This week: thoughts on the risks of ‘buy it for life’.
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Best of the best, and a killer color on top of it all.
Note: This item was provided for review.
Spend any amount of time around outdoor clothing, and you will have likely heard of Polartec, and likely still of their range of mid-layers — from fleece, grid fleece, synthetic insulation, and in the last half dozen years: Alpha. Polartec’s Alpha started making its way to consumers around 2017, and I reviewed one of the first ‘direct’ Alpha jackets here — in that time Alpha has gained (right fully so) a cult following, and is thus transitioning to more everyday clothing options.
Which brings us to Haven, a nearly 20 year old brand that you might not have heard of — they produce lifestyle clothing in Vancouver, British Columbia Canada. They have set out to create fantastic everyday clothing, and sent me the Ascent Zip Neck to show off what they can do.
It’s exceptional.

One of the best all around winter jackets I own.
There’s quite a history behind Fjallraven’s Greenland series of jackets, with the original design coming about in the late 1960s. It’s a staple of the collection, and there are quite a few variants, but the standard variants are: Greenland, Greenland Winter, and Greenland Down No. 1. In order listed, those go from not warm, to warmest. Today I want to talk about the Greenland Winter Jacket, which sits right in the middle of the range.
This is the jacket that most people are going to find the most useful day-to-day during the winter months. And, I am surprised by how quickly this became one of my favorites to wear.

High quality, USA made, hand sewn, leather gloves.
Note: this item was provided for review.
I’ve always been someone who prefers to wear gloves: for work, for warmth, for really any reason I can come up with. In my closet is a stack of gloves, and in the garage is another stack of gloves. It’s not something I write about often, but it would be surprising if I didn’t have a pair of gloves close by.
I am a bit embarrassed, being from the Pacific Northwest, I had never heard of Sullivan Glove Company, which has been hand-crafting gloves in Bend, OR since 1941. Thus, I quickly jumped to get a pair of their gloves to test out, and as luck would have it, I really put them through the paces for testing.
These are great gloves, and I am a big fan.

Why you need six weeks to un-break your head when changing OSes for the first time.

Great deals on GR bags.
A great sale going on at GORUCK right now with GR1s starting at $235 and GR2s at $281. Good prices, and I’d expect them to go up with future stock given the current tariff situation.

I thought this was a gimmick, but it’s actually amazing.
One of the bigger trends in desks, which I was late to the party on, was the idea of a monitor light. This style of light clamps to the top of your monitor, has a bar/strip of lights, which are designed to shine downwards in front of your monitor. I suspect that the reason for these existing, is that the overall size increase of monitors the last several years, as meant that there’s often very little space left on a desk for a more traditional desk lamp.
Which is why I ended up buying the BenQ ScreenBar Pro. BenQ invented this category of lights with the ScreenBar line back in 2017, fast forward to today and they have a bevy of options — and a wide range of randomly named competitors on Amazon to boot.
But, I went with BenQ, because of all the lights available, they seem to be the only ones with a very specific focus on the quality of the light they are outputting. And that is speaking my language.
This light bar is, without caveat, exceptional.


Alright, let’s dive into the specs on this:
Those specs slightly downplay what is actually happening with this light. BenQ has very clearly spent significant time designing (and patenting) this light to really nail this use. There’s three things I think BenQ has clearly focused on with the ScreenBar line (and the Pro specifically):

tl;dr: Impressive.
As I mentioned above, I was running out of space on my desk for a desk lamp to fit on the desk neatly, and also provide good lighting. I got curious about the ScreenBars and dug in. The Pro model is the middle-ground model from BenQ, with the Halo model offering and additional light to illuminate behind the monitor, and a little remote controller to fine tune it all. With my monitor in front of a window, and my desk space at a premium, both of those upgrades were downsides for me.

I’ve been using the ScreenBar Pro for several months now, and it’s simply fantastic. First, let’s talk through how it mounts, and the potential downsides:
I found that, even thought those seem like they could be quite the trade offs, they are practically a non-issue in practice. Next, let’s go over what it’s like using the light, and isn’t it annoying to reach up to control it all the time:

How my keyboard generally looks, no hot spots of light.

I angled the camera to get as much of the hot spot as I could.
Alright, let’s talk through what I thought for sure would be the biggest issue: glare. It seems unfathomable to me that you can mount a bar at the top of a monitor like this, and not experience some degree of glare. But, this light is so well designed, there’s no glare. There’s no glare on my screen, and there’s no bright light shining in my eyes (and it’s above eye level for me). It’s astounding that this is the case, and a testament to how much thought and engineering went into this.
I was also quite worried about the quality of the light, but again I was proven wrong there, as the overall quality is excellent. Good rendering, and no dead spots visually on my desk.
At my desk this light stays set on presence mode at all times. When I leave my desk for the day, I switch the mode to my favorite, which sets the light to the dimmest and warmest, levels. Thus, when I walk into my office at 5am to grab stuff and the light turns on, it’s not blinding or overly cool in temp — it’s inviting and useful. When I start my day, I move the light to automatic and don’t pay it another thought.
I wouldn’t go back on any of this. This is a really nice bit of kit, and a well thought through and designed product.
There are many competitors, but this one has so very clearly been designed to be so perfect,, that I can’t imagine what you lose with others. It has solved my desk lamp issue, it looks great, and I have no regrets.


Rugged mountains mean rugged people, and they probably don’t know much about AI search quality.

Compact and nice little sling.
New release from Pioneer Carry is the A4U Sling I have a review sample in hand, but as I understand it this is a limited run for now. Really compact, smart layout, nice materials. I’ve not used it more than once, so I can’t say much more right now.


Yes this is a super expensive water bottle; but it is worth every penny.
Since I am in a safe space here, I will openly admit that the Snow Peak Aurora Bottle was a ‘grail’ water bottle for me. There’s absolutely no justifiable reason for me to go buy a $150 water bottle, which I will use on a trail and will likely drop a few times over the life of it, when I have dozens of other water holding bottles. There’s no reason for this. And yet, if you happen to hold one of these, you’ll get why people spend the money on this.
Luckily, I didn’t spend my money on this, my wife spent our money on it, and gifted me the world’s best water bottle in the process.

A look back at the winter jackets I used this year.
One of the biggest pet peeves of mine is people proclaiming items as the best of at the start/middle of the year. You can’t know what the Best of 2025 is, when it’s *still* March of 2025. That’s why my Best Lists come out at the end of the year.
Likewise, you can’t really know what a good winter jacket is, until you’ve spent a season with that jacket. I could tell you all day long what I think might be good based on specs in September, but that could leave you with a pretty shitty jacket for the winter if you buy based on my assumptions. And I suspect most people are not as crazy as I am, and thus don’t buy this many jackets, and so it matters a lot more to get it right on the first purchase.
Technically winter is over, though my friends here in Boulder tell me we are not quite done with snow (I am pretty sure we are). But I do believe we are mostly done with the cold-cold of the winter as it’s forecasted to tickle 80°F this week.
Today, I want to run through my thoughts on the jackets I wore this winter — which stretched from late October until about now.
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A good chance to get a good bag for less $.
Filson has topped up it’s outlet section for bags, adding a bunch of great ones:
Plenty more, some odd colors, great prices.

What’s old is new.
GORUCK has a 21L and 26L GR1 Throwback, which essentially undoes the majority of the GR1 changes over the years and takes the bag back to somewhere around 2011 or so. Most notably (I think) is changed the strap mount back to the original method.
Pretty cool.

A rare office and travel backpack which is quite good.
Note: this item was provided for review.
I have a hierarchy I keep in my head for the overall difficulty for making different types of backpacks, from easiest to hardest, the categories are: military, hiking, hunting, travel, edc, office. Every time a company tries to tackle an office backpack, they run the risk of making something completely absurd, ugly, and generally useless. To couple that then with travel, well that’s asking for criticism.
So when Pioneer Carry asked if I wanted to test out their Savant Pack — which is for office and travel — I had a very low bar of expectation for this pack. It’s not often a company does this well.
With the Savant Pack, Pioneer Carry has a gem on their hands, being led by the materials, and followed by the smart simplicity of the bag. This is good stuff.

A dive into blue light glasses, but really a lot of chat about the corporate world and why a couple big companies are embarrassing themselves.

No need to beat around the bush on this one (but it’s durable enough you could): this is the best winter jacket you can own.
There’s no Filson product more iconic to their brand than their Mackinaw Wool Cruiser an item Filson patented in 1914. One of the bigger regrets I have was a trip to Filson back in 2013 or so. I went to the old Filson flagship in Seattle (4th Ave) to get a Filson wool jacket with my first large bonus. I walked out with a lovely charcoal ‘Wool Weekender’ made in Mackinaw wool, which I wore for years (until I lost weight and it was too large), but I always had this thought that I should have bought the Mackinaw Wool Cruiser instead.
Thankfully, this was rectified recently, and now that I can once again wear heavy wool jackets we need to talk about this icon. Because there’s a damned good reason Filson has been making this for so long: it’s beyond good.
I knew what the material would be like, but I had no idea it would be this good to wear throughout the winter and even in snow.