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Essential Gear Checklist for Arctic and Polar Adventure Tourism
Essential Gear Checklist for Arctic and Polar Adventure Tourism

Essential Gear Checklist for Arctic and Polar Adventure Tourism

Essential Gear Checklist for Arctic and Polar Adventure Tourism

You need gear that handles minus 30 C, constant wind, and wet snow without failing. I learned this on a 12-day Svalbard ski trip where cheap mittens froze solid on day three.

Base and Mid Layers

Start with merino wool next to your skin. It manages sweat better than synthetics when you stop moving.

  • Two thin merino base tops and two pairs of long underwear
  • One 200-weight fleece or light wool sweater for active days
  • One thicker 300-weight fleece for camp and windless stretches

Pack an extra base layer top in your daypack. You will sweat through the first one during a long traverse.

Outer Shell and Insulation

Your shell must block wind and shed snow. I use a hardshell parka with a removable synthetic or down liner.

  • Waterproof breathable jacket and pants rated for Arctic conditions
  • Separate insulated parka for static periods like photography stops
  • Windproof overmitts that fit over your gloves

Footwear and Hand Protection

Boots make or break the trip. My Baffin Impact boots kept my feet warm during a five-hour snowmobile ride at minus 28 C.

Item Example When to Use
Primary boots Baffin or similar expedition model Daily travel and camp
Light boots Insulated pac boots Ship decks or indoor stops
Socks Two pairs heavy wool plus liners Change daily
Gloves Leather work gloves + liner gloves Fine tasks in cold

Sleep System

A three-season sleeping bag will not cut it. Bring a bag rated to at least minus 30 C and a closed-cell foam pad plus an inflatable one.

  • Expedition sleeping bag with draft collar
  • Two sleeping pads for ground insulation
  • Bivy sack for extra wind protection if you camp in a tent

Test the full system in your freezer for an hour before you leave. You will spot gaps fast.

Navigation and Safety

Phone maps fail in the Arctic. Carry redundant tools.

  • GPS unit with extra batteries stored inside your jacket
  • Paper map in a waterproof case and compass
  • Personal locator beacon and VHF radio
  • Headlamp with red light mode and spare batteries
  • Basic repair kit: duct tape, zip ties, extra glove liners, and a multi-tool

Check your beacon battery the morning you fly out. One dead unit has grounded entire groups.

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