You just made an old man very happy. I still pull out my old gear and use it all that nostalgia, old memories and friends that have gone. Keep making memories with the old and the new and thank you.
Thanks!!! That's nice to hear. It's really lovely to sitt there and think about friends and people that's gone today... it hurts but it is at the same time with a nice and warm pain. I think you understand. 😉 /Matti
@@JOKKMOKKGUIDERNA It was indeed a lovely video to watch...and each mention of an old item triggered a kaleidoscope of memories of my own. My whole life has been spent travelling and exploring the wilds...and even now, at 65 (next week) I'm still living almost 24/7 outdoors. It was a pity about the problem discovered due to the lack of sound, because I'm sure we would have all enjoyed watching those same video clips and listening 🎧 to your overdubbed or narrative added at a later stage during the post editing.
I used to own a G66 alu but unfortunately it got lost when I moved from the city to the countryside. I still miss it cause it was a nice tent and with a lot of memories. At one occasion me and a friend of mine went by train and took the ferry from Nynäshamn with both our Haglöfs Skarja backpacks. After renting bicycles in Visby we hauled ourselves out on the road and cycled around in northern part of Gotland during one week. I brought my old Trangia bought from Hobbex in Borås as a gift from my sister (one of the pots now got a small hole in the bottom, got to buy a new 😄) and we slept in my beloved G66 alu from Fjällräven. I remember a had my Caravan Superdown 500 and a simple sleeping mattress. This was in the middle of the 80's and we were two young guys and now we both are around 50+ ☺️
What a fantastic idea for a video. Memories for me, too, especially from that area. I still use older gear; for example, old cotton tents might be heavier, but when it doesn’t matter as much, the comfort from the material is unparalleled. Trangia never breaks, where I’ve had modern canister stoves spring a leak or something and flame to their death, stranding with no hot food in the middle of nowhere (of course super rare but it’s happened to me).
Your video brought back many wonderful memories and the answer to the question is old school gear is always going to be functional and stand up to the adventure that is before us. God bless you and now you have a new prescriber to your channel..
Thanks for following us! This video was really nice to make. I started to think about making the same theme again because it brought back memories from the past! Really lovely!!! /Matti
I loved this. The point is would make is i still use a trangia. I think the focus of backpacking these days is to go fast and light. But if on a long path, pass by a local shop, you can grab some real ingredients. You can then cook some proper food and spend time relaxing, the trangia is brilliant at that. Real ingredients, cooked up for real food is unbeatable. These days most “Cooksets” are not cook sets, they are Water Boilers. I would urge everyone to slow down, and enjoy some proper food when on the trail from time to time.
Very good video! There are actually still hikers that use the frame backpacks such as Haglöfs Grönland regularly, and these hikers would never exchange their frame backpack against a "modern" backpack. When I was cabin warden again this summer I had during four weeks like 10-15 people as guests or just passing by the cabin who had such a backpack.
Lovely to see the G66. I've had two, a blue one and a silvered one. I still have the silvered one and use it sometimes. It's so simple and I love it, except for one thing - lack of ventilation!
The G66 was a great tent!!! If we look at the tents today, the G66 was a really good one! The tent we got today is, of course, lighter, stronger, and more roomy... but... they can never compete with the memories that G66 gives us back! 😀 /Matti
Todays rain gear are the worst. I really prefer the old classic bulletproof pvc, which is ACTUALLY stopping you from being drenched from the rain. Yes, you will be sweaty, but rather that than soaked through. Thanks for the retro trip. Got a few smiles here now.
There is something refreshing and soothing in this video. It was good to hear your memories. Could you consider using those voiceless footage with a voiceover recorded at home? I am curious what you have said there. I absolutely agree, that repairing equipement should be considered first as long we are able to do it without compromising safety. Anyway, thank you for the trip down the memory lane. May you always enjoy a good cup of hot coffee when you need it!
I will go out with my old canoe again and I will talk about my granmother again so... the video I failed this time will be content in the future. 😀 /Matti
Thank you for this video and the nostalgia tour of back country camping. I had some of the same equipment and techniques from the 70's and 80's in Canada. I have been thinning out my camping equipment and that of my father. I really enjoyed hearing how you maintained and repaired your equipment. I created some of my own carry bags, bags for cooking kit. I still have a copy of sewing your own camping gear. Those were the days of down sleeping bag sewing kits, before commercial down sleeping bags were available. I used to carry one of those old sewing awls with the wooden handle to do repairs. I like the idea of doing a retro weekend camping adventure and using the old gear and cooking on my Optimus 8R white gas stove. I also used to prepare typical European climbing meal kits of chocolate, nuts, pilot crackers, cheese. The food preparation and meal planning was a big part of any trip. Respect!
Fantastic video that took me back in time! I also remember the hikes we did as youngsters with a Fjallraven external frame pack. We used to pack our sleeping bag and mat in a typical grey garbage bag to keep them dry. K-way pullover jackets to keep dry, Esbit fires for the food (cooked in our dad's old military stuff). Ah...good times!
We all wish we could have our loved ones who are gone come visit us again. I spend a lot of time looking for the older quality made products that are still made to that old specification. Such as Filson clothing which still makes same clothing as they did in the 1850's. My old gear from the 80s fortunately didn't survive as it was mostly junk.
As an old canoer and Kayaker. I always taught those new to the water to always float your boat before getting. With one end on the shore the canoe can tip over as your are getting in. I'm still using a lot of my equipment form the late 60's. My old tents are long worn out, but I did find a North Face three person 8 sided tent in the corner of the shelf from the early 80's and it is going back in use. Still using my Swedish Seva 123 stove and a little larger Optimus 00. for power output stoves you can't beat pressurized Kerosene. And my Swiss Sigg nesting pots and fuel bottles and tea pot it is still going strong after 55 years. Flashlights/ torch where so inferior to the new solar LED lights. The good old Jungle Juice. The little plastic bottle said to use one bottle on your skin and a second bottle on your clothing. I still have one from 1975 unopen just to help me remember how toxic it was. Still using my French Opinel folding thin blade kitchen knives. still wearing Swedish Fish Net underwear. And still prefer it to the poly pro stuff. My old Anorak full length to the top of my shoes. It shortened to hip length by folding in half. If you got caught in a storm you could bend your knees and sleep in it. I have worn ot may wind breakers over the years. My favorite wool sweater has a patch on the elbow. i still wear it to out for a beer with friends as well as on the trail. Today for me the trail is bike touring. my body joints have been replaced with titanium. But I keep moving because that is what I have to do.
Good that you choose to film it on a modern camera ... Super 8 would be quite interesting 😉 And it is nice to see that the old things are not to much worse than the new ones.
I still have a 30 year old fjallraven kuppeltelt and a caravan sleeping bag. The outer one of my double one til minus 30. It all was expensive high tech equipment in the 80.
I still own a few Items from the 60s and 70s...an old Camp trails External frame "Moose pack", Kelty's Very first internal frame pack which I picked up in 73 and a few other bits and bobs I somehow managed to hang onto. I sure enjoyed watching your video, well Done!...MTwoods
This is one of the most enjoyable videos I've seen in a good while. I was moved by how your use of the old gear brought back memories of family. I understand this well. Old memories and stories are always good to carry with us, either in the heart or the pack. I have a similar Trangia and love its simple, clean design: I was attracted to the no moving parts and the quiet. I agree that it is heavy for backpacking, but I use it for car camping and float trips.
Loving your video. The Trangia I nicked off my sister 40 years ago is still my goto stove - was used every weekend this summer - albeit with gas fitting. My bones aren't as young as they were and appreciate the new air mats 😀 Have to take issue with you re your Grandmother...My dog does the best "first clean"!
Greetings from North Idaho. The names may be different but the feelings are universal. I had Coleman sleeping bags not down and a peak 1 gas stove nothing light weight. I’m 71 now and your right I can smell old canvas or the old nylon tent and I’m right back there. Thanks for the trip.
Thanks for watching! The old stuff wasn’t bad. Some equipment is actually still very good and will come back in the future like backpack with external frames. /Matti
We used to get the Moras with the two guards we often cut one off the top spine side. I cut deep into my palm with a Mora, ahh the memories. I'm approaching my mid 50's and much of your kit is very similar to what we had here in US, Maine
Great video. Party because I’m old and partly because it’s still in good condition I use my old gear as well. I’m not an ultralight hiker/camper/ canoeist and probably never will be because my old gear still does what it’s supposed to do and does it well.
Super video....the old stuff has a certain romance about it, no doubt. (I still struggle not to buy those "top of the line" rucksacks that I couldn't afford in my youth when I see them second hand 🙂).
Thanks for the video! thumbs up just for the beard. I'm born 1981, so i also know the old stuff and i am still using it, specially for my winter trips. I have Haglöfs sleeping bags from 1979, i got from my parents, with 900g down filling but with enough space for 1400g filling, so it was warm down to -37°C i had two times in north sweden. I also have the old Optimus Hiker and the Exlorer. Both are the best stoves in my eyes since the last 50years. I own tegsnäs skies, made for telemark i think, but i use it with climbing skins for backcountry. Also i love my bamboo ski sticks and my wodden segebaden pulka. I totally love wool and Ventile / EtaProof for clothing. My first gear was the UCO candle latern. I got it 1989, i think and still love it. For all these stuff i dont know why i have to take new ones!? But, yeah, i also love the 20g titanium stove, breathable rain cloth, etc.
Great video and nice to go back to old times. But Im 63 now and I enjoy very much using some of the new ultralight stuf like my Zpacks backpack and Lixada 25 gramm gas stove etc. And not to forget the modern waterbottles that are safe and dont make water taste disgusting like the "vintage" one's 😀. I agree 100% to you about repair marks and patina on gear, it gives it a charme new things can never have. Cheers and take care. 💪💪💪
I think this is one of your best films to date, I really enjoyed it thanks - I had a fantastic caravan sleeping bag in the early 1990's and would love to still have it now! I'd decided to take my trangia on the next trip before seeing this video so even more looking forward to using it now 👍
I talked with an old reindeer herder and he told me stories from his parents when they got their first plastic bags. That was a game changer back in the old days. Suddenly you could transport and protect things. That’s not very long time ago… :-) /Matti
I'm still using gear I bought in the early 80s. I have a pair of Alp Sports gaiters, made for the NZ alpine Spaniard grass, and other than the elastic needing replacement, they are still in pretty good condition. I'm still using them in the Alps. The high UV in NZ ate my small alpine tent (ozone hole), I still have it, but it's no longer waterproof. I use it in sommer for nostalgia, again it's the smell that brings the memories.
Loved the video, beautiful. I'm not averse to using old cotton tents on occasion myself, Blacks Good Companions tents, about 60 years old. Oh yes, the smell......heavenly, lol!! Oh yes, and a modifies LK 35 rucksack on an aluminium frame. Doesn't everyone?
Excellent presentation, and really enjoyed the entire video. For me ~~~ The old gear speaks to us in a way... it's a part of us as we are a part of it with unforgotten familiarity, understanding, care, feelings, fittingness, and history (our-story).
great ! I still have my old caravan sleeping bag from the eighties it was a great company making amazing gear. I remember they had a cold temp sleeping system with two sleeping bsgs down inside and synthetic outside, their tents are legends made by Bo Hilleberg himself Kaipak , Keb and the Nomad which would become the Keron !!!! Back then I could not afford the caravan Nomad. I also still have a very similar Anorak from Norrönna and my old Trangia I still use too all was more simple and basic and true allot heavier and lot more robust. we had a lot of fun back then. thanks for this time machine!!
Fun to see the old-style equipment. Most gear of today is far better than back in the 1980-90's. I remember only having those sleeping pads, I never really slept then, only if I made a bed of spruce branches beneath it...A new era started with the therm a rest mattress for me. And the sleeping bags took up a lot of space in the pack, and were heavy too. And those backpacks with external frames and not adjustable shoulder straps, poorly padded belts..horrible compared with todays packs. I had Norrøna's models from late 80's and when they started making real padded hipbelts and shoulder straps like on the anatomic models, the external frame packs were a lot better. I tried Fjellrevens top model Gyro, but no way...I found it horrible, thin shoulder straps, not adjustable in heigth..Norwegian big backpack models were a lot better and I think still they are. 30 kg's in the Hagløfs you show in this epsiode would be a nightmare..In a modern Gregory for instance, it's quite comfortable. Trangia is still ok, you can use other fuels in it but it's quite heavy. Most equipment is a lot better today, and more lightweight. The positive side is that more people can manage to go backpacking for a week or so. But yes we buy too much new gear all the time, lightweight stuff doesn't last too long, but it's also something to do with the mentality today.
@@bonilsson3161 Yes I have some of his books, and you have most certainly guessed where I got the name Megalep from🙂 I've used that nickname since 1994 actually..
Bästa friluftsfilmen på länge. Känner igen mig i de gamla grejerna. Kul att du har kvar dem! Jag har fortfarande en mindre Haglöfs ramsäck på vinden, som tog mig runt Europa på 80-talet. Och min gamla Caravan-sovsäck. Otroligt varm, men tung.
My brother still have his Caravan skvader... I had one but its gone now but it was also used very much; once on over 4000 meters altitude in the Peruvian andes.
Fantastisk film. Turutstyr fra 70-tallet gir en egen følelse. På neste tur skal jeg ta fram Norrøna ryggsekken fra 1980, lete fram Trangia og Lundhags Luffare. Takk for påminnelsen
I like the G66 tent. I have used it in Sarek 2005 and was my fathers. But you have to be in love to sleep 2 persons. My parents always forced me to bring an orange also. I like the time accurate mustache, why not keep it?
I agree... this tent is a good solo tent but not for two persons... My mustache... I want to be able to come close to Stina again... and then I can't keep it. 😉 /Matti
Nice agility getting into & out of that canoe. Ahhhh HA - using a P38 can opener, never fails. That pot you use to boil water looks like it's older than you. Yes, I recognized the 35mm film canister the moment you showed it. I, too, put the flashlight under my chin to create a scary person. My flashlight held 2 D size batteries & allowed me to have a solid beam or a button I could push to send morse code/SOS. Tents didn't have bath tub type floors like all modern tents & they were heavy. But they did provide shelter & they didn't leak. I had & slept inside a military surplus 2 man pup tent throughout my childhood. Repairing/sewing - do you use the Speedy Stitcher like MEeee? I use it to repair broken stitching along seams on my military pants & gear. I, too, had & carried an exterior aluminum frame backpack which I remember as being a comfortable fit that didn't slip down on my hips. The contents got wet when the backpack material got wet. I still have & carry my Boy Scout pocket knife. I don't think your eye glasses are vintage. Did you shave with a straight razor? - snicker Warm Regards from bone dry Reno, Nevada
Thanks for a lot of nostalgic input. I remember more things when you write this. 😀 My glasses... I have o Another pair from that time. Small rounded... I used them for a picture. I'll put it as a picture on the community later. I didn't use them because I didn't see clear with them anymore. 😕 ...maybe my eyes are little bit vintage! 😀 /Matti
Today there's better tents. Today illumination light technology is far far better, no comparison. As for frame packs I still think they're a viable choice as is a lot of the older gear. In the states the 80's 90's and 2000's was the dark ages for pots and most cookware for outside. We had very little in the way of choices outside of old vintage boy scout sets, or USGI military surplus. The old Bush pots and some things were difficult to source but Today we live in a golden age of pots and implements for outdoor cooking and stoves. It's incredible
Jag kör med fjällräven gyro..60 år gammal ryggsäck. Fotogenlampa Gammalt liggunderlag. Osv osv. Det som hänt mest i utrustningen är tälten...❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
A really really nice video!! The best I've seen in a long time🔥 really interesting and I'm excited to se what to come in the industry. Hopefully we'll be better to take care and repair our gear! Sorry about the clips we missed... but you make a new one soon🔥🔥 take care//Johan
Det här var den absolut coolaste videon jag sett på länge! För en gångs skull blev det inte kostsamt heller, två ggr har jag sett Jokkmokksguidernas test av Hillebergtält och varje gg har jag köpt ett: Bra och roliga filmer
Good video I enjoyed very much I too remember those past times the repair and make last eras we didn't think about the next better quality purchase or having more you just made the best of what you had and enjoyed that moment which wasn't cluttered by thoughts of better and more a lot of the time because money was tight and you didn't think like wanting more you new that was pointless but now I'm the same striving for better but can this be a waste of effort and definitely a strain on the environment with all the disposed of materials it's hard to stop progress but there are costs in the long term I think and a distraction my opinion
When packing the two tentpoles together (the two fit together and make a small pack) do you still have the two caps (lid) in rubber? They were used for not letting rainwater in down through both of the poles. The last thing to connect was the tentline in both ends.
Nice one Matti. Not sure you remember this but you and I actually communicated quite a lot some years ago. Last time was about a canoe that I had gotten my hands on. Must be 10 years ago now I guess :-) I got the canoe from a German guy who had made it himself but you thought it looked a lot like an Acron solo canoe. I also used to ask your advice on some husky related stuff from time to time.. Thing is I remembered about it last week while sitting in that same canoe talking to the stupid cam. So.... you actually got a mention then and there on my channel 🙂Stay strong and keep doing what you do! 🔥🔥🛶
im 44. my late 1990s / early 2000s gear was 38 pounds of space-age goodness. My old boy scout stuff was canvas and steel. You ever tie a cast iron skllet to an external frame pack?
I don’t know if I understand you correctly… my swenglich you know… I never ties anything outside my backpack if it’s not totally impossible to avoid… /Matti
Thanks! Klas is doing fine. We posted a reel on Instagram last week about him. We can post that as a short on youtube this week. He will also show up in a video soon with dogtraining that Stina has done. 😀 /Matti
Memories! Great topic! All from the canoe to the sleepingbag. But what about that common green plastic or aluminium water bottle that made the water taste like the material it was made from? Yiak! 🤮 Or the fishing reels that always made a ”skatebo” (Swedish for Magpie nest) i the beginning of every fishing hike? 😂 But maybe You’r a decade to young fore thoose items?
Härligt Matti! Jag gillade verkligen den här videon. Känner mig väldigt old-style för det är exakt den utrustningen jag själv hade (eller har då den fortfarande ligger eller hänger i magasinen i Vaikijaur). Vi släpade dock sällan med oss Trangia-köken utan hade en sotig kaffepanna och stekpanna i säcken och lagade/kokade direkt på elden... Kul också att se att du vände Trappern uppochner inför natten 😁
Du får plocka fram grejerna och ge dig ut igen. 😀 Det är härligt med alla minnen som fladdrar förbi när doften från tältet letar sig in i näsan och när muskelminnet från att stänga ryggsäcken aktiveras... Kanoten brukar jag vända. Det ät ytterst få gånger jag inte vänder den...men jag tänkte på dig när jag vände den. 😀 /Matti
Ah, jag har ju grejer här men det blir ju lite andra sorts färder här… mera walkabouts på den här sidan längs leder och mycket sällan man övernattar någon annanstans än vid campingplatser. Dryga böter om man eldar nånstans utanför anordnade eldplatser osv… Fast det är ju kul att gå dagsturer också.
Jag har ännu kvar min Caravan Arctic (1.6kg) som jag köpte 1975. Den fungerar utmärkt ännu, möjligen kanske inte lika varm som förr. Den klarar dock av minusnätter. Kanotmodellen i videon har också varit i min ägo. Ryggsäcken var en Camptrail Ponderosa och tältet ett ryggås med innertält av Himalayabomull. Mycket har blivit bättre...:)
As a comparison: My MSR tent outer fly has completely deiaminated after 10 years, my 16 year old Arcteryx backpack inside fabric has become sticky and disgusting, the MSR Dragonfly has been replaced by another Dragonfly since it broke in multiple places over time (soldered some, but at some point replaced it), but on the other hand the fuel bottles are still good, as is the Svea 123r, the Germany army utensils kit is still perfect, the MSR stainless pot set is still good. The gear at the time was heavier and less "functional" in some ways, but it lasted a lot longer ...
This was such an enjoyable film. Loved how each piece of old equipment brought up memories of loved ones no longer here. I agree that we are too quick to throw equipment away when it could be repaired. When I buy new I try to get gear that has been around long enough that folks can say it is durable and still usable after several years. Nothing holds memories better than old tough stuff. Keep up the good work keep hugging your dogos.
Jag hade en sån ryggsäck när jag började vandra. Jag köpte den på second hand för ca 75 kr och det var den bästa ryggsäck jag haft. Tyvärr blev den så sliten så jag fick säga adjö till den men jag saknar den fortfarande 😀
Det var en fornøyelig film. Jeg har kost meg og smilt og ledd flere ganger. Det meste var så gjenkjennelig, vi har hatt mye av det samme utstyret. Om ikke alt var av samme fabrikat så var modellen ganske lik det jeg hadde fra annen produsent. F.eks teltet, jeg hadde et far Helsport som hette "Børgefjell", det hadde jeg helt til noen okser tråkket det sund. Jeg gjorde meg også noen tanker om det jeg hadde i langt yngre år, og alt det jeg har i dag. Man har bedre økonomi nå enn før, det skjer hele tiden utvikling av utstyr, bedre funksjoner, og ikke minst vekt. Men det er også, som du sier, gøy å få nye ting.......og en del blir kjøpt kankje av den grunnen, og ikke nødvendigvis for at kjøpet var nødvendig. I dag er jeg flinkere til å tenke "MÅ jeg ha det, er det nødvendig?" Men men, svaret er noen ganger "nei", men så blir fristelsen for stor. 😔 Vel vel, takk for artig film så ga meg ei trivelig stund.
Det är en balans med utrustning. Självklart ska man byta till bättre grejer och unna sig det roliga med kul nyheter. Samtidigt så för varje grej vi konsumerar så belastas planeten. Skogar huggs, gruvor öppnas, långväga transporter, vindkraftverk byggs i favorit skogen osv... Svårt och fyllt av dubbelmoral. Vill ha pryl men inte effekterna av konsumtionen. 😀 /Matti
Tack!
Vi skulle gjort en Viking-style video.
😀
/Matti
Tack snälla Tommy för din $superthanks 🙏
You just made an old man very happy. I still pull out my old gear and use it all that nostalgia, old memories and friends that have gone. Keep making memories with the old and the new and thank you.
Thanks!!! That's nice to hear.
It's really lovely to sitt there and think about friends and people that's gone today... it hurts but it is at the same time with a nice and warm pain.
I think you understand.
😉
/Matti
@@JOKKMOKKGUIDERNA It was indeed a lovely video to watch...and each mention of an old item triggered a kaleidoscope of memories of my own.
My whole life has been spent travelling and exploring the wilds...and even now, at 65 (next week) I'm still living almost 24/7 outdoors.
It was a pity about the problem discovered due to the lack of sound, because I'm sure we would have all enjoyed watching those same video clips and listening 🎧 to your overdubbed or narrative added at a later stage during the post editing.
Ah, the memories... Thank you, Matti.
Yes… It really brings old memories back…
/Matti
I used to own a G66 alu but unfortunately it got lost when I moved from the city to the countryside. I still miss it cause it was a nice tent and with a lot of memories.
At one occasion me and a friend of mine went by train and took the ferry from Nynäshamn with both our Haglöfs Skarja backpacks. After renting bicycles in Visby we hauled ourselves out on the road and cycled around in northern part of Gotland during one week. I brought my old Trangia bought from Hobbex in Borås as a gift from my sister (one of the pots now got a small hole in the bottom, got to buy a new 😄) and we slept in my beloved G66 alu from Fjällräven. I remember a had my Caravan Superdown 500 and a simple sleeping mattress.
This was in the middle of the 80's and we were two young guys and now we both are around 50+ ☺️
Thanks for the memories 60 years old now remembering the 70s camping
I thinking about going out again with my old gear. It was a very nice experience!!! Lots of memories that came back to me.
/Matti
What a fantastic idea for a video. Memories for me, too, especially from that area. I still use older gear; for example, old cotton tents might be heavier, but when it doesn’t matter as much, the comfort from the material is unparalleled. Trangia never breaks, where I’ve had modern canister stoves spring a leak or something and flame to their death, stranding with no hot food in the middle of nowhere (of course super rare but it’s happened to me).
It’s lovely with memories from the good old days…
:-)
/Matti
I love videos about vintage camping gear
😀
Your video brought back many wonderful memories and the answer to the question is old school gear is always going to be functional and stand up to the adventure that is before us.
God bless you and now you have a new prescriber to your channel..
Thanks for following us!
This video was really nice to make. I started to think about making the same theme again because it brought back memories from the past! Really lovely!!!
/Matti
The "Ole Timey" music is best!
I loved this. The point is would make is i still use a trangia. I think the focus of backpacking these days is to go fast and light. But if on a long path, pass by a local shop, you can grab some real ingredients. You can then cook some proper food and spend time relaxing, the trangia is brilliant at that. Real ingredients, cooked up for real food is unbeatable. These days most “Cooksets” are not cook sets, they are Water Boilers. I would urge everyone to slow down, and enjoy some proper food when on the trail from time to time.
Very good video!
There are actually still hikers that use the frame backpacks such as Haglöfs Grönland regularly, and these hikers would never exchange their frame backpack against a "modern" backpack. When I was cabin warden again this summer I had during four weeks like 10-15 people as guests or just passing by the cabin who had such a backpack.
Yes...and this backpacks are better than some of the new once like my crapy Osprey. 😀
...but less God than the top products today.
/Matti
Did cry a bit when my grampa trowed away his old Haglöfs frame backpack 🤦
Wow, you really have one of the coolest Vans ever build. i really like the old Hi-Aces
Lovely to see the G66. I've had two, a blue one and a silvered one. I still have the silvered one and use it sometimes. It's so simple and I love it, except for one thing - lack of ventilation!
The G66 was a great tent!!! If we look at the tents today, the G66 was a really good one! The tent we got today is, of course, lighter, stronger, and more roomy... but... they can never compete with the memories that G66 gives us back! 😀
/Matti
Todays rain gear are the worst. I really prefer the old classic bulletproof pvc, which is ACTUALLY stopping you from being drenched from the rain. Yes, you will be sweaty, but rather that than soaked through. Thanks for the retro trip. Got a few smiles here now.
We still use the old ones when we don’t move so much. In boats, on the quad and when we working in the kennel.
/Matti
TOTALLY BRILLIANT. Thank yo so much. I was there with you all the way.
Love your canine companion.
All the best
There is something refreshing and soothing in this video. It was good to hear your memories. Could you consider using those voiceless footage with a voiceover recorded at home? I am curious what you have said there. I absolutely agree, that repairing equipement should be considered first as long we are able to do it without compromising safety. Anyway, thank you for the trip down the memory lane. May you always enjoy a good cup of hot coffee when you need it!
I will go out with my old canoe again and I will talk about my granmother again so... the video I failed this time will be content in the future.
😀
/Matti
Thank you for this video and the nostalgia tour of back country camping. I had some of the same equipment and techniques from the 70's and 80's in Canada. I have been thinning out my camping equipment and that of my father. I really enjoyed hearing how you maintained and repaired your equipment. I created some of my own carry bags, bags for cooking kit. I still have a copy of sewing your own camping gear. Those were the days of down sleeping bag sewing kits, before commercial down sleeping bags were available. I used to carry one of those old sewing awls with the wooden handle to do repairs.
I like the idea of doing a retro weekend camping adventure and using the old gear and cooking on my Optimus 8R white gas stove. I also used to prepare typical European climbing meal kits of chocolate, nuts, pilot crackers, cheese. The food preparation and meal planning was a big part of any trip. Respect!
You should go for a vintage camping weekend!!!
:-)
/Matti
Fantastic video that took me back in time!
I also remember the hikes we did as youngsters with a Fjallraven external frame pack. We used to pack our sleeping bag and mat in a typical grey garbage bag to keep them dry. K-way pullover jackets to keep dry, Esbit fires for the food (cooked in our dad's old military stuff). Ah...good times!
...there is some good memories from the god old days...
/Matti
We all wish we could have our loved ones who are gone come visit us again. I spend a lot of time looking for the older quality made products that are still made to that old specification. Such as Filson clothing which still makes same clothing as they did in the 1850's. My old gear from the 80s fortunately didn't survive as it was mostly junk.
As an old canoer and Kayaker. I always taught those new to the water to always float your boat before getting. With one end on the shore the canoe can tip over as your are getting in. I'm still using a lot of my equipment form the late 60's. My old tents are long worn out, but I did find a North Face three person 8 sided tent in the corner of the shelf from the early 80's and it is going back in use. Still using my Swedish Seva 123 stove and a little larger Optimus 00. for power output stoves you can't beat pressurized Kerosene. And my Swiss Sigg nesting pots and fuel bottles and tea pot it is still going strong after 55 years. Flashlights/ torch where so inferior to the new solar LED lights. The good old Jungle Juice. The little plastic bottle said to use one bottle on your skin and a second bottle on your clothing. I still have one from 1975 unopen just to help me remember how toxic it was. Still using my French Opinel folding thin blade kitchen knives. still wearing Swedish Fish Net underwear. And still prefer it to the poly pro stuff. My old Anorak full length to the top of my shoes. It shortened to hip length by folding in half. If you got caught in a storm you could bend your knees and sleep in it. I have worn ot may wind breakers over the years. My favorite wool sweater has a patch on the elbow. i still wear it to out for a beer with friends as well as on the trail. Today for me the trail is bike touring. my body joints have been replaced with titanium. But I keep moving because that is what I have to do.
Still love my 42 year old kelty external frame pack. Lots of great memories.
Nice to hear!
Do you love it for the memories or for the function?
/Matti
All of the above.
A life long Kelty guy.
I can smell the old tent fabric from here!
Yes... that is actually a very familiar smell!!! You don't get that in the new tents.
/Matti
Good that you choose to film it on a modern camera ... Super 8 would be quite interesting 😉
And it is nice to see that the old things are not to much worse than the new ones.
I still have a 30 year old fjallraven kuppeltelt and a caravan sleeping bag. The outer one of my double one til minus 30. It all was expensive high tech equipment in the 80.
I still own a few Items from the 60s and 70s...an old Camp trails External frame "Moose pack", Kelty's Very first internal frame pack which I picked up in 73 and a few other bits and bobs I somehow managed to hang onto. I sure enjoyed watching your video, well Done!...MTwoods
Thanks!
😀
/Matti
This is one of the most enjoyable videos I've seen in a good while. I was moved by how your use of the old gear brought back memories of family. I understand this well. Old memories and stories are always good to carry with us, either in the heart or the pack. I have a similar Trangia and love its simple, clean design: I was attracted to the no moving parts and the quiet. I agree that it is heavy for backpacking, but I use it for car camping and float trips.
Loving your video. The Trangia I nicked off my sister 40 years ago is still my goto stove - was used every weekend this summer - albeit with gas fitting.
My bones aren't as young as they were and appreciate the new air mats 😀
Have to take issue with you re your Grandmother...My dog does the best "first clean"!
So nice to hear Karen!
This was just wonderful, simply wonderful. Thank you for making such genuine, honest and most excellent films, please keep them coming 🙏
Thanks!!! We really try to make one video each week besides the work with our guide business.
/Matti
Your fabulous videos are becoming one of the highlights of my week!
Greetings from North Idaho. The names may be different but the feelings are universal. I had Coleman sleeping bags not down and a peak 1 gas stove nothing light weight. I’m 71 now and your right I can smell old canvas or the old nylon tent and I’m right back there. Thanks for the trip.
Thanks for watching!
The old stuff wasn’t bad. Some equipment is actually still very good and will come back in the future like backpack with external frames.
/Matti
We used to get the Moras with the two guards we often cut one off the top spine side. I cut deep into my palm with a Mora, ahh the memories. I'm approaching my mid 50's and much of your kit is very similar to what we had here in US, Maine
Matti.... you rock, Dude!
Great video. Party because I’m old and partly because it’s still in good condition I use my old gear as well. I’m not an ultralight hiker/camper/ canoeist and probably never will be because my old gear still does what it’s supposed to do and does it well.
Nice to hear!
Yepp... it's easy to go for new fancy gear and forget to actually be out there...
/Matti
Good video mate, a trip down memory lane. Me and the wife backpacked around Europe for 6 months in 1987 using equipment like yours. Good times.
🏕👍
Super video....the old stuff has a certain romance about it, no doubt. (I still struggle not to buy those "top of the line" rucksacks that I couldn't afford in my youth when I see them second hand 🙂).
Thanks for the video! thumbs up just for the beard.
I'm born 1981, so i also know the old stuff and i am still using it, specially for my winter trips.
I have Haglöfs sleeping bags from 1979, i got from my parents, with 900g down filling but with enough space for 1400g filling, so it was warm down to -37°C i had two times in north sweden.
I also have the old Optimus Hiker and the Exlorer. Both are the best stoves in my eyes since the last 50years. I own tegsnäs skies, made for telemark i think, but i use it with climbing skins for backcountry.
Also i love my bamboo ski sticks and my wodden segebaden pulka.
I totally love wool and Ventile / EtaProof for clothing.
My first gear was the UCO candle latern. I got it 1989, i think and still love it.
For all these stuff i dont know why i have to take new ones!?
But, yeah, i also love the 20g titanium stove, breathable rain cloth, etc.
No school like Old School......thank you
Great video and nice to go back to old times. But Im 63 now and I enjoy very much using some of the new ultralight stuf like my Zpacks backpack and Lixada 25 gramm gas stove etc. And not to forget the modern waterbottles that are safe and dont make water taste disgusting like the "vintage" one's 😀. I agree 100% to you about repair marks and patina on gear, it gives it a charme new things can never have. Cheers and take care. 💪💪💪
Thanks!
Now you made me remember the 'flavour ' that we got I the old army -aluminium-water-bottles...
🤣
...I agree... disgusting!
/Matti
I think this is one of your best films to date, I really enjoyed it thanks - I had a fantastic caravan sleeping bag in the early 1990's and would love to still have it now!
I'd decided to take my trangia on the next trip before seeing this video so even more looking forward to using it now 👍
Thanks!
I really had fun and enjoyed making this video.
😀
/Matti
Thnx that was blast from the past.
We would pack our sleeping bags in garbage bags inside of our not waterproof stuff sacks.
Cheers ✌🇨🇦
I talked with an old reindeer herder and he told me stories from his parents when they got their first plastic bags. That was a game changer back in the old days. Suddenly you could transport and protect things.
That’s not very long time ago…
:-)
/Matti
I'm still using gear I bought in the early 80s. I have a pair of Alp Sports gaiters, made for the NZ alpine Spaniard grass, and other than the elastic needing replacement, they are still in pretty good condition. I'm still using them in the Alps. The high UV in NZ ate my small alpine tent (ozone hole), I still have it, but it's no longer waterproof. I use it in sommer for nostalgia, again it's the smell that brings the memories.
I was an exchange student in 1979 in Sweden and remember all those brands.
That’s long time ago! I hope you had a great time!
:-)
/Matti
@@JOKKMOKKGUIDERNA brilliant.. l am returning to Storuman for the first time in 40 years in the autumn 2024z
Did you make the Fjalledarlinjen at Storuman Folkhögskola??? :-)
/Matti
@@JOKKMOKKGUIDERNA no.. but l was good friends with them and they took me Tarna,Gronafjall and Kittlefjall…
Loved the video, beautiful. I'm not averse to using old cotton tents on occasion myself, Blacks Good Companions tents, about 60 years old. Oh yes, the smell......heavenly, lol!! Oh yes, and a modifies LK 35 rucksack on an aluminium frame. Doesn't everyone?
👌⛺️
Excellent presentation, and really enjoyed the entire video. For me ~~~ The old gear speaks to us in a way... it's a part of us as we are a part of it with unforgotten familiarity, understanding, care, feelings, fittingness, and history (our-story).
Thanks!
Yes...that's true. It's a part of our history who made the person that we are today!
😀
/Matti
We had a very similar tent back in the 70s. Thank you for this video. Wonderful!
It was a great experience for me to make this video! Lots of memories were brought back to me.
:-)
/Matti
Absolutely outstanding! Well done. It sure does bring back memories.
Thanks!
/Matti
Get some flashbacks! Nice!
That's great! The good old days had some good parts. 😀
/Matti
That was fun to watch that video, brought back memorys from My childhood when I was a little girlscout. Thx for that:)
Nice to hear!
😀
/Matti
Matti you have made me feel human again after watching this....thank you
I am glad that Globalization has brought you a good Novscraft canoe . I just wish we had your beautiful Scandinavian sweaters here in Canada.
The Trapper canoe is great on flat water... but I'm super happy for our Novacraft and Mad River canoes.
😀
/Matti
This has been really cool! I use some things 12:06 from when I was 17 to this day. Its all good stuff! Take care. NQU
great ! I still have my old caravan sleeping bag from the eighties it was a great company making amazing gear. I remember they had a
cold temp sleeping system with two sleeping bsgs down inside and synthetic outside, their tents are legends made by Bo Hilleberg himself
Kaipak , Keb and the Nomad which would become the Keron !!!! Back then I could not afford the caravan Nomad.
I also still have a very similar Anorak from Norrönna and my old Trangia I still use too all was more simple and basic and true allot heavier and lot more robust. we had a lot of fun back then. thanks for this time machine!!
Bring the old gear back out on the trail and you will get a time journey.
😀
/Matti
Keep up the great work :) I hope that this channel really explodes (in a positive way), you guys deserve it!
Thanks!
😀
We will continue making videos.
/Matti
Beautiful video. Nostalgic and really good fun. Thank you.
🙏 thank you!
Great video, memories and music, perfect viewing this Sunday.
Thanks!
😀
/Matti
Enjoyed this
Grandma's are always right.
❤️
Fun to see the old-style equipment.
Most gear of today is far better than back in the 1980-90's. I remember only having those sleeping pads, I never really slept then, only if I made a bed of spruce branches beneath it...A new era started with the therm a rest mattress for me. And the sleeping bags took up a lot of space in the pack, and were heavy too.
And those backpacks with external frames and not adjustable shoulder straps, poorly padded belts..horrible compared with todays packs. I had Norrøna's models from late 80's and when they started making real padded hipbelts and shoulder straps like on the anatomic models, the external frame packs were a lot better. I tried Fjellrevens top model Gyro, but no way...I found it horrible, thin shoulder straps, not adjustable in heigth..Norwegian big backpack models were a lot better and I think still they are. 30 kg's in the Hagløfs you show in this epsiode would be a nightmare..In a modern Gregory for instance, it's quite comfortable.
Trangia is still ok, you can use other fuels in it but it's quite heavy. Most equipment is a lot better today, and more lightweight. The positive side is that more people can manage to go backpacking for a week or so. But yes we buy too much new gear all the time, lightweight stuff doesn't last too long, but it's also something to do with the mentality today.
Yepp... instead of using our gear we searching for new and better gear and we belive that that will make us really happy...
/Matti
Megalep, Are you a Harry McFie reader ?
@@bonilsson3161 Yes I have some of his books, and you have most certainly guessed where I got the name Megalep from🙂 I've used that nickname since 1994 actually..
Another fantastic video Matti,great to see the dog too 👍👍🇬🇧🇬🇧
Thanks!!!
😀
/Matti
great video, I really enjoyed it. I love using vintage gear 🙂
Grym film!
En sån underbar video. Jag kan tänka mig att vi är ungefär i samma ålder. Ren nostalgi och visst var det ibland lite bättre förr.
Är man i vår ålder tillhör det vår skyldighet att påpeka för de yngre att det var bättre förr!!!
😉
/Matti
Så kul och avslappnande video. Jag känner igen mycket av utrustningen som mina föräldrar använde. Mend don’t spend ❤
Du får gräva fram lite av dina föräldrars prylar och testa dem.
😀
/Matti
Helt underbart Matti. 😊
Bästa friluftsfilmen på länge. Känner igen mig i de gamla grejerna. Kul att du har kvar dem! Jag har fortfarande en mindre Haglöfs ramsäck på vinden, som tog mig runt Europa på 80-talet. Och min gamla Caravan-sovsäck. Otroligt varm, men tung.
Tack!!!
Vad kul att du gillade filmen!!!
/Matti
Good video. Thanks. Beautiful dog.
My brother still have his Caravan skvader... I had one but its gone now but it was also used very much; once on over 4000 meters altitude in the Peruvian andes.
That was a good sleepingbag at that time... and it's still better than many of the cheapest once.
😀
/Matti
It's amazing!!! ❤
First time viewer to your channel, loved this video. Such a great idea
Very good thanks
Fantastisk film. Turutstyr fra 70-tallet gir en egen følelse. På neste tur skal jeg ta fram Norrøna ryggsekken fra 1980, lete fram Trangia og Lundhags Luffare. Takk for påminnelsen
Du kommer att få å en tur med minnen som kommer tillbaks. Glöm inte att även ta damma mat som på den tiden.
/Matti
I like the G66 tent. I have used it in Sarek 2005 and was my fathers. But you have to be in love to sleep 2 persons. My parents always forced me to bring an orange also. I like the time accurate mustache, why not keep it?
I agree... this tent is a good solo tent but not for two persons...
My mustache... I want to be able to come close to Stina again... and then I can't keep it.
😉
/Matti
Nice agility getting into & out of that canoe.
Ahhhh HA - using a P38 can opener, never fails.
That pot you use to boil water looks like it's older than you.
Yes, I recognized the 35mm film canister the moment you showed it.
I, too, put the flashlight under my chin to create a scary person. My flashlight held 2 D size batteries & allowed me to have a solid beam or a button I could push to send morse code/SOS.
Tents didn't have bath tub type floors like all modern tents & they were heavy. But they did provide shelter & they didn't leak. I had & slept inside a military surplus 2 man pup tent throughout my childhood.
Repairing/sewing - do you use the Speedy Stitcher like MEeee? I use it to repair broken stitching along seams on my military pants & gear.
I, too, had & carried an exterior aluminum frame backpack which I remember as being a comfortable fit that didn't slip down on my hips. The contents got wet when the backpack material got wet.
I still have & carry my Boy Scout pocket knife.
I don't think your eye glasses are vintage.
Did you shave with a straight razor? - snicker
Warm Regards from bone dry Reno, Nevada
Thanks for a lot of nostalgic input. I remember more things when you write this. 😀
My glasses... I have o
Another pair from that time. Small rounded... I used them for a picture. I'll put it as a picture on the community later.
I didn't use them because I didn't see clear with them anymore. 😕
...maybe my eyes are little bit vintage!
😀
/Matti
great video. everything looks vintage, also you matti.
Hahahaaaa... But I just looks vintage... but I am NOT vintage.. 😉
/Matti
Today there's better tents. Today illumination light technology is far far better, no comparison. As for frame packs I still think they're a viable choice as is a lot of the older gear.
In the states the 80's 90's and 2000's was the dark ages for pots and most cookware for outside. We had very little in the way of choices outside of old vintage boy scout sets, or USGI military surplus. The old Bush pots and some things were difficult to source but Today we live in a golden age of pots and implements for outdoor cooking and stoves. It's incredible
Lovely video sir. Subscribed.
🙏
Haha, awesome! Like the moustache for the theme 🤣
Stina didn't liked it...
🤣
The black film canisters were from Kodak, the white ones from Fujifilm.
Jag kör med fjällräven gyro..60 år gammal ryggsäck. Fotogenlampa
Gammalt liggunderlag. Osv osv. Det som hänt mest i utrustningen är tälten...❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Ja, de nya tälten är faktiskt ganska bra!!! De moderna expeed liggunderlagen med 5-9 cm luft är inte heller så tokiga!!!
/Matti
A really really nice video!! The best I've seen in a long time🔥 really interesting and I'm excited to se what to come in the industry. Hopefully we'll be better to take care and repair our gear! Sorry about the clips we missed... but you make a new one soon🔥🔥 take care//Johan
Thanks!
Yepp. It's good to save some content for the future.
😀
/Matti
Det här var den absolut coolaste videon jag sett på länge!
För en gångs skull blev det inte kostsamt heller, två ggr har jag sett Jokkmokksguidernas test av Hillebergtält och varje gg har jag köpt ett:
Bra och roliga filmer
Hahahaa… Ja detta blir ju billigare. Bara att rota lite på vinden!
;-)
/Matti
Good video I enjoyed very much I too remember those past times the repair and make last eras we didn't think about the next better quality purchase or having more you just made the best of what you had and enjoyed that moment which wasn't cluttered by thoughts of better and more a lot of the time because money was tight and you didn't think like wanting more you new that was pointless but now I'm the same striving for better but can this be a waste of effort and definitely a strain on the environment with all the disposed of materials it's hard to stop progress but there are costs in the long term I think and a distraction my opinion
’You made the best of what you had’…
❤️
That’s a good philosophy.
/Matti
Thanks for positive feedback I think enjoying nature is the main goal for us and that's when you see the light
When packing the two tentpoles together (the two fit together and make a small pack) do you still have the two caps (lid) in rubber? They were used for not letting rainwater in down through both of the poles. The last thing to connect was the tentline in both ends.
Cool😀😀😀
i would have liked to have sat by that lake with my labrador dogs who have sadly all gone now.
I can understand that!!!
/Matti
Nice one Matti. Not sure you remember this but you and I actually communicated quite a lot some years ago. Last time was about a canoe that I had gotten my hands on. Must be 10 years ago now I guess :-) I got the canoe from a German guy who had made it himself but you thought it looked a lot like an Acron solo canoe. I also used to ask your advice on some husky related stuff from time to time.. Thing is I remembered about it last week while sitting in that same canoe talking to the stupid cam. So.... you actually got a mention then and there on my channel 🙂Stay strong and keep doing what you do! 🔥🔥🛶
im 44. my late 1990s / early 2000s gear was 38 pounds of space-age goodness. My old boy scout stuff was canvas and steel. You ever tie a cast iron skllet to an external frame pack?
I don’t know if I understand you correctly… my swenglich you know…
I never ties anything outside my backpack if it’s not totally impossible to avoid…
/Matti
Haha brings back memories. Beautiful done. But i was curious how is Klas doing. Do you still have him around.
Thanks!
Klas is doing fine. We posted a reel on Instagram last week about him. We can post that as a short on youtube this week. He will also show up in a video soon with dogtraining that Stina has done.
😀
/Matti
Oh i don't have Instagram but i saw a movie on you tube with stina 👍👍
tackar , alla saker man använde eller drömde om när man växte upp
Mycke bra Video, hälsa fron Jürgen, Tyskland
Riktigt fin video med bra känsla
Tack!
😀
/Matti
Grymt bra och intressant video
Tack!
😀
/Matti
Memories! Great topic! All from the canoe to the sleepingbag. But what about that common green plastic or aluminium water bottle that made the water taste like the material it was made from? Yiak! 🤮 Or the fishing reels that always made a ”skatebo” (Swedish for Magpie nest) i the beginning of every fishing hike? 😂 But maybe You’r a decade to young fore thoose items?
you are driving a pretty cool Car :-)
Härligt Matti! Jag gillade verkligen den här videon. Känner mig väldigt old-style för det är exakt den utrustningen jag själv hade (eller har då den fortfarande ligger eller hänger i magasinen i Vaikijaur). Vi släpade dock sällan med oss Trangia-köken utan hade en sotig kaffepanna och stekpanna i säcken och lagade/kokade direkt på elden...
Kul också att se att du vände Trappern uppochner inför natten 😁
Du får plocka fram grejerna och ge dig ut igen. 😀 Det är härligt med alla minnen som fladdrar förbi när doften från tältet letar sig in i näsan och när muskelminnet från att stänga ryggsäcken aktiveras...
Kanoten brukar jag vända. Det ät ytterst få gånger jag inte vänder den...men jag tänkte på dig när jag vände den.
😀
/Matti
Ah, jag har ju grejer här men det blir ju lite andra sorts färder här… mera walkabouts på den här sidan längs leder och mycket sällan man övernattar någon annanstans än vid campingplatser. Dryga böter om man eldar nånstans utanför anordnade eldplatser osv… Fast det är ju kul att gå dagsturer också.
Jag har ännu kvar min Caravan Arctic (1.6kg) som jag köpte 1975. Den fungerar utmärkt ännu, möjligen kanske inte lika varm som förr. Den klarar dock av minusnätter. Kanotmodellen i videon har också varit i min ägo. Ryggsäcken var en Camptrail Ponderosa och tältet ett ryggås med innertält av Himalayabomull.
Mycket har blivit bättre...:)
As a comparison: My MSR tent outer fly has completely deiaminated after 10 years, my 16 year old Arcteryx backpack inside fabric has become sticky and disgusting, the MSR Dragonfly has been replaced by another Dragonfly since it broke in multiple places over time (soldered some, but at some point replaced it), but on the other hand the fuel bottles are still good, as is the Svea 123r, the Germany army utensils kit is still perfect, the MSR stainless pot set is still good. The gear at the time was heavier and less "functional" in some ways, but it lasted a lot longer ...
I agree... I know what kind of gear I would choose if I wasn't able to replace it again... 😉
/Matti
This was such an enjoyable film. Loved how each piece of old equipment brought up memories of loved ones no longer here. I agree that we are too quick to throw equipment away when it could be repaired. When I buy new I try to get gear that has been around long enough that folks can say it is durable and still usable after several years. Nothing holds memories better than old tough stuff. Keep up the good work keep hugging your dogos.
Väldigt kul koncept :) Saknar inte dom gamla prylarna lol
Det va faktiskt riktigt trevligt att fara ut med dessa grejer. 😀
...men det mesta idag är bättre.
😀
/Matti
Cars had carburetors, TV was black and white, camping gear was basic and life was good.
Jag hade en sån ryggsäck när jag började vandra. Jag köpte den på second hand för ca 75 kr och det var den bästa ryggsäck jag haft. Tyvärr blev den så sliten så jag fick säga adjö till den men jag saknar den fortfarande 😀
Du borde hitta fler på second hand eller blocket om du vill ha en till.
/Matti
Det var en fornøyelig film. Jeg har kost meg og smilt og ledd flere ganger. Det meste var så gjenkjennelig, vi har hatt mye av det samme utstyret. Om ikke alt var av samme fabrikat så var modellen ganske lik det jeg hadde fra annen produsent. F.eks teltet, jeg hadde et far Helsport som hette "Børgefjell", det hadde jeg helt til noen okser tråkket det sund.
Jeg gjorde meg også noen tanker om det jeg hadde i langt yngre år, og alt det jeg har i dag. Man har bedre økonomi nå enn før, det skjer hele tiden utvikling av utstyr, bedre funksjoner, og ikke minst vekt. Men det er også, som du sier, gøy å få nye ting.......og en del blir kjøpt kankje av den grunnen, og ikke nødvendigvis for at kjøpet var nødvendig. I dag er jeg flinkere til å tenke "MÅ jeg ha det, er det nødvendig?" Men men, svaret er noen ganger "nei", men så blir fristelsen for stor. 😔
Vel vel, takk for artig film så ga meg ei trivelig stund.
Det är en balans med utrustning. Självklart ska man byta till bättre grejer och unna sig det roliga med kul nyheter. Samtidigt så för varje grej vi konsumerar så belastas planeten. Skogar huggs, gruvor öppnas, långväga transporter, vindkraftverk byggs i favorit skogen osv...
Svårt och fyllt av dubbelmoral. Vill ha pryl men inte effekterna av konsumtionen.
😀
/Matti