Today I wandered the local bushwalking shops hunting out jackets and the styles around, not that I need an excuse to do that

It is interesting to see the fashions come and go and also the pricing policy used Kathmandu that seams to be afflicting some other marketers. Pair of Kathmanu woollen underwear boxer shorts at above seventy dollar full price while the design leader, Icebreaker, was $53.95 full price at MD. I think it is clear to most thinking people what the marketing tactics are of Kathmandu but then again there are non so blind that chose not to see so stay tuned for the sound of running feet and claws been drawn on at least this point of my post.
Anyway back on jackets. Interesting to see underarm zips are now quite common on many jackets regardless the material used. Also interesting on how some had the zips protected by a material flap while others had exposed zips. However, it was interesting chatting to a long time seller of bushwalking gear on what is the perfect Tassie jacket design and material. He is a fan of the Performance-shell version in the Gore-tex range as it is tough as nails and offers a better price to performance trade-off compared to the Pro-shell. Also (unprompted by me) mentioned that jackets tend to get burdened with unnecessary features such as ventilation zips that many people do not use which naturally adds to the all ready high cost. So the "perfect jacket" would be made out of Gore-tex Performance-shell with minimal bells and whistles and be around knee length so you can say fish in shorts and keep them dry from the rain. Yes, he is an avid fisher as well as walker, and it can sometimes be missed that a large amount of bushwalking gear is brought by people whose main reason to go bush is to fish. Now "perfect" is a subjective thing so if you march to a different drum then a light weight shorter jacket designed to be worn with waterproof pants might be "perfect" so as always "perfect" gear choice will be a personal opinion
It was also interesting to check out the Mountain Design Stratus and noticed that for once on me a MD jacket had long enough sleeves in the XXL fitting as it has been many years since that was the case. When I mentioned this I was told that MD has adopted a longer sleeve approach for the larger fittings based on feedback from the shops. Also MD central has apparently shown real interest in listening compared to the darker days when insular centralised thinking ruled design control. All indications are some seriously gifted people dedicated to improving products through customer feedback are on board. The result in at least my humble opinion is an gradual improvement in design and fit. Hopefully one day we will see the advent of Short and Long fittings in some garment designs and this can only be a good thing for all of us. So the Stratus is a pretty close fit but could do to be a bit longer in the body and a bit cheaper by dropping the bells and whistles but even then it is an impressive jacket. But then again some could consider this opinion to be unsafe
Cheers Brett
"lt only took six years. From now on, l´ll write two letters a week instead of one."
(Shawshank Redemption)