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- Capacity: 24 litres
- Convertible design – wear as backpack or carry as tote
- Padded, breathable shoulder straps that tuck away
- Sternum strap
- Main compartment with cinch closure and expandable side-release buckles
- Zipped internal pocket
- Hidden back pocket with hook-and-loop closure
- Zipped external pocket with key clip
- Two oversized stretch-mesh water bottle pockets
- Packs into its own pocket
- Materials: 70-denier 100% recycled nylon ripstop body with PU coating (140-denier on bottom), 200-denier 100% recycled polyester lining with PU coating, polyester airmesh shoulder straps, 72% recycled nylon/28% spandex stretch-mesh side pockets
- Weight: 420g
- bluesign approved fabrics
- Made in Vietnam in a Fair Trade Certified factory
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- Gear Capacity: 24L
- Dimensions: 41 x 25 x 20cm
- Weight: 420g
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| Body |
2.4-oz 70-denier (bottom: 3.8-oz 140-denier) 100% recycled nylon ripstop with a PU coating |
| Lining |
3-oz 200-denier 100% recycled polyester plain weave with a PU coating |
| Shoulder Straps |
9.4-oz 100% recycled polyester airmesh |
| Side Pockets |
7.1-oz 72% recycled nylon / 28% elastane power mesh |
| General |
Body and side pocket fabrics are certified as bluesign® approved. Made in a Fair Trade Certified™ factory. |
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Recycled Materials: made from recycled polyester and recycled nylon
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Environmental Initiatives: Through their membership with 1% for the Planet, Patagonia donate 1% of every sale to carefully chosen social and environmental causes
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Patagonia is the brand that other gear companies want to be when they grow up. In 2022, the company's founder, Yvon Chouinard, famously gave the company to the planet. It’s now jointly controlled by a charitable trust and a not-for-profit dedicated to fighting the climate crisis, and all post-operating profits go to environmental causes.
But in some ways that’s the tip of the (melting) iceberg. For nearly half a century, Patagonia has been an experiment in responsible business. From the farms that grow their cotton to the factories that make their goods and everything in-between, they’ve tried incredibly hard to set the gold standard in terms of ethics, transparency and social responsibility. Not only that, but their gear is made to last – to take hard use and repairs, and to maintain its performance through thick and thin.
All of which is even more extraordinary when you consider that Yvon Chouinard started out blacksmithing climbing gear for his mates in his parents' backyard, using a forge and anvil that he bought from a junkyard.
At WildBounds we don’t usually tend to go for the big-name brands, but this was one we simply couldn’t resist. Quite apart from their amazing ethical and environmental credentials, they just make great gear. We’ve used it and loved it for years, and you will too.