Skip to main content

New to Nature? Start Backpacking and Camping with Rental Gear from CampCrate

How do you plan for a backpacking trip in Yosemite National Park when you have no gear?

There are a couple options. For starters, you could buy a bunch of cheap gear and hope it doesn’t rain on your trip. Chances are you’ll be wet, cold and hungry and may never go backpacking again.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Option two is buying a bunch of nice gear for the trip. Between a tent, backpack, sleeping bag, stove, water filter, clothes, and food, you’ll spend well over $1,000 for all of it. Hopefully, you’ll use it again.

Your final option is to rent backpacking gear. CampCrate will ship you a box of goodies you can use for the trip. Afterward, you send it back with a pre-printed shipping label. Founders Chad Lawver and Mason Gravley want to make it as easy as possible for beginners to go backpacking. “Over 90 percent of our customers have never even slept in a tent,” they tell The Manual.

What’s In a CampCrate?

In your standard CampCrate, you’ll find the basics needed for a few days out in the woods. Look forward to a waterproof tent, warm sleeping bag, and a comfortable sleeping pad for a great nights sleep. A Katadyn Hiker Pro water filter and JetBoil flash stove are lightweight and reliable for rehydrating all your freeze-dried bag meals and boiling water for coffee in 100 seconds. Pack all this into a Klymit Motion 60 backpack that saves weight with an inflatable frame. You’ll be able to see what you’re doing at night with a 200-lumen Petzl Tikka headlamp.

Standard CampCrate Gear

  • Tent
  • Sleeping bag
  • Sleeping pad
  • Camp stove
  • Headlamp
  • Backpack
  • Water filter

The standard crate costs $92 per day. You can bump up to a two-person crate that shares the tent, stove, and water filter but doubles down on the other supplies for $111 per day. CampCrate also offers options for larger groups. If you just need a couple things on your own trip, make a custom crate. The service rents out individual items, like the tent, sleeping bag, or headlamp, for a few nights.

All the gear is thoroughly cleaned before it’s sent out for another trip. “Mason keeps the gear cleaner than I keep my own gear,” Lawver brags. 

Before you embark, you can watch about an hour’s worth of instructional videos on CampCrate’s website to understand basics like packing your backpack, filtering water, and pooping in the woods. If you have any questions before the trip, you can just ask —Lawver and Gravley are happy to answer any number of questions you have about bears.

Fully Planned, Self-Guided Backpacking Trips

If you’re short on time or just don’t know where to go, CampCrate also offers fully planned, self-guided experiences in two locations. For example, CampCrate’s most popular trip takes you through Yosemite Valley’s southern rim on the Pohono Trail. Beginner backpackers can witness the iconic Half Dome, Yosemite Falls, and Giant Sequoia groves without planning a thing.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

“We want you to feel like you’re on a guided service by how well thought-out it is, but we want you to be empowered to do it on your own because that’s that’s a priceless experience,” Gravely explains.

Both Lawver and Gravley have spent years working in Yosemite and know it well. They go to great lengths to make sure budding adventures have everything they’ll need on the trek, shipping the CampCrate with permits, step-by-step instructions, an itinerary, and even a bus ticket to Glacier Point to start the hike. The itinerary is relaxed, leaving time for side hikes and exploring the beautiful scenes in Yosemite.

Next year will be spent expanding the number of planned experiences, adding another six or seven across the United States. Gear kits will grow to include more “luxury” car camping items and necessities for music festivals. CampCrate is also looking to include a biodegradable trash bag in every crate; send the company a picture of the bag full of trash from the trail and the team will send you a free T-shirt.

Editors' Recommendations

Ross Collicutt
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Ross is an outdoor adventure writer, amateur photographer, and computer programmer based on Vancouver Island, British…
Everyday carry label The James Brand has a new collab for something you definitely shouldn’t carry daily
The James Brand's latest collab involves a hatchet
The James Brand Hatchet

The James Brand is well-known for its sleek pocket knives and minimalist multitools. This Black Friday, they're breaking new ground, unveiling a collaboration that might just be the coolest ever. It's a pleasant surprise to us that The James Brand has teamed up with Adler, a renowned German hatchet and axe maker, for their newest collaboration. And no, you read that right—it's not your typical pocket-friendly gear.
The James Brand reveals a new everyday carry hatchet for their lineup
Set to launch just in time for Black Friday, The James Brand and Adler are introducing the TJB x Adler hatchet. Crafted with precision, this collaboration embodies the ethos of both brands — a commitment to quality, functionality, and timeless design. Priced at $149, this hatchet features an American Hickory handle with a non-slip coating, offering a firm grip even in the most challenging conditions. The forged steel head, complemented by a protective sheath, ensures durability and sharpness, ready to tackle any task at hand.

If you're thinking of gifting this baby to a friend or loved one, this hatchet nestles within a stunning wooden box which is perfect for gifting and secure storage.

Read more
2024 camping preview: Hilleberg unveils new tent options
These new tent options will make 2024's adventures awesome!
Green Rogen Tent

Hilleberg tents are getting an upgrade! Swedish tent manufacturer Hilleberg has just announced two new additions to their lineup of camping tents set to hit the market in 2024. Whether you're planning a rugged expedition or a leisurely family camping trip, Hilleberg's Saivo 4 and Rogen 3 have got you covered with innovative features and reliable performance.

Saivo 4 is an all-season dome tent
The Saivo 4 is engineered to be the ultimate dome tent, offering a spacious and comfortable shelter for four occupants and their gear. Designed for all-season use, this tent boasts a voluminous interior that can easily accommodate a group of four, making it an ideal choice for base camp or expedition use. Here are the key features:

Read more
This new Airstream touring coach is about the size of an F-150 – and starts at nearly $200k
Travel anywhere and leave (almost) no creature comfort behind with this ultimate van life rig
Aerial view of a couple relaxing on an outdoor blanket beside an Airstream Interstate 19X Touring Coach.

If living the van life has taught us anything, it's that you really can fit all the essentials and most of the creature comforts you could ever need in a surprisingly small space. But most van lifers will tell you that it's not without compromise. Leave it to Airstream to flip that conventional thinking on its head. Along with its all-new, off-road-worthy Trade Wind travel trailer, the company just released one of its most rugged touring coaches to date. It's a deft blend of versatility, luxury, and go-anywhere, adventure-ready design — all in a surprisingly compact footprint.

The new Interstate 19X touring coach is the smaller brother to Airstream's Interstate 24X, released a few years ago. Like the 24X, the latest version is built for serious, go-anywhere exploration. That includes standard all-terrain tires, an ultra-durable black coating to protect the exterior on rough trails, and four-wheel drive (with optional all-wheel drive). Under the hood is a very capable High Output Turbo Diesel engine with the power to take you anywhere and enough torque to pull up to 5,000 pounds. It's all built on a nimble, 19-foot Mercedes Sprinter chassis that's roughly the size of a Ford F-150.

Read more