by clarence » Wed 23 May, 2012 10:42 am
The cost of Australian manufactured items is not necessarily that high.
I buy all my work clothes from an Australian manufacturer (Tuffa) and they are less expensive than the identical asian made items from King Gee or Yakka in a retail store (I would rather support an Australian manufacturer than an Australian retailer selling imported product).
On the outdoors front, there is simply not the range that was once available in locally made gear. In the 90s you could get a complete kit of world class quality items made in Australia (WE packs, jackets, tents, MONT jackets and sleeping bags, ONE PLANET ditto, CIGANA clothes, OUTGEAR packs, even BOGONG boots- okay maybe they were not totally world class). If you included the NZ brands, the choice was exceptional.
HOWEVER, there still is a reasonable range available, provided you know where to look.
I buy most of my clothing from WILDERNESS WEAR. Wide range, nice fabrics, good quality and very reasonable prices. Go online to one of their sales and be very surprised. I had a made to measure SUMMIT GEAR pack from the Blue Mountains a few years back. It fitted like a glove, was light and bombproof and cost $100 more than the equivalent Macpac at the time. Their ability to customise gear is something you will not get from an imported product, and their off-the-shelf items are as good as anything else you would find. My last sleeping bag was a ONE PLANET (still made in Australia at that time) and it was about $80 more than the imported item of "similar" quality.
Add to this the NZ manufacturers (EARTH SEA and SKY, CACTUS and for bike related gear GROUND EFFECT) and there is a not unreasonable choice.
Last week I picked up some made in Australia socks and NZ made gloves from MD in Hobart. Locally made gear is around if you look.
Rather than complain about the problem, why not seek out the locally made product and share your experiences for the benefit of others. The gear is out there at reasonable prices (as long as you don't base "reasonable" on a price comparison with Kathmandu rubbish).
Clarence