Full-day adventures are no sweat with the all-new Fourteener 24 and Fourteener 20, both featuring the innovative NV back panel.
Full-day adventures are no sweat with the all-new Fourteener 24 and Fourteener 20, both featuring the innovative NV back panel.
Our category-defining collection of sport bottles just got better. Introducing the completely redesigned CamelBak Podium series; available in insulated and non-insulated styles.
CamelBak is the official hydration sponsor for pro cycling’s Team Garmin-Sharp. The team uses Podium bottles in training and during races.

The new Chute™ 1L and .75L water bottles are designed for hydration on demand, whether you’re in the back country or sitting at your desk. The ergonomic high-flow spout is angled and contoured for efficient, full-on hydration. The leak-proof, tethered cap twists off with just half a turn and conveniently snaps into the handle so it’s out of the way when you’re drinking. We even put the threads for the cap on the inside of the spout so you get a comfortable lip seal. And the one-piece tether is twice as clever as any you’ll see on the market. It keeps the top locked out of your way for one-handed refills on the go.

Looking for a zero calorie replacement for soda? Check out CamelBak Mantra. Naturally flavored and sweetened with Stevia, Mantra is the perfect drink for your reusable bottle!
Mantra makes it easy to enhance your water with antioxidants, vitamins and electrolytes. It comes in convenient stick packs that go anywhere with you. Each stick pack turns 16 ounces of water into a naturally flavored refreshing beverage that is sweetened with stevia and has zero calories.

CamelBak eddy™ and Mantra create the perfect pair for everyday on-the-go hydration. Mantra is designed for reusable bottles and promotes sustainability. Great taste; less waste.
Raspberry Lemonade Mantra brings a hint of summertime to your day. The raspberry sweetness joins the refreshing lemonade for a perfect balance of summertime refreshment.
Cranberry Lime Mantra is expressive without being overpowering. The crisp, clean flavor of cranberry is balanced by the tart finish of the lime. It is perfect for when you want a refreshing cool-down beverage any time of the day.
Blueberry Pomegranate Mantra is the perfect combination for light and refreshing fruit flavors without being overpowering. Perfect for when you want to add a hint of flavor to your water no matter where you are.
A reusable bottle is not only a smart green alternative to disposable drinks but more economical and healthy too. For more hydration, health and green tips visits: http://www.camelbak.com/HydratED
A reusable CamelBak Eddy bottle is a sustainable gift that can be used all year.
Winter is coming and with it cold weather. It is important to keep hydrated when active in the outdoors. Keeping your water flowing is critical. Pick up the CamelBak Thermal Control Kit to turn whatever CamelBak pack you have into a winter pack. Whether you are bombing through the woods on your mountain mike or going for a hike or even a trail run, you can turn your sport specific pack into a sport specific winter pack.

Side-country adventures provide the benefits of both letting the lift do the uphill work for you and getting fresh untracked turns. However, when you are ducking boundary lines you are leaving the safety net of the ski patrol. With the proper training and knowledge this can be a fully rewarding and safe risk. But you will need some equipment.
When all you need is the essentials the Gambler has got your back. Carry a shovel, avalanche probe and 3L water in a compact, glove-friendly pack with a Therminator harness to help prevent freezing.
CamelBak.com
$95
From GearJunkie By Stephen Regenold
On Friday afternoon, I plugged my water bottle into a laptop USB port for a charge. Saturday found me in the woods of Wisconsin, dipping the bottle into a lake then pressing a button to purify its contents for a drink.
The $99 bottle, called the All Clear UV Microbiological Water Purifier, is made by CamelBak. It uses UV light to render microbes harmless, letting you grab a drink almost anywhere.
Specifically, the UV light “destroys microbe DNA,” as CamelBak puts it. Bacteria, water-borne viruses, and protozoan cysts, including the troublesome cryptosporidium breed, are rendered benign by the light.

This technology is not new. Municipal water plants have long used UV light to make mass quantities of water safe.
In the outdoors industry, Hydro-Photon has sold its UV-based SteriPEN product for more than 10 years. You dip the wand-like SteriPEN device in water and stir as UV light streams and purifies.
CamelBak’s All Clear is a similar concept but with a different design. The all-in-one bottle and purifier comes as a kit with two caps — one with the lamp mechanism, one a normal plastic lid.
The goal with All Clear is simple and quick purification. You fill the 0.75-liter bottle up to near the top then screw the cap on tight. Press a button and gently shake the bottle as light glows and a digital counter ticks from 60 seconds to 0.

That’s it. The water is rendered drinkable in a minute, CamelBak guarantees. You can pour it from there into another container or drink straight from the bottle.
The system is slick. But there are a few caveats. Make sure and wipe off the threads of the bottle, for example, so that you don’t ingest untreated drips.
Also, not all water works in the system. Water must be mostly transparent for the All Clear to function — it’s not a filter and any sediment or specs floating will remain. (The company sells a $15 optional filter cap if “chunky” water is likely on your trip.)

CamelBak recommends water that is “at least as clear as lemonade.” Anything funkier and you need a pump-filter or other product to work the H2O clean.
Personally, I’ve used UV purifiers around the world, from Patagonia to Nepal. My test this past month was not as exotic. But even water from a lake in northern Wisconsin can make you sick.
How do you know it works? CamelBak cites independent lab tests and EPA protocols. You can openPDF documents on the company website and read detailed reports on “ultraviolet light as a sanitizing agent,” stats about reducing bacteria by 99.9999%, and so on.
In the end, you need to trust that the brand is telling it straight. I drank a few bottles’ worth of lake water and am still standing and functioning fine.

As noted above, the All Clear costs $99. This is on par with some of the competition, meaning mainly SteriPEN, which has products that run between $49.95 and $99.95 depending on weight, size, and functions.
As for the All Clear design, I like the integrated form of the purifier and bottle in one. But it is heavier than SteriPEN products — the UV cap weighs 7 ounces.
Together, the bottle and UV cap measure 10.8 ounces on my scale. This may look heavy to a backpacker counting every gram.

However, my use of SteriPEN models, which weigh 2.6 to 5.5 ounces depending on the version, has usually been with a 1-liter Nalgene bottle. That extra bottle and the SteriPEN unit added together equal the approximate same weight of the All Clear system.
Despite the ounce counting, CamelBak made the All Clear more as a camping and traveling tool, not necessarily for the ultra-light crowd. You can use it in iffy hotel rooms or at water pumps in remote villages as well as at wilderness lakes and streams.
Its lithium-ion battery lasts for 80 purification cycles, CamelBak cites. You can plug it into a wall outlet or a laptop via USB for a charge.
The company notes 16 gallons of water can be made pure for each battery cycle. That’s a lot of liquid, a lot of Wisconsin lake water for me to drink.
—Stephen Regenold
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