Hiking Clothes - The Cheapest
Backpacking and hiking clothes need to function to a higher
standard than everyday clothes. Hence, they are often more expensive.
Now, you can shop all the sales you want, and you will save money,
but that extremely expensive waterproof/breathable coat will
still be very expensive. Here are some more radical ways to find
cheap hiking clothes.
First of all, consider what you really need for the trips
you have planned. If you are going to be scaling peaks in Patagonia
for a month, you may have to stick with the best sales you can
find on the high-quality stuff. On the other hand, if your trips
are fair-weather overnighters, one of those two-ounce, two dollar
plastic ponchos isn't out of the question.
In fact, even on the more extreme trips you can often find
cheaper alternatives. I didn't take a $400 waterproof/breathable
rain suit to the top of 20,600-foot Mount Chimborazo. I took
my papery Frogg-Toggs rain suit. You can find these at golf shops,
and yes it is waterproof and breaths well too. The cost? It was
$49 for the set. I have used it for years, on many rainy trips,
with only one duct-tape repair.
If you like to hike in running shoes, as I do, start watching
the sales on out-of-style shoes. I have bought brand-name $90
shoes for $25. For savings like that, I'll gladly be out of style.
I stopped getting blisters the day I gave up on high-tech
too-hot hiking socks. Now I hike thirty miles without a blister
in comfortable, lightweight, white nylon dress socks. They weigh
less than an ounce and cost about a dollar per pair.
Used Hiking Clothes
About the only hiking clothes I won't buy used is shoes and
boots. All other potential backpacking clothes are worth checking
out whenever I can find them at a rummage sale or thrift store.
In fact, I have found a Goretex rain jacket and North Face vest
at a thrift store for a few dollars each. My thrifty wool sweater
weighs in at just 11 ounces, and is almost as warm as the newest
models.
My favorite thrift store discovery was silk shirts. Once I
learned that they weigh just tree ounces, and show up on the
racks regularly for $3, I was hooked. They are comfortable too,
although on the trail some of the styles might make me look like
I'm looking for a wilderness disco.
Make Hiking Clothes
While I just can't recommend sewing your own hiking and backpacking
clothes, I have made a few simple things. A sleeve from an old
thermal shirt became a one-ounce ski mask with scissors and three
minutes of sewing. Socks with holes for your fingers make nifty
hand warmers. For an insulating layer, I wore a four-ounce piece
of poly batting like a tunic under my Frogg Toggs, to the top
of Chimborazo and other mountains. Finally, without much sewing,
you can often modify clothes to make cheap hiking clothes.
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