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High Points

High Points

Get a lift with the best new peak-bagging gear

Published:  Updated: 
High Points

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

(1) With Salomon‘s Proton Mid GTX, get the protection of a real boot with the light, agile feel of a sneaker. $160;

(2) Cruise over mixed snow and scree with KTS‘s Steel Crampons, which are light, compact, and more durable than aluminum models. $144;

(3) Consider The North Face‘s Flash Jacket your minimalist bivy sack. It’s stuffed with 800-fill down and weighs just a few feathers over 13 ounces. $229;

(4) Marmot‘s Eiger 35 pack handles long days of alpine abuse. Credit 420-denier nylon reinforcements and a molded suspension that doesn’t wilt when overloaded. $109;

(5) Zip-off pants? Only if they’re Prana‘s smart-looking, nylon-and-spandex Katek Convertible. $75;

(6) Helly Hansen‘s flat-seamed Frost Hoodie blends synthetic and merino fabrics in a versatile layer you can wear peak- and pint-bagging. $90;

(7) Drink from mountain streams—safely—with Sawyer‘s 32-ounce Water Filter. $55;

(8) Sure, a couple sticks will do, but they won’t have the rubber grips or easy-locking adjustment of Black Diamond‘s Syncro trekking poles. $90;

(9) Arc’teryx‘s Gamma LT Pullover is lighter than most soft shells but still scrape-proof and plenty weather-resistant for passing squalls. $125;

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