikes, carry a small emergency layer: water, snacks, a headlamp, fire starter, whistle, first aid basics, weather protection, and a compact blade or multi-tool. Most outdoor problems start on trips that were supposed to be simple.

For weekend camping trips, add cooking gear, shelter tools, backup lighting, repair items, extra insulation, water treatment, and enough food to handle a delayed return. Comfort matters, but reliability matters more.

Backcountry travel needs more redundancy in the highest-stakes categories: fire, water, shelter, navigation, lighting, and communication. In remote terrain, one failed tool becomes a bigger problem quickly. Cold or wet conditions call for reliable fire-starting, insulation, waterproof storage, spare socks, rain protection, and hot food capability. Wet gear drains energy fast.

Hot or dry environments shift the priority toward water capacity, shade, sun protection, electrolytes, and navigation. Heat-related mistakes escalate faster than most people expect.

For group trips, don't assume one person has everything covered. Shared gear is useful, but each person should carry enough basics to stay safe if separated.

Adventure Gear vs. Survival Equipment: Why the Difference Matters

Outdoor adventure gear and survival equipment overlap, but they solve different problems. Adventure gear supports the trip you planned. Survival equipment covers the problems you didn't plan for.

  • Adventure gear improves the experience: Good cookware, a comfortable shelter, quality lighting, and well-organized camp tools make the trip smoother and more enjoyable. These are the things that make you want to go back out.
  • Survival gear covers failure points: Your fire starter matters when your lighter dies in the rain. Your emergency shelter matters when the weather changes overnight. Your signaling tools matter when the trail disappears. Pack for the trip going wrong, not just the trip going right.
  • Weight matters: Every piece of gear in your pack has to justify being there. The best outdoor tools solve more than one problem without adding dead weight. If you can't name what problem it solves, leave it behind.
  • Durability matters more than features: A simple knife that holds an edge in cold and wet conditions is more useful than a complicated multi-function tool that fails under pressure. Buy gear that works in bad conditions, not just good ones.
  • Familiarity matters: The best survival tool is the one you've used before. Practice starting a fire with your ferro rod before the trip depends on it. Set up your shelter in the backyard before you need it in the dark. Gear you've never used is gear you can't rely on.
  • The line can shift fast: A comfortable camping trip becomes a survival situation when someone gets injured, weather pins the group down, a trail disappears, or daylight runs out before you reach camp. Build your kit for both scenarios, not just the easy one.

Frequently asked questions

A good day-hike kit covers water, food, a headlamp, fire starter, basic first aid, a whistle, weather protection, a map or navigation tool, and a compact knife or multi-tool. The goal is to cover the problems that turn a short hike into an unexpected overnight situation without overloading your pack.

Camping gear is built around comfort and planned use. Survival equipment is built around failure points: cold, darkness, injury, lost trails, bad weather, and delayed help. The best outdoor setup includes both.

Yes. Wind, rain, cold, broken parts, or an empty fuel supply can all make a lighter unreliable. A ferro rod, waterproof matches, or prepared tinder gives you a backup when fire actually matters.

Shelter, insulation, fire, lighting, and water protection. A poncho, tarp, emergency blanket, dry bag, headlamp, and reliable fire starter make a real difference if rain, cold, or wind moves in faster than expected.

Pack by function. Cover water, fire, shelter, food, first aid, navigation, lighting, and communication. Choose compact tools that solve more than one problem, and avoid heavy duplicates unless the risk justifies it.

Yes. Stoves, lanterns, water filters, fire starters, blankets, multi-tools, radios, and portable shelters all overlap with home preparedness. Gear you already know how to use outdoors is often more useful in a home emergency than equipment that has never left the package.

HAVE QUESTIONS OR NEED HELP CHOOSING THE RIGHT SURVIVAL GEAR? GET IN TOUCH WITH US TODAY – WE'RE HERE TO HELP!

Forest Survival