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Patagonia Mountain Catalog 2017 (U.S.)

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The Cascadian Rhythm

Words by Colin Wiseman

“I just want to stay home and ride wind lips,” Josh Dirksen says. A simple statement. A simple goal. It was April 2014. We’d been camped

adventure, progression and produc-

and high-plateau winds create an

out on Central Oregon’s South Sister

tivity. Home was just a place to un-

abundance of these features. Dirksen

for a couple of days. Getting to our

wind. Now pushing 40 years old with

is a product of this environment.

midmountain camping spot had tak-

a wife and young child, he wanted to

en some time, but not a lot of nerve.

slow the pace.

It was a casual splitboard approach,

“I started traveling an incredible

“My snowboarding has always been influenced by Oregon,” Dirksen says. “The cement skate parks, the cold ocean waves and the natural

with the novelty of fat bikes instead

amount the moment I committed to

of snow machines for the groomed

snowboarding as a career,” Dirksen

terrain at Mount Bachelor have

10-mile approach from Highway 372.

says. “I was always running away

all affected my style. I learned the

We’d then carved out a home base in

from where I grew up, from Oregon.

benefits of generating speed from

the deep spring snowpack on the

When I’d come home, I’d ride wind

the skate parks, the rhythm and

south side.

lips, and it felt unique. It felt like my

flow from surfing the waves, and the

best riding.”

possibility of bringing all three sports

Amid deep-water runnels formed

together while snowboarding at

by heavy rains, we spent three nights

Over the past 20 years, Dirksen

exploring the surrounding area, with

has spent more than six months of

Mount Bachelor. Wind lips are really

Dirksen noting changes in the snow

each year on the road. During the

similar to a skate park in that you’re

formations from what he’d seen earli-

winter of 2015-16, he decided to stay

searching for speed. You’re not just

er in the season. We barely scratched

exclusively in Oregon. It was a bold

dropping in and letting gravity take

the surface, but found a few nice

decision, but one aided by a strong

over. I wanted to find that flow state.”

gullies to ride.

snow year in the Pacific Northwest

It was a new beginning for

and Dirksen’s peculiar fixation: wind

Dirksen dedicated the winter to seeking new wind lips via split-

Dirksen, who lives in Bend, Oregon,

lips. Wind lips are wavelike snow for-

board—a task easier said than done.

and was raised in the nearby town

mations created when the wind blows

Like ocean waves, wind lips are

of Creswell. A snow­boarder since

from a single direction. They are usu-

constantly changing due to local

his teens, he’d become familiar with

ally found along the edges of gullies

weather patterns.

predictable global migrations each

and bowls. Central Oregon is the kind

winter. Traveling for him meant

of place where volcanic landscape

Left: When your backyard includes under-the-radar gems like Mount McLoughlin, staying in Oregon all winter doesn’t seem like such a sacrifice. TYLER ROEMER

“They don’t last forever,” Dirksen says. “You could show up on one day

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“I realized that the idea that you need to travel in order to find quality snowboarding is like Coca-Cola convincing everyone they need to buy bottled water to stay healthy.”

fun to ride,” he says. “This year, we just began to scratch the surface of

telling you otherwise. This year, I

there’s huge wind lips that are perfect

what’s out there. Now, exploring the

didn’t travel more than two hours

and beautiful and dreamy, and so

mountains close to home is a lifelong

from my house.”

fun to ride. During a snowstorm with

goal. It’s only going to get better.”

strong winds, they’ll build up, and

So often we’re led to believe that

It’s a decidedly different kind of adventure from that which is usually

then when the sun comes out, they

the only way to expand our horizons

found in modern snowboard media.

fade back down. Their glory moment

is to travel the globe. But by staying

There’s little need for an ice axe,

is right after a storm.”

home, Dirksen was able to experience

crampons, ropes, 3 a.m. “alpine”

The method is simple but requires grit and patience. Get out in the

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tap, when the media is constantly

and there’s nothing there, and then you can show up on another day and

his home range in a new way. “I realized that the idea that you

starts or anything resembling an expedition. It’s the kind of explora-

mountains while the storm is still

need to travel in order to find qual-

tion that doesn’t require a lot of

in progress, set up camp, and then,

ity snowboarding is like Coca-Cola

resources and is accessible to anyone

hopefully, wake up to sunshine and a

convincing everyone they need to

with backcountry knowledge and a

changed landscape.

buy bottled water to stay healthy,”

will to explore. It allows for a kind of

“I see those wind lip lines, and

Dirksen says. “It’s easy to forget that

snowboarding that, as long as you

they’re so beautiful to look at and so

you already have that water in your

have done your diligence with terrain


choices relative to weather and

Mount McLoughlin down south to

avalanche conditions, lets one

the iconic Mount Hood to the north.

move past the prospective perils of

While riding was the goal, the reward

backcountry travel and focus on a

was made so much greater by pursuing

different kind of puzzle: deciphering

a vision that is unique to the person

rolling volcanic terrain in a way

and place. They found a volcanic land-

that provides exciting and fun

scape largely devoid of other humans—

snowboarding and an easy sense

and often populated with wind lips as

of adventure.

far as the eye can see. They found a

“The world of snowboarding has become so extreme, your femur’s

fresh Cascadian rhythm in Dirksen’s own backyard.

gonna break in half if you don’t land the jump, or you’re dropping into a line with a decent chance of an avalanche,” Dirksen says. “I’ve had a lot on my mind with my family these last couple years, and I’m not searching for more worries.” At season’s end, Dirksen and friends explored 10 different Oregon mountains, from the lava cone of

Left: Josh Dirksen takes his turn from a different point of view than most. TYLER ROEMER Left inset and right: CHRIS WELLHAUSEN Below: Blowing it up. The volcanic contours of Mount Bailey, Oregon, played host to Dirksen’s wind lip mission. TYLER ROEMER

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free shipping on orders over $75


all styles imported

patagonia.com 800-638-6464

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Men’s

Refugitive Jacket

A shelter for the high-country escape artist, the Refugitive Jacket keeps up during the deepest searches for steeper and more exposed terrain. Lightweight, stretchy and durable 3-layer GORE-TEX® construction ensures the last thing on your mind will be the jacket on your back.

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Only the Best Ingredients

All Good in the Hood

Lots of Pockets

Durably waterproof/breathable and windproof 3-layer GORE-TEX® fabrics with GORE® C-KNIT™ backer technology are lighter, more packable and more breathable than regular 3-layer GORE-TEX® fabrics. Together, the hybrid design offers optimal balance of stretch and light weight.

Specially engineered Optimal Visibility Hood adjusts with single-pull Cohaesive® embedded cord-lock system to fit equally well over all helmet types or a bare head.

Simplify your storage situation. The Refugitive comes with two harnessand pack-compatible handwarmer pockets with watertight zippers, a welted exterior left-chest pocket, an interior left-chest pocket and an interior stretch catch-all pocket. Fill it up.

Refugitive Jacket $499.00 I 83615 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 425 g (15 oz)

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Previous spread: Sometimes, all that’s needed to shake things up is a good directional change. Mount Bailey, Oregon. TYLER ROEMER


Men’s

Reconnaissance Jacket Powder is where you find it, so our Reconnaissance snow kit offers protection tuned to high-output search missions. The hybrid soft-/hard-shell kit with maximum breathability and protection can keep up with any high-energy backcountry devotee. $399.00 I 30340 I XS-XL I Regular fit I 572 g (20.2 oz)

SnowDrifter 30L Built for a full backcountry day that might

Men’s

stretch into an overnight, the SnowDrifter features a dedicated compartment for snow safety tools.

Reconnaissance Pants

$169.00 I 48195 I S/M, L/XL I 1,105 g (2 lbs 7 oz)

$349.00 I 30350 I XS-XL I Regular fit I 496 g (17.5 oz)

[ 20L and 40L available online ]

all styles imported

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Ascensionist Pack

Need to tackle a quick-and-tricky Chamonix ski mountaineering route? The newly designed and updated Ascensionist pack is a streamlined yet highly versatile tool built for climbing fast so you can get to your descent before the weather turns. Imported.

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Punching Bag Lightweight bomber nylon ripstop fabric stands up to inevitable run-ins with rock, ice axes or sharp ski edges.

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To the Brim An asymmetrical spindrift collar opens wide for easy packing, while a drawcord simultaneously secures and seals the lid. Yet another spindrift collar protects the gear when you’ve overstuffed your pack because—let’s face it—you’re going to.

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Flexible Bones The aluminum-stay frame has a tensioned mesh center for pack structure and extra support of heavy loads. It can also be removed for lightweight pursuits.

Ascensionist 40L $179.00 I 48002 I S/M, L/XL I 878 g (1 lb 15 oz) [ 30L available online ]

Kye Petersen sneaks a peek over a sneaky peak in the Tantalus Range, British Columbia. BLAKE JORGENSON

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At Home, Everywhere Whether it’s first chair or last light, the gear you choose needs to keep up all day long in all conditions. Thankfully, these pieces feel like they belong, all the way from the blustery peak to

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the parking lot tailgate. Imported.

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Fully featured comfort for lapping stashes, chairlifts and beyond the rope.

Men’s

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3-in-1 Snowshot Jacket $399.00 31674 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 1,335 g (47.1 oz)

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Powder Bowl Jacket $399.00 31391 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 952 g (33.6 oz)

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Glade Beanie $29.00 28885 I One size I 87 g (3.1 oz)

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Snowshot Pants $199.00 30688 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 677 g (23.9 oz)

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Powder Bowl Pants $299.00 31487 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 782 g (27.6 oz)

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Hestra® Fall Line Gloves $150.00 O2054 I 6-11 I 458 g (16 oz)

short and long inseams available online

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For season-long comfort and durability, the Powder Bowl is built with a tough 2-layer GORE-TEX® fabric.

short inseam available online

To the uninitiated, Pemberton, British Columbia, is mistakenly known as a suburb of Whistler. To Kye Petersen, it’s the place he lays his head. Good thing the pillows are soft. DANIEL RÖNNBÄCK


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Men’s

Nano-Air® Light Hybrid Jacket Business in the front. Party in the back. The Nano-Air ® Light Hybrid Jacket is for those who go hard. The breathable back panel blows heat and moisture out on high-exertion, all-out pushes in cool conditions. The 40-g FullRange® insulation keeps it toasty otherwise. Breathable. Stretchy. Warm. Rock on. Imported.

NEW Nano-Air® Light Hybrid Jacket $199.00 I 84345 I XS-XXL I Slim fit I 286 g (10.1 oz) [ vest available online ]

Previous spread: Piers Solomon goes dark during a six-day cycle of sun and snow in Engelberg, Switzerland. OSKAR ENANDER


Men’s

Nano-Air ® Hoody

It skis. It rides. It climbs. The Nano-Air ® Hoody revolutionized the midlayer universe by being as versatile as it is simple. This hoody with 60-g FullRange® insulation is built to go all day long. It’s impeccably patterned for both comfort and performance. This is the standard for cold-weather, stop-start missions in the mountains. Imported.

Nano-Air® Hoody $299.00 I 84260 I XS-XXL I Slim fit I 385 g (13.6 oz) [ vest and jacket available online ]

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Men’s

Nano Puff Trusted warmth, around the snow globe. Shoulder season demands diversity. Ideal as an outer layer or cold-season midlayer, the windproof and water-resistant Nano Puff ® styles fill that need. Imported.

Nano Puff® Bivy Pullover $219.00 I 84186 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 354 g (12.5 oz)

Nano Puff® Pullover $169.00 I 84022 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 286 g (10.1 oz)

Nano Puff® Jacket $199.00 I 84212 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 337 g (11.9 oz) [ vest available online ]

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Men’s

Down Sweater The warm, comfy, versatile goodness of nature’s perfect insulation can be worn in myriad styles and colors with our Down Sweater collection. Imported.

Down Sweater Vest $179.00 I 84622 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 277 g (9.8 oz)

Down Sweater Hoody $279.00 I 84701 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 428 g (15.1 oz)

Down Sweater $229.00 I 84674 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 371 g (13.1 oz)

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Men’s

Technical Fleece

Worn alone or as a layer, our versatile Regulator ® fleece insulation warms like a woodstove, wicks moisture rapidly and packs down to nothing.

R1® Pullover $129.00 I 40109 I XS-XXL I Slim fit I 337 g (11.9 oz)

Minimally designed and finely tuned for the full spectrum of mountain endeavors.

R2® Jacket $169.00 I 25138 I XS-XXL I Slim fit I 405 g (14.3 oz)

High-loft fleece for extended comfort on long approaches, ice climbs and ski tours.

R3® Hoody $199.00 I 25772 I XS-XXL I Regular fit I 510 g (18 oz)

Plush, high-loft fleece maximizes warmth in deep cold with minimal weight.

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Men’s

R1® Hoody A venerated alpine essential, the R1® Hoody remains the optimal versatile hooded midlayer. Take it skiing. Take it hiking. Take it to après. One thing you won’t want to do is take it off.

Interior fabric detail

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A New Spin on an Old Favorite

Revel in the Details

Comfort on the Move

Exclusive to Patagonia, this Polartec® Power Grid™ fabric (with Polygiene® permanent odor control) is lighter and more breathable than before, but with the same outstanding stretch and durability.

It’s like your own private cocoon— the snug-fitting, balaclava-style hood fits comfortably under a helmet strap, and the center-front Slim Zip with a soft kissing-welt zipper garage at chin offers nextto-skin comfort.

It’s the little things that matter. Raglan sleeves give increased mobility, and off-shoulder seaming allows for comfort while worn under a pack.

R1® Hoody $159.00 I 40074 I XS-XXL I Slim fit I 364 g (12.8 oz)

all styles imported


Men’s

Baselayer

Whether in familiar hometown terrain or pioneering first descents in far-off lands, your choice of baselayer can be the difference between anguish or comfort. Fortunately, all of these pieces promise the comfort of home, wherever you hang your skins. Imported.

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Capilene® Lightweight Crew

Merino Midweight Zip-Neck

$49.00 I 45641 I XS-XXL I Slim fit I 99 g (3.5 oz)

$109.00 I 36732 I XS-XXL I Slim fit I 209 g (7.4 oz)

Capilene® Thermal Weight Crew

Merino Air® Hoody

$89.00 I 43647 I XS-XXL I Slim fit I 147 g (5.2 oz)

$149.00 I 36390 I XS-XXL I Slim fit I 206 g (7.3 oz)

Kailua big-wave conquistador Kohl Christensen turns his attention to splitboarding corn at the edge of the Arctic Circle. Westfjords, Iceland. ANDREW MILLER


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Geography Lessons Words by Lisa Richardson Photos by Garrett Grove

One Christmas, my brother gifted me a copy of 1,000 Places to See Before You Die. I hate those kind of books. He and his girlfriend could both name-drop dozens of the tick-listed destinations, but I was mostly perplexed. What did you do there? Came, saw, conquered—never to look back. Judginess harshed my holiday spirit. It all seemed so trivial. They struck me as hollow victories. Not that I don’t have tick lists, but suggesting there’s a formula is a swindle, a slickly packaged con job promising downloadable GPS directions to happiness. I heard someone insulted once in a way that has stuck with me ever since: “He just doesn’t know his own geography.” So effectively dismissive was that single statement. I thought, I don’t ever want to be thought of in that way. And it’s true. What is it to claim a destination with a selfie if you never stared your own fear in the face? What’s a tick list if you had to line up behind a hundred nameless strangers for your carbon-copy moment? I’d trade knowing the whole world’s geography to at least have a sense of my own. Yet, I stare out my living room window past mountains whose names I don’t know and ridgelines I’ve never climbed, longing to go somewhere else, for places with strange names and stranger light, as if I might find a betterfitting version of myself somewhere out there, instead of here in the town I live in. “You go to these places to dream,” says Leah Evans, “which is strange when you live in the places that are The Dream.” Evans lives in Revelstoke, British Columbia, where she just bought a fixerupper. Revelstoke is the boilerplate ski town. Around the world, skiers and snowboarders fantasize about—even fetishize—Revy. It is mecca for a skier. The kind of place where skis poke out of beds of rusty pickup trucks. The mountains are big and steep and wild, the backcountry terrain is endless, and no luxury hotels contaminate the downtown vibe, with its dark, beer-soaked pubs. And yet, Evans leaves her town regularly for places with less predictable snow and more challenging conditions. Why? “The jaw-dropping moments are so much more common when you travel,” says Evans. “When you’re in completely unfamiliar terrain, everything is onsighting.” Even if conditions are better back home, the full sensory impact is lost when you stay local. Up against unfamiliar geography, terrain and climate,

“What is it to claim a destination with a selfie if you never stared your own fear in the face?” 24


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Evans and her team navigate the unknown with senses

Of course, the judgment of my brother was unfair. As if

blazing, anchored by the small things they can be certain

I don’t have 1,000 places of my own conjured by dog-eared

of, wherever they are—they are skiers, friends, adventurers,

guidebooks, penciled check marks next to routes. As if I

planet lovers. They might never come this way again. They

haven’t lined up for a four-star multipitch or hiked up a ridge

may not always go deep enough to become indigenous, but

with a queue of boot-packing lemmings to get at the same

their own personal landscapes will be altered. Until we go,

fresh bowl.

we can’t see home for what it is. Or ourselves for that matter. The truth is, we are often losers of places rather than

For me, it’s not the where so much as the why. I am not altered by the sights, crowds, lists and roadside pullouts.

collectors: rogue riverside campsites, beaches made difficult

My reckoning comes in the salt, the effort and surrender;

to access, realistic ski-town housing turned luxury condos,

the cruxy move I doubt I can make, but do; the memories

surf breaks ruined, childhood homes sold. So many places

that surface while paddling the long stretch of lake before

we’d like to return to become lost to time. Places with no

the whitewater; the all-night slog through underbrush just

coordinates, not even physically retraceable by our inner

to arrive at the skintrail, the path navigated by headlamp.

geographer. No one ever steps in the same river twice. The

In those moments I know something of myself, something

only constant is change. But home doesn’t change. At least

I can rely on. At home or away.

that is our hope when we create one. So when we travel, we

There are no places left uncharted that satellites can’t

try to carry some feeling of belonging. Anytime I have gone

focus in on, that thermal imaging can’t penetrate. Except

somewhere without a harness or mountain bike or ski boots,

maybe our minds. And it’s where our unmapped dreams and

I felt alien, a drifter. A familiar practice in a fresh location is

the dream places come together that the intrepid truly shine.

grounding, just enough to retain a small measure of fluency

I think it’s what my brother was trying to tell me: The more

to orient by.

you experience, the more sense of yourself you get. Don’t

“I love traveling through skiing,” says Evans. Experiencing places as a skier means that whatever else might be shaken

worry about how. There’s no prescription, no single path to knowing yourself. Geography lessons are everywhere.

through the day as we navigate our own foreignness in unfamiliar places, how to interact with a landscape is never stripped away.

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Lisa Richardson is a writer based in Pemberton, British Columbia.


Previous spread: Leah Evans navigates late-season liquid in Norway’s Lyngen Alps. Above: Jasmin Caton and Leah Evans make a long white line on their quest for couloirs. Lofoten Islands, Norway. Left: The icy waters of the Trollfjorden provide a rapid post-ski cooldown for Jasmin Caton and Leah Evans. Lofoten Islands, Norway.

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United We Descend With features like dedicated webbing loops to attach all Patagonia snow jackets and powder skirts to all our snow pants, each piece of our women’s Snow collection works great together. Of course, they do pretty well on their own, too. Imported.

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Built without limitations, the PowSlayer uses extremely light 3-layer GORE-TEX® PRO™ fabric for the pinnacle of waterproof/ breathable and windproof protection.

Women’s

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PowSlayer Jacket $699.00 PowSlayer Bibs $599.00 30330 I XS-XL I Regular fit I 473 g (16.7 oz)

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Untracked Jacket $599.00 29877 I XS-XL I Regular fit I 745 g (26.3 oz)

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Untracked Pants $449.00 29911 I XS-XL I Regular fit I 581 g (20.5 oz)

30312 I XS-XL I Regular fit I 521 g (18.4 oz)

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Crafted with unwavering attention to descent-oriented details, our Untracked kit features 3-layer 100% nylon GORE-TEX® fabric for unsurpassed windproof and waterproof/breathable performance.

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SnowDrifter 20L $129.00 48190 I One size I 952 g (2 lbs 1.6 oz)

Wind-exposed glacier camp. 4 a.m. start. Predawn hike. Well-earned powder turns. There’s no equation Marie-France Roy would rather be a part of. Tordrillo Mountains, Alaska. JAY BEYER


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Get Your Kit Together Spending all day deep in cold smoke requires a kit that can handle all conditions. The Powder Bowl and Snowbelle collections are perfect in-bounds partners. Pair up, and spend a few winters becoming great friends with them. Imported.

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For season-long comfort and durability, the Powder Bowl is built with a tough 2-layer GORE-TEX® fabric.

Fully featured comfort for lapping stashes, chairlifts and beyond the rope.

Women’s

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3-in-1 Snowbelle Jacket $399.00 31679 I XS-XL I Regular fit I 1,153 g (40.7 oz)

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Lightweight Snow Socks $29.00 50085 I S-XL I 87 g (3.1 oz)

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Insulated Snowbelle Pants $199.00

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Powder Town Beanie $39.00

31129 I XS-XL I Slim fit I 620 g (21.9 oz) short and long inseams available online

29187 I One size I 172 g (6.1 oz)

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Powder Bowl Jacket $399.00

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Powder Bowl Pants $299.00 31432 I XS-XL I Regular fit I 640 g (22.6 oz) short inseam available online

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Hestra® Heli Ski Gloves $130.00 O2106 I 5-9 I 340 g (12 oz)

31407 I XS-XL I Regular fit I 785 g (27.7 oz)

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Internationally known as heaven, but far from ski resort hell, Revelstoke, British Columbia, is the dream mountain town. That’s precisely why Leah Evans calls it home. MATTIAS FREDRIKSSON


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Women’s

Nano-Air® Light Hybrid Jacket Business in the front. Party in the back. The Nano-Air® Light Hybrid Jacket is for those who go hard. The breathable back panel blows heat and moisture out on high-exertion, all-out pushes in cool conditions. The 40-g FullRange® insulation keeps it toasty otherwise. Breathable. Stretchy. Warm. Rock on. Imported.

NEW Nano-Air® Light Hybrid Jacket $199.00 I 84350 I XXS-XL I Slim fit I 252 g (8.9 oz) [ vest available online ]

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Women’s

Nano-Air ® Jacket

It skis. It rides. It climbs. From the midlayer line that changed it all, the Nano-Air ® Jacket is as versatile as it is simple. This jacket with 60-g FullRange® insulation is built to go all day long. Impeccably patterned for both comfort and performance, this is the go-to piece for cold-weather, stop-start missions in the mountains. Imported.

Nano-Air® Jacket $249.00 I 84255 I XXS-XL I Slim fit I 292 g (10.3 oz) [ vest and hoody available online ]

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Women’s

Nano Puff

The go-to, get-after-it, get-a-beer-after jacket. The windproof and water-resistant Nano Puff ® styles fit in a pack easily for an extra layer during demanding ski tours and fit in easily running errands around town afterward. It’s insulation for life. Imported.

Nano Puff® Jacket $199.00 I 84217 XXS-XL I Regular fit I 283 g (10 oz)

[ hoody available online ]

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Nano Puff® Bivy Pullover

$219.00 I 84196 XXS-XL I Regular fit I 311 g (11 oz)

Nano Puff® Vest

$149.00 I 84247 XXS-XL I Regular fit I 206 g (7.3 oz)


Women’s

Down Sweater

Down for adventure, these pieces provide the perfect warmth for just about everything. Deep-snow tent mission with the splitboard? It’s down. Crack-of-dawn peak attempt? It’s down. The perfect partner. Available in a huge array of styles and colors to complement a lifetime of adventures. Imported.

Down Sweater Hoody $279.00 I 84711 XXS-XL I Regular fit I 371 g (13.1 oz)

Down Sweater

$229.00 I 84683 XXS-XL I Regular fit I 345 g (12.2 oz)

Down Shirt

$199.00 I 84751 XXS-XL I Slim fit I 221 g (7.8 oz)

[ vest available online ]

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Women’s

Technical Fleece

Worn alone or as a layer, our versatile Regulator ® fleece insulation warms like a woodstove, wicks moisture rapidly and packs down to nothing.

R1® Full-Zip Jacket $159.00 I 40138 I XXS-XL I Slim fit I 317 g (11.2 oz)

Minimally designed and finely tuned for the full spectrum of mountain endeavors.

R2® Jacket $169.00 I 25148 I XXS-XL I Slim fit I 331 g (11.7 oz)

High-loft fleece for extended comfort on long approaches, ice climbs and ski tours.

R3® Hoody $199.00 I 25708 I XXS-XL I Regular fit I 428 g (15.1 oz)

Plush, high-loft fleece maximizes warmth in deep cold with minimal weight.

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Women’s

R1® Pullover Good gear excels at more than one activity. The multisport versatility of R1® insulation stems from its minimal design. Take it skiing. Take it hiking. Take it to après. One thing you won’t want to do is take it off.

Interior fabric detail

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A New Spin on an Old Favorite

Revel in the Details

Comfort in the Move

Exclusive to Patagonia, this Polartec® Power Grid™ fabric (with Polygiene® permanent odor control) is lighter and more breathable than before, but with the same outstanding stretch and durability.

Get up close and personal with your pullover. The silhouette has a deep center-front Slim Zip with a soft kissing-welt zipper garage at chin for next-to-skin comfort.

It’s the little things that matter. Raglan sleeves give increased mobility, and off-shoulder seaming allows for comfort while worn under a pack.

R1® Pullover $129.00 I 40118 I XXS-XL I Slim fit I 280 g (9.9 oz)

all styles imported

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“I have never felt as far from home as I did while visiting Turkey. 6,500 miles or so from my natural habitat, my senses were flooded with unfamiliarity. On our first day out in a small mountain village named Ayder, we stumbled into a small trailer adorned with Ottoman Empire-era clothing. For a small fee, we were decked out in robes and hats and immortalized in a snapshot from a distant time. When I strapped in, the moment became a beautiful synergy of culture shock and comfort, as I was suddenly back at home, sliding downhill on snow.” —Alex Yoder WADE DUNSTAN

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After the Cold Rush You may be able to rack up vertical all day like a billy

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Women’s Los Gatos Vest $99.00 I 25216 I XS-XL I Regular fit

goat, but are you capable of getting casual when night

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Brodeo Beanie $35.00 I 29206 I One size

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Women’s Long-Sleeved Fjord Flannel Shirt $89.00 I 53915 I 0-14 I Regular fit

falls? Life is about balance, and Patagonia’s vast line of men’s and women’s off-mountain threads ensure comfort while kicking back, running errands or celebrating big

4

days of crushing laps. Imported. 5 40

Women’s Live Simply ® Knapping Cotton Crew T-Shirt $35.00 I 38966 I XS-XL I Regular fit

Women’s Stacked Shapes Cotton/Poly V-Neck T-Shirt $29.00 I 38946 I XS-XL I Regular fit


10 9 8

11

14 12, 10 13

6

Women’s Hestra® Närpes Mitts $125.00 I O2133 I 7-9

11 Men’s Hestra® Tällberg Gloves $150.00 I O2111 I 6-11

7

Women’s Slim Jeans $99.00 I 55120 I 24-32 I Slim fit

12 Men’s Better Sweater® Jacket $139.00 I 25527 I XS-3XL I Regular fit

8

Men’s Shaka Crab Cotton/Poly T-Shirt $29.00 I 38955 I XS-XXL I Slim fit

13 Friction Belt $29.00 I 59178 I One size I Adjustable fit

9

Slopestyle Beanie $29.00 I 28971 I One size

14 Men’s Flannel Lined Straight Fit Jeans

10 Men’s Long-Sleeved Lightweight Fjord Flannel Shirt $79.00 I 54020 I XXS-XXL I Regular fit

$119.00 I 56170 I 28-40/even + 31, 33, 35 I Slim fit short and long inseams available online

41


Take Home on the Road Go lighter. The always-popular cargo king is now available in a new lightweight option, meaning quick-and-dirty forays into the wild backcountry or the urban wilds are easier than ever. Imported.

NEW Lightweight Black Hole™ Cinch Pack 20L $79.00 I 49040 I 479 g (1 lb 0.9 oz)

42


NEW Lightweight Black Hole™ Pack 26L $99.00 I 49050 I 510 g (1 lb 2 oz)

NEW Lightweight Black Hole™ Gear Tote $49.00 I 49030 I 263 g (9.3 oz)

NEW Lightweight Black Hole™ Duffel 30L $79.00 I 49070 I 453 g (1 lb)

NEW Lightweight Black Hole™ Duffel 45L $99.00 I 49080 I 510 g (1 lb 2 oz)

43


patagonia, inc.

Prsrt. Std. U.S. Postage PAID Patagonia, Inc.

8550 White Fir Street Reno, NV 89523-8939

Cover: Nick Russell stays the course and finds a laid-back place in the sun on a sleepy powder day. Big Cottonwood Canyon, Utah. ANDREW MILLER

Customer Number

Source Code

FREE

S H I P P IN G on orders over $75* *not valid in Patagonia® retail stores or with the Patagonia Pro Program

800.638.6464

we guarantee everything we make

patagonia.com the only place to find everything we make

1% for the Planet®

Patagonia pledges at least 1% of sales ($75 million to date) to the preservation and restoration of the natural environment. onepercentfortheplanet.org

Nano-Ai ® Nano-Air Light Hoody Built for the highest-exertion mountain athletes and their objectives, the Nano-Air ® Light Hoody is 75 percent more breathable, 33 percent less insulative, and lighter weight than our Nano-Air Hoody. It looks pretty sweet, too. Imported.

Men’s Nano-Air® Light Hoody $249.00 I 84280 I XS-XXL I Slim fit I 309 g (10.9 oz)

Women’s Nano-Air® Light Hoody $249.00 I 84290 I XXS-XL I Slim fit I 260 g (9.2 oz)

Unwanted Mailings If you are moving, send us your old and new addresses. If you’ve received this catalog in error, received a duplicate or want to remove your name from our mailing list, please call us at 800-638-6464.

100% Recycled Paper This catalog is made with FSC®-certified 100% postconsumer recycled paper. Not a single tree was cut to produce it. If you can’t hug a tree right now, you could just hug this catalog.

This catalog refers to the following trademarks as used, applied for or registered in the U.S.: 1% for the Planet®, a registered trademark of 1% for the Planet, Inc.; Cohaesive®, a registered trademark of Cohaesive Garment Technology Inc.; FSC® and FSC Logo®, registered trademarks of the Forest Stewardship Council, A.C.; GORE-TEX® C-KNIT™, GORE-TEX® and GORE-TEX® PRO™, trademarks of W.L. Gore & Associates, Inc.; Hestra®, a registered trademark of Hestra-Handsken AB; Polartec® Power Grid™, trademarks of MMI-IPCO, LLC; and Polygiene®, a registered trademark of Polygiene AB. Patagonia® and the Fitz Roy Skyline® are registered trademarks of Patagonia, Inc. Other Patagonia trademarks include, but are not limited to, the following: Better Sweater®, Black Hole™, Capilene®, FullRange®, Live Simply®, Merino Air®, Nano-Air®, Nano Puff®, R1®, R2®, R3® and Regulator®. All rights reserved. Prices are valid through July 31, 2017. © 2017 Patagonia, Inc.

100% PCW

JANUARY 2017


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