Wednesday, December 4, 2024
HomeOutdoorOverview: Mammut Sender IN Parka - Sustainable and Insulated

Overview: Mammut Sender IN Parka – Sustainable and Insulated


The Mammut Sender IN Hooded Parka is an synthetic insulated parka made with 100% recycled materials and insulated with recycled climbing rope scraps. The jacket is quite warm with a deep hood that insulates the head well even though it’s quite large and helmet compatible. While it has a Michelin Man look, the exterior construction is not sewn-through but crimped, providing excellent windproof and water-resistant warmth at a suprisingly economic price point.

  • Gender: Men’s (Women’s available)
  • Pockets: 4: Two external zippered, two internal drop pockets
  • Stuffable: No
  • Hood: Helmet Compatible
  • Shell: 9% Spandex, 91% Polyester
  • Weight: 17 oz (Men’s large)
  • Fit: True-to-size

I’ve been wearing this parka for a few weeks and I’m quite impressed by its warmth.  I carry it with me on my daily winter hikes and around town; it’s completely impervious to the wind and has a stretchy 30d polyester exterior that’s proven impervious to vegetation on my on-trail and off-trail explorations. I’m section hiking parts of the North Country Trail this December and I’ve needed the extra insulation to stay warm.

The hood is helmet compatible. What’d you expect on a jacket insulated with climbing rope ends!

The Sender is a pretty basic parka weight jacket. It has stretch cuffs, a stretch hem, and a non-adjustable, helmet compatible hood. While the hood is very large, its also quite deep and has a high neck, so you can snuggle back into it to keep your head and face warm.

The Sender also has four pockets: two zippered handwarmer pockets on the exterior and two very deep drop pockets on the interior good for storing and warming up gloves. But the jacket is not stuffable in a handwarmer pocket because its synthetic insulation is just too bulky for that. While it comes with fabric loops you could conceivably attach to a biner, the jacket is simply too large to tow along on a harness.

Despite that, Sender has plenty of room inside for layering and is true-to size. Lengthwise, it reaches the bottom of my pockets and would be perfectly suitable as a belay jacket if you’re climbing inclined.

I’ve had the opportunity to try a lot of products from Mammut this autumn and winter and I’m impressed with their design and quality. Mammut has fixed their longstanding distribution issues in the US and is making a concerted effort to sell direct. If you’re in the market for climbing or mountaineering oriented gear for winter hiking, I’d definitely give their products a close look. It’s really premium stuff.

 

Disclosure: Mammut donated a jacket for review.

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