Hiking Gear
Use this page as the hiking lane overview, then move into hydration, trekking poles, packs, and footwear when you want the cleanest trail-system buying path. That keeps hiking in a hero role while ...
TRAIL SYSTEMS
Build a better trail kit from core categories
START HERE
Start with proper footwear
Boots and socks are the foundation. Get fit and traction right before adding pack weight or trail miles.
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Merrell Men's Moab 2 Vent Hiking Shoe
$148.64
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Merrell Men's Moab 2 Mid Waterproof Hiking Boot
$192.99
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Timberland Men's Lincoln Peak Waterproof Hiking Boots
$141.86
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Columbia Women's Newton Ridge Plus Waterproof Amped Hiking Boot
$49.99
FULL CATALOG
Hiking Gear

Garmin GPSMAP 66i, GPS Handheld and Satellite Communicator, Featuring TopoActive Mapping and inReach Technology

Amazfit T-Rex 3 Pro Outdoor Smart Watch 48mm Sapphire AMOLED Display, Dual-Band GPS, Offline Maps, Built-In Flashlight, Black

Amazfit T-Rex Ultra 2 Outdoor Smartwatch 51mm Titanium Body, Dual-Band GPS, Offline Maps, Black

Amazfit T-Rex 3 Pro Outdoor Smart Watch 44mm Sapphire AMOLED Display, Dual-Band GPS, Offline Maps, Black Gold

Suunto Race GPS Sports Watch with AMOLED Color Screen and Long Battery Life

Suunto Run GPS Sports Watch with AMOLED Touchscreen and Wrist Heart-Rate Tracking, Black

Suunto Core Classic Outdoor Watch

North Edge Tactical Outdoor Watch with Altimeter, Compass, Barometer, and Pedometer

Mountain House Chili Mac with Beef Freeze-Dried Camping Food, 10 Servings

Mountain House Chicken Teriyaki Freeze-Dried Backpacking Food 6-Pack

Mountain House Emergency Meal Assortment Kit with 30-Year Shelf Life

Peak Refuel Chicken Alfredo Pasta Freeze-Dried Backpacking Meal

Carbon Fiber Trekking Poles — Ultra-Lightweight Collapsible Trail Poles with Tungsten Carbide Tips

Modern Needs Emergency Sleeping Bag Thermal Bivy Sack

Emergency Sleeping Bag 3-Pack Waterproof Mylar Bivy Shelter

Go Time Gear Life Bivy Emergency Survival Sleeping Bag
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Guided buying path
Build your trail kit from the feet up
Start with proper footwear and hydration, then layer in pack, poles, and navigation tools.
Fit your feet first
Proper hiking boots matched to terrain and break-in time prevent blisters and injury.
Shop footwear →Match your pack
Daypack, overnight, or multi-day — pack size should match your trip length and load needs.
Shop backpacks →Stay hydrated
Reservoir, bottles, or filtration. Plan water access for your route and carry what you need.
Shop hydration →Mission kit paths
Build faster with trail-ready paths
Half-Day Trail Path
Light daypack, water bottle, and trail snacks for 4-6 hour outings close to the trailhead.
Build day hike kit →All-Day Summit Path
Full daypack, hydration bladder, trekking poles, and nutrition for longer objectives.
Build summit kit →COMMON QUESTIONS
Frequently asked
What should most hikers solve first: footwear, pack, or water?
Start with the biggest constraint on the trip you actually take. For many shoppers that means footwear and water first, then a pack sized to carry that system comfortably.
When do trekking poles and other accessories matter most?
After the main trail-carry system is already working. Accessories matter more once route length, footing, water planning, and carry comfort are already handled.



