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FullLoad Pack

FullLoad Pack

Regular price $159.99
Regular price $131.77 Sale price $159.99
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Pack Everything. Feel Nothing. Go Further.

Most hikers underpack because their bag can't handle a full load without destroying their back by mile five. Straps dig in, the frame flexes, the weight shifts forward, and by the time you reach camp your shoulders are done and your hike is suffering for it. FullLoad Pack is the 60-liter aluminum frame expedition backpack engineered to carry your complete multi-day kit without transferring that weight into pain. The internal aluminum frame acts as your personal load management system, moving heavy weight off your spine and onto your hips where your body is built to carry it. The ventilated back panel keeps you cooler under pressure. The compression straps lock every kilogram tight and centered no matter how much or how little you pack. And the multi-compartment layout keeps your entire kit organized and accessible from day one to day five. Load it heavy. Carry it far. Arrive feeling like you could go again.

Internal Aluminum Load Transfer Frame FullLoad Pack is engineered with a full internal aluminum frame that runs the length of the pack and anchors directly to the padded hipbelt, which means the weight of a completely full 60-liter load transfers off your shoulders and onto your hips and legs where your body carries weight most efficiently, so that you hike longer distances under heavier loads without the shoulder fatigue and back pain that breaks down hikers carrying inferior frame systems.

Ventilated Suspended Back Panel FullLoad Pack features a structured ventilated back panel that holds the pack body away from your spine and creates continuous airflow across your entire back, which means sweat and heat escape freely rather than saturating your shirt and building up heat against your body under a heavy load, so that you stay cooler, drier, and more comfortable across full days of hard climbing and loaded trail miles.

Multi-Point Side Compression System FullLoad Pack is built with a full side compression strap system that cinches the pack body tight at multiple points against the frame, which means your load stays compact, centered, and locked in position whether the pack is carrying a full expedition kit or a lighter day-three load after burning through supplies, so that your balance and stability remain consistent and controlled across every type of terrain from flat trail to exposed technical ridge.

 Expedition-Grade Multi-Compartment Layout FullLoad Pack features a top lid compartment, main body, and multiple exterior access pockets designed around how serious hikers actually organize and access their gear on the trail, which means your most-used items stay at your fingertips and your heaviest gear stays centered and low without digging through the entire pack to find anything, so that you transition faster between hiking, rest stops, and camp setup without ever losing time or momentum managing your kit.

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Heavy Expedition Packs Crush Your Back And Suffocate Your Shoulders — The Naturehike Ultralight Carries 65 Liters And Actually Lets You Breathe

The Ultralight Pack That Carries 65 Liters And Actually Lets Your Back Breathe.

Ready To Carry A Full Multi-Day Kit Without Feeling Like You're Hauling A Truck?

Breathable Back Panel That Actually Ventilates

Instead of pressing a solid wall of fabric flat against your back and trapping heat and moisture until you're drenched in sweat by mile two, the Naturehike's breathable back panel design keeps a channel of airflow moving between the pack and your body the entire hike, which means you're not overheating, soaking through your shirt, or burning energy just to cool down. Just hike the way you're supposed to.

Weight Distribution That Hits Right

Instead of feeling every single pound of your gear stacked directly on your shoulders like a punishment, the Naturehike's supportive frame transfers the load down to your hips and spreads it across your back the way a serious pack should, which means you're not burning out your shoulders and upper back three miles into a five-mile carry. Just move.

Rain Cover Included — No Extra Purchase, No Extra Hunting

Instead of realizing the storm is coming and then digging through your pack for a rain cover you either forgot or never bought, the Naturehike comes with a rain cover built to fit this pack and nothing else — snaps on in seconds and stays on in the wind, which means you're not soaking your sleeping bag, your clothes, or your food while you figure out your next move. Just cover it and keep going.

60+5 Liters Of Real, Usable Capacity

Instead of cramming a multi-day kit into an undersized pack and strapping half your gear to the outside like a pack mule, the Naturehike opens up into a full 60+5-liter system with compartments and space designed around the way people actually pack for trips, which means you're not playing Tetris with your gear or leaving something critical at the trailhead. Just load it, strap it, and go.

Pack More. Walk Farther. Hike Smarter.

Get Yours Now! 👉
  • First Time I Finished A Three-Day Hike Without My Shoulders Destroyed

    Did a three-day backcountry loop last summer with the Naturehike 60+5 and carried a full kit the entire way. My shoulders felt fine at the end of every single day. That's never happened before with a pack this size. The frame does exactly what it's supposed to do — moves the weight where it belongs and keeps it there.

  • The Back Ventilation Is The Real Deal — No More Soaked-Through Shirts

    Used to finish every long hike drenched in sweat because every pack I owned just pressed against my back like a wet blanket. The Naturehike breathable panel changed that. I'm still working hard, still sweating, but my back stays dry and comfortable the whole time. Should be standard on every pack.

  • Rain Cover Stayed On Through A Full Mountain Storm

    Got hit with a serious storm on day two of a five-day trip. Threw the rain cover on and kept hiking. Stopped four hours later and opened the pack — everything inside was completely dry. The cover didn't budge once the entire time. That's how a rain cover is supposed to work.

  • Carried A Full Camping Setup And Still Had Room Left Over

    Tent, sleeping bag, pad, three days of food, water, clothes, cooking gear, and personal kit — all in one pack with space to spare. I was genuinely surprised everything fit without forcing it. 60 liters sounds big on paper but the way this pack is organized makes every inch of it usable.

  • Switched From A 70-Liter Pack And I Actually Move Faster Now

    Had a big expedition pack I'd been using for years. It was heavy, it was stiff, and I dreaded putting it on. Switched to the Naturehike 60+5 and I carry basically the same amount of gear but the pack itself weighs so much less. I actually move faster on the trail now. Should have switched two years ago.

  • The 40+5 Version Is Perfect For Weekend Trips

    Grabbed the 40+5 for weekend hikes where I don't need the full 60 liters. Carries everything I need for a one-night trip with zero wasted space, and the breathable back panel and rain cover work exactly the same as the bigger version. It's the sweet spot for anyone who doesn't need maximum capacity every single time.

  • Took It On A Backcountry Fishing Trip And It Held Everything

    Packed fishing gear, a full camping setup, and enough food for four days into the 60+5 and it handled it all without straining. The organization of the compartments made it easy to find what I needed without tearing the whole thing apart. Best pack I've used for fishing trips by a long shot.

  • My Hiking Partner Noticed The Difference On The First Day

    Was hiking with a buddy who was carrying a different brand at the same capacity. By mile six he was adjusting his straps every ten minutes and complaining about his shoulders. I hadn't touched mine once. He asked about the pack at camp that night and ordered one when we got back to cell service.

  • Built A Go-Bag Around This Pack And It Actually Works

    Wanted a pack that could handle a serious emergency kit — enough gear to be self-sufficient for a week if I had to be. The 60+5 holds everything I need and the ultralight build means I can actually carry it and move fast if I have to. Most go-bags are too heavy to actually use. This one isn't.

FAQs

How is this pack "ultralight" if it holds 60 liters? Doesn't that size mean it's heavy?

Most packs at 60 liters are heavy because they're over-built — thick frames, dense padding, oversized buckle systems, layers of fabric you never asked for. The Naturehike is engineered to carry serious volume without all that dead weight. The frame is lightweight but functional, the materials are chosen for strength-to-weight ratio, not just bulk, and the design cuts everything that doesn't earn its place in the pack. You're still getting a real, supportive multi-day pack — you're just not paying for it with ten extra pounds before you load a single piece of gear. The difference is noticeable the moment you pick it up compared to a standard expedition pack at the same capacity.

How well does the breathable back panel actually work on long hikes?

It works, and it works in a way you'll notice within the first hour. The back panel is designed with spacing built into it — your gear doesn't press flat against your spine and trap heat. Air moves between the pack and your back, moisture dissipates faster, and you stay cooler over distance. It's not air conditioning — you're still hiking and you're still sweating. But the difference between a ventilated back panel and a solid one is one of the biggest comfort upgrades in pack design. If you've ever finished a long hike drenched and uncomfortable because your pack was glued to your back, this is exactly the problem it solves.

Does the rain cover actually stay on, or does it blow off the second it gets windy?

It's designed to fit this specific pack — not a generic one-size cover that flaps around and slides off. It snaps and secures around the pack body and stays put in wind and rain. Most hikers get it on in under thirty seconds once they've done it once. It covers the main compartment and keeps water out of the places where it matters most. If you've dealt with a rain cover that either didn't fit right or kept blowing off mid-storm, this one is a completely different experience. It's part of the pack, not an afterthought.

Is the 60+5L version or the 40+5L version right for me?

If you're doing weekend trips, multi-day hikes, or anything where you're carrying a full camping setup — tent, sleeping bag, pad, food, clothes, water, and gear — go with the 60+5L. That's the pack built for serious capacity and long trips where you need everything with you. If you're doing shorter trips, lighter loads, or you just prefer to carry less and move faster, the 40+5L gives you the same frame, the same breathable design, and the same rain cover in a smaller package. Both versions use the same suspension system and back panel — the difference is purely in how much you need to carry.

How does the frame and suspension system handle uneven terrain?

The frame is designed to move with you, not against you. On flat ground it distributes weight evenly and stays put. On uneven terrain — switchbacks, rocky trails, steep descents — the suspension adjusts so the pack doesn't shift and throw off your balance. The hip belt takes the load, the shoulder straps keep the pack from swinging, and the whole system stays centered on your back whether you're climbing, descending, or scrambling over rocks. It's not a rigid box strapped to your back — it's a system that works with your body the way a multi-day pack has to if you're going to cover real distance.