“A big part of my career trajectory has just been bouncing back and forth between tech and ski bumming.”
Kyle Siegel
As Siegel progressed as a skier, his eyes opened to the advances and shortcomings of technical gear, and he began to tinker. “I think everyone progresses with their gear,” he says. “Maybe you start super maximalist, then you go super minimalist, and then you find a balance between that’s right for you. I was going through that process and growing frustrated that I couldn’t find what I wanted out there.”
Skiing the 4,057-metre (13,310-foot) Tahoma Glacier at Mt. Rainier was the breaking point Siegel needed to propel his creativity forward. The highest volcano and most glaciated peak in the contiguous United States, it’s a long, complex objective that requires numerous transitions, careful management of nutrition and hydration, and frequent adaptation to the peak’s mercurial weather. Unsatisfied with his pack’s ergonomics, fit, and function, he got home determined to design his own.