Tubbs Discovery 21, 27 Snow Shoes

Tubbs Discovery 21, 27 Snow Shoes 

USER REVIEWS

Showing 1-5 of 5  
[Oct 20, 2000]
T23 of T&M Clan
Mountaineer

When I bought myself a pair of Discovery 27's I intended to use them as recommended by the manufacturer. This is a shoe intended for recreation and excercise on gentle terrain. It proved iteself worthy on my local snowmobile trails.
BUT, do not attempt to use this snowshoe or any other type of recreational snowshoe on any real expedition type sh*t.
My pair looked nearly brand new after approx. 50 hours of use before, I took them with me to the Adirondaks in March of '00. The most detrimental effects of this trip were seen on the shoe's crampoon which was dulled too the point of uselessness. On my decent I might as well have been wearing two Burger King trays on my feet. I was in a continium of sliding-skiing-falling. On the positive side, this shoe was easy to take on and off, and this sticky rubber that the straps are built from kept them in place, which was nice considering that when things turned from bad to worse a.k.a. -30 wind chill, they didn't require a lot of adjustment. My esteemed collegue, the Mza, did not fair as well and had alot of problems with the straps on a pair of Adventure 25's. He spent a considerable amount of time freezing his a-hole off while trying to adjust the bindings.
The point is if you plan to use this shoe for recreation on FLAT terrain and in moderate temperatures it is decent. If you intend to get hardcore like the mid-winter expeditions of TandM Clan and you want to stick with Tubbs, get a pair of Mountain 25's or a pair in the Peak series.
Some of the problems we encountered we could blame ourselves for. When buying gear, consider what you will use it for and make sure that it is rated for that usage. I.E. If you go to the local nature walk your gear should be durable, if you go to Adirondak High Peaks in December your gear show be Oklahoma City bomb proof.

Similar Products Used:

Additionally, I'd like to plug O.R's gore-tex knee height gators, which kept my legs dry when I took the snowshoes off; because of their instability on my decents. Outdoor Research is an official sponsor of T&M Clan Expedition.

OVERALL
RATING
2
VALUE
RATING
4
[Apr 27, 2000]
Corey Larrabee
Backpacker

I love to snowshoe the Tubbs were my first pair of snow shoes and broke the binding after 5 times out had to send them in and get a new binding put on them.
Need a stiffer more durable binding

Similar Products Used:

Atlas

OVERALL
RATING
2
VALUE
RATING
2
[Mar 24, 2000]
steve mongeon
Mountaineer

I bought these shoes for my wife but have used them for > 80hrs myself. They are small and light, good for spring snow. They don't hold up too well to rough use, decking is flimsy and now almost destroyed, heel strap is prone to sliding off, and the fixed toe cord is best suited to packed rolling trails. I recommend these only for light use, or as a just-in-case take along.

Similar Products Used:

Tubbs Sierra - way better choice!

OVERALL
RATING
3
VALUE
RATING
2
[Feb 08, 2000]
Eric Holsinger
Backpacker

I bought these because they were for 'rolling hills'. Unfortunately, I was struggling the first time I used them on a small 600' hill climb.
These shoes are made for a weekend snowshoe trip in areas where you might also cross-country ski. The shoe doesn't drag when you lift your foot, but it tends to flip snow up the back of your leg, and it is hard to drive you toe into the side of a slope to make a step.

Similar Products Used:

MTN 36

OVERALL
RATING
3
VALUE
RATING
4
[Dec 15, 1999]
UK
Day Hiker

CHEAP BUT FLIMSY!
I GOT THE LARGEST SIZE FOR A GOOD PRICE.
BUT I'VE HAD TO RE-RIVET THE BINDING TO THE SHOE 4 TIMES. THE MATERIAL USED IN THE REAR PORTION IS ALSO WEARING QUICKLY.

Similar Products Used:

REDFEATHER SNOWSHOES

OVERALL
RATING
2
VALUE
RATING
3
Showing 1-5 of 5  

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