Folding chairs for river raft trips or car camping comfort
Posted: Sun Sep 05, 2010 9:30 am
Many moons ago, my search for a durable comfortable roll up chair to handle the rough and tumble rigors of river tripping started. Cost counts but I have been willing to pay for quality and design.
My home trash can has been filled with units that did not make the cut. I am sure I have plenty of roll up chairs either at the homes of the trash guys or in the trash collector office.
I have spent lots of money for big name chairs and not much money for WalMart specials. None work, all break typically at the plastic connectors and none that roll up support my back and neck. Which makes me think no matter what the cost to buy at retail, these chairs are all made in China or India from the same rip off parts made some where on the cheap.
Lots of roll up chairs hidden around my shed and garage that looked good on the advertisements but failed miserably on construction or comfort - some never passed the back yard test!
The only truely comfortable long lasting river chair I have found is the Lafuma folding recliner. I have had mine for a long time. The suspension cords rotted away and I replaced them with US Army parachute cord and the chair now seems bulletproof. On sale, there are good copies of the Lafuma for less than a hundred bucks. Cabelas and Alps look ok but school's out on durability. The real deal Lafuma original is the bomb when it comes to a frame that lasts. The only problem with the Lafuma recliner is the size and weight. It is ungainly to carry. On the raft I have been able to strap it across the top of the cooler, but it is still ungainly.
I may have found the next best camp chair to the Lafuma that does roll up - albeit the roll is a bit longer than normal.
http://cabelas.com/cabelas/en/templates ... m23&Go.x=0" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
the chair is a cabelas version probably the original is from Alps Mountaineering but Cabela's is where I found mine and it is on sale. By the way, Alps Mountaineering chairs (next to the Lafuma) seem to be pretty well made and cost much less. Sierra Trading Post and overstock.com often run good sales on Alps gear especially when one of the hooks is free shipping.
Cabela's High-Back Ergo Chair
Item:9IS-519860
Got the chair and did tests in the yard. It looks well built. It is very comfortable. What I look for after construction is something to support my head and neck. This chair does that well especially for a roll up design. In fact, if I support my feet up on something, naps are pretty easy. This chair does not sleep as comfortably as the Lafuma but the cost is much cheaper and it does roll up.
Hope to take this new toy on a few trips and see if it holds up on river trips. The back yard test is only the start, a real honest river trip is the acid test.
Just passing this on for what it is worth.
My home trash can has been filled with units that did not make the cut. I am sure I have plenty of roll up chairs either at the homes of the trash guys or in the trash collector office.
I have spent lots of money for big name chairs and not much money for WalMart specials. None work, all break typically at the plastic connectors and none that roll up support my back and neck. Which makes me think no matter what the cost to buy at retail, these chairs are all made in China or India from the same rip off parts made some where on the cheap.
Lots of roll up chairs hidden around my shed and garage that looked good on the advertisements but failed miserably on construction or comfort - some never passed the back yard test!
The only truely comfortable long lasting river chair I have found is the Lafuma folding recliner. I have had mine for a long time. The suspension cords rotted away and I replaced them with US Army parachute cord and the chair now seems bulletproof. On sale, there are good copies of the Lafuma for less than a hundred bucks. Cabelas and Alps look ok but school's out on durability. The real deal Lafuma original is the bomb when it comes to a frame that lasts. The only problem with the Lafuma recliner is the size and weight. It is ungainly to carry. On the raft I have been able to strap it across the top of the cooler, but it is still ungainly.
I may have found the next best camp chair to the Lafuma that does roll up - albeit the roll is a bit longer than normal.
http://cabelas.com/cabelas/en/templates ... m23&Go.x=0" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
the chair is a cabelas version probably the original is from Alps Mountaineering but Cabela's is where I found mine and it is on sale. By the way, Alps Mountaineering chairs (next to the Lafuma) seem to be pretty well made and cost much less. Sierra Trading Post and overstock.com often run good sales on Alps gear especially when one of the hooks is free shipping.
Cabela's High-Back Ergo Chair
Item:9IS-519860
Got the chair and did tests in the yard. It looks well built. It is very comfortable. What I look for after construction is something to support my head and neck. This chair does that well especially for a roll up design. In fact, if I support my feet up on something, naps are pretty easy. This chair does not sleep as comfortably as the Lafuma but the cost is much cheaper and it does roll up.
Hope to take this new toy on a few trips and see if it holds up on river trips. The back yard test is only the start, a real honest river trip is the acid test.
Just passing this on for what it is worth.