By Stephen RegenoldIt may look like an inflatable pool toy, but the pack raft, a personal watercraft with roots in aviator survival boats from replica brand watches World War II, is a serious tool for some backcountry explorers. Lightweight and durable, the blow-up boats can weigh as little as three pounds. They roll up and stow small in a backpack. You can trek into the wild and then inflate a pack raft to cross lakes, descend rivers, or paddle the ocean where no other boat could go.Made by a handful of manufacturers over the years, pack rafts have seen a resurgence among outdoor fanatics. Last summer, on the Arkansas River of Colorado, I joined a pack-rafting group for a two-day trip.
It is much cheaper-feeling, and its components--including an iffy roll-top dry bag and two silly hand paddles--are not worthy of anything more than a gentle stream.But the Sevylor raft itself is fine. I have used the Trail Boat a dozen replica Rolex Datejusts watch times in water up to Class II. It holds its own and paddles straight. Like the Alpacka, with a regular kayaking paddle, the Trail Boat can catch eddies and drop through whitewater chutes. Like the Alpacka, the Sevylor rolls up small and can be squeezed into a backpack. It weighs less than five pounds. For a pack-rafter on a budget, the Trail Boat is a worthy solution and an inexpensive entry into a neat new outdoors sport. He gave it a good whack, he reckons, a good punch, and that doesnt surprise me, knowing Mick, said Lee Cummuskey, who saw what happened, according to ABC.Luckily, Bedford surfed his way back to shore. He had surgery for bite wounds on his leg and is now in stable condition. --Aileen Torre
Pemba Dorje Sherpa, a Nepalese Sherpa who holds the record for the fastest ascent ofEverest (eight hours and ten minutesin 2004) is hoping to take a local child to the summit after 13-year-old American Jordan Romero became the youngest person to replica A Lange&Sohne watches climb the mountain last month. Nepalis a small country and we do not get much good publicity, Dorje Sherpa told AFP. I want totake an 11- or 12-year-old to the summit because I think all theEverest records should be held by Nepalese people. Dorje Sherpa, wholives in Kathmandu and was born in a small village high in theHimalayas,