Hillsound Cypress6
I do a lot of winter mountain hiking on the Appalachian Trail/Vermont Long Trail. Trail conditions range widely from packed powder snow to wet snow to heavy crust to sheet ice, sometimes all of the above in one hike depending on elevation gained. If the trail is already packed and I don’t need snowshoes to break trail on new snow, some form of light trail crampon is far superior to clunking around in snowshoes.
Over the past 5 years I’ve tried to find a light trail crampon for winter trekking. I’ve wasted a lot of money on Yaktrax (they slip off on steep terrain, and clog with snow), Stabilicers (most of the ice studs fell off after just 2 miles on rocky snow) and other ice traction products with rubber bindings that get loose and literally fall off when they get cold.
The Petzl Crab 6, also a 6 point mid-sole crampon, while similar in concept has zero protection from wet snow build-up and only webbing straps for binding that take minutes to put on with cold bare hands, and are impossible to put on with heavy winter gloves or mitts on. Full mountaineering crampons are too big, too heavy, way too excessive for the AT/LT, and too costly.
After an intensive online search for a better alternative I found the Hillsound Cypress 6 mid-sole trail crampon – they are amazing!
-- the ratchet bindings took just 5 seconds to click on (and only 1 second to click off, very cool!) with heavy winter mitts on!
-- the bindings not only locked the crampons onto my hiking boots with zero play or slip, they even helped snug up the boots for a more secure fit due to the Cypress 6 wrap-around binding design
-- the traction on snow and ice was phenomenal, I was even able to run full speed down a black diamond ski trail without using my poles on packed powder, and hike up black ice sheeted trail rocks with 100% traction
-- the crampon points are not as long as mountaineering crampon points so they didn’t catch at all when I didn’t need them too, so no accidental spike-induced tripping
-- the anti-snow pads meant zero snow build up, even in transitioning from wet snow to frozen crust during altitude transitions or during end of day temperature drops
-- they’re very compact and light
-- the included stuff bag is not only very tough and rip-proof, it allowed me to put the Cypress 6 in my pack with no fear of damage to down parka, sleeping bag, etc.
-- they are beautifully made, with incredible attention to detail and durability
-- all this for under $50!
Finally got the perfect solution to what I needed for winter trekking in the Green Mountains!
Price Paid: $48.99
All tours, just for any season to wear in backpack!
Pros
- Fits excellent on sport shoes or boots
Cons
- Granite or any hard rock when you step on after snow
This little crampons remind me of older and similar crampons Grivel Hunter with chain step on below and belts on upper side of boot.
Sometime is just fine to wear in your backpack like first aid kit , light e.t.c.
Range of use >>>>>>Better to have in any case crampons then no any and direct exposed to danger and high risk.
Much Luck
Source: better any than no any!
Your Review
Where to Buy
You May Like
Specs
Price |
MSRP: $59.00 Historic Range: $32.13-$50.00 Reviewers Paid: $48.99 |
Weight |
680 g/pair |
Plate Material |
Heat-treated S50C Carbon steel |
Tensile Strength |
1,183N |
Compressive Strength |
17,120N |
Rockwell Hardness |
45HRC |