The 2022 Winter Buyer's Guide

Author: Polly

Apr. 29, 2024

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The 2022 Winter Buyer's Guide

Making our annual Winter Buyer’s Guide is roughly an eight-month process. We start testing gear in late January and go to press in September, just as the temps begin to drop and workplace banter turns to which ski passes everyone has sprung for. Flipping through page layouts and seeing all the season’s most exciting new products in one place always gets me looking ahead to what I’m most excited about for the coming winter.

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This year, it’s heading out the door for mid-week dawn patrols at Ski Santa Fe, our local hill. At 5:45 A.M. on a cold morning, everything gets reduced to habit. I slide into the base layers I laid out the night before, followed by the shell pants and jacket perpetually hanging on a hook by the door. I spread peanut butter on toast, steep a thermos of tea, and pour warm water into a bottle. I grab my pack, which is ready to go with mitts, helmet, goggles, and a headlamp—I always put my touring kit right back in as soon as it’s done drying. The only thing I have to think about is what midlayer to wear—heavier or lighter—and what kind of music to put on the radio for the 40-minute drive up to the resort. Often, this is the calmest part of my day.

At its very best, gear makes outdoor pursuits simpler. Perfect products are the ones you don’t have to think about, so you can focus on getting into the mountains or onto the trails and back home again, safely. This is true across the board, from the most basic goggles (check out the Glade Challenger here) to the most cutting-edge skis (click here to read about the Salomon QST Blank).

Unfortunately, real-world function is one of the few things you can’t surmise from spec sheets alone. That’s where Outside’s testing comes in. Our writers spend months in the field checking out hundreds of products that all boast fancy features, novel materials, and innovative sustainable manufacturing. The purpose of our review process is to get beyond all of those bullet points, to study the way each item fits, moves, feels, and performs, and to identify the pieces that we want to keep using again and again­­—without thinking twice. —Ariella Gintzler

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Softball Catching Buying Guide

Be VERY careful with sizing on catcher’s mitts. Sizing goes by the pocket size circumference, rather than the glove’s length like most fielder’s mitts. Many baseball dads who have softball daughters assume they can buy any old catcher’s mitt on the shelf. Please make sure you are buying the correct size!

A 32inch catcher’s mitt is almost ALWAYS a baseball mitt and the pocket will be WAY too small to fit a softball! If your daughter is playing with the 11inch ball, you should look for a 33-inch catcher’s mitt. This is the pocket-size needed to fit the 11inch ball. Once your daughter graduates to the 12inch ball, I would recommend spending a little more on this glove, since hopefully, she’ll have it for a long time if she takes care of it. For the 12inch ball, you’ll need a 34inch pocket on your catcher’s mitt. 

Catcher’s mitts are notorious for being difficult to break in, especially when investing in a high-end brand like Wilson or Rawlings, that leather will be STIFF.  Make sure you read the section on my best tips on how to break in a mitt.

I have listed these gloves in order of Advanced to Youth. 

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