We know winter is well underway when the聽国产吃瓜黑料聽gear team heads to Denver for the聽Outdoor Retailer Winter Show. Here, the outdoor industry鈥攔etailers, media, and brands鈥攊s already hyping up products for winter 2021. Our editors are聽on the show floor this week, sifting through thousands of items聽to bring you the highlights, starting with our picks for Gear of Show. Here鈥檚 what we鈥檙e most excited to test out.聽聽
MountainFlow Eco-Wax ($19)

Wax is a ubiquitous but largely invisible part of your snow-sports kit. Whether you tune your skis at home or bring them to a shop, you rely on the friction-reducing properties of hydrocarbon to make your skis glide. The only problem: the petroleum-based hydrocarbons used in traditional wax rub off when you ski, leaving toxic residue in the snow, which eventually ends up in our waterways.聽
聽is a petroleum-free application that derives its glide properties from five different plant-based waxes and oils (the formula is proprietary, but the brand specified that it doesn鈥檛 use palm oil聽and that all of its materials are sustainably sourced).聽
Other companies have made their own attempts at environmentally friendly ski wax. , based in Boulder, Colorado, made its name with homemade perfluorocarbon-free formulas (PFCs are commonly added to ski waxes to make them faster) that it claims are just as fast as fluorinated waxes. However, Purl鈥檚聽waxes are still hydrocarbon-based. And Swix recently announced that it鈥檚 going to make a new fluoro-free wax that鈥檚 just as fast as its fluorinated counterparts.聽
But MountainFlow is the first company to make a wax that is entirely plant based聽and thus free of petroleum hydrocarbons. The brand鈥檚 Eco-Wax, which comes in four temperatures (warm, all-temperature, cool, and cold) melts on just like your run-of-the-mill hot wax. MountainFlow claims that it works just as well as traditional hot waxes聽but without the negative environmental side effects. Whether those performance claims are accurate, it鈥檚 too soon to say (we haven鈥檛 put the product through its paces ourselves). But the concept is revolutionary.聽
Picture Demain Jacket ($500)

Sadly, sustainability and performance are often at odds in premium outdoor gear. But it appears the opposite may be the case with Picture鈥檚 new three-layer waterproof-breathable Demain聽jacket.聽
What makes the Demain stand out its聽use of biosourced polyester that鈥檚聽made from sugarcane waste. That fiber makes up 59 percent of the jacket, while the remainder is recycled polyester made from plastic water bottles. The jacket is also PFC- and solvent-free, thanks to its exclusive new 鈥渘ano-pore鈥 membrane from Taiwanese consumer-electronics manufacturer聽BenQ.
Performance-wise, Picture says聽that its聽biosourced material is not only extremely capable in the waterproofing and breathability departments (25k/20k), but it鈥檚 also two times lighter than competing laminates. We鈥檙e excited to put this jacket (which will be available at retailers in fall聽2020) to the test this winter to see if the performance matches those claims. While we try to be impartial, it will be tough to not root for the Demain, which could be a game changer both on the slopes and for the environment.聽
Yakima CBX Solar聽Cargo Box ($1,299)

For serious outdoor aficionados who inevitably load up their car with gear, rooftop boxes come with some serious pros and cons. Namely: you get more storage space聽but聽lose valuable real estate for heavy-hitting upgrades like solar panels. Yakima solved that issue with the CBX Solar, the first mass-produced cargo box with an integrated sun-powered sheet on top.聽
Its lightweight Sunflare聽panel is 36 watts (five watts of power with a three-amp max), enough to power your spare batteries and electronics from two USB ports (there is no built-in battery to store the charge). Yakima claims the panel works great in low-light situations but exact charge times have yet to be determined. And there鈥檚 no loss of space in the carrier: it features 16 cubic feet of cargo room, comparable to its聽non-powered boxes, and is long enough to hold up to 185-centimeter skis. Plus, it opens from both sides and is easy to聽install聽on any type of crossbar.聽
There are plenty of car-rooftop solar options out there, but if you want simple installation, added storage, and a tidy little amount of juice for life on the road, the CBX Solar is a smart solution. We can鈥檛 believe no company made this聽sooner.聽
Osprey Sopris Pro 30 Avalanche Airbags ($1,200)

The fit of your gear is always important, and even more so when it comes to safety equipment. That鈥檚 why we鈥檙e so excited Osprey is releasing the women鈥檚 Sopris Pro 30 avy pack. While there have been women鈥檚 avy packs in the past, Osprey鈥檚 stellar reputation for ergonomic gear could be a game changer for women聽charging hard in the backcountry. The company has been a leader in the backpack space鈥攅specially in fit鈥攕ince it聽started making custom packs in the 1970s and debuted the industry鈥檚 first custom-molded hipbelts in 2005.聽
The shortened torso and contoured harness (with a scratch-free goggles pocket on one side and a gear loop on the other) are designed to fit women鈥檚 bodies, keeping the load stable and off your mind when you鈥檙e on tough terrain. The included Alpride E1 supercapacitor unit, the lightest electronic system on the market, is travel friendly and rechargeable with AA batteries or a USB. A separate avy-tool compartment makes for quick access in an emergency, and ski-, board-, and helmet-carry options keep equipment secure. At 6.13 pounds, it鈥檚 relatively light for an avy pack, due in part to the feathery聽but abrasion-resistant 210-denier DWR nylon fabric. The聽men鈥檚 version, the Soelden Pro 32, weighs in at 6.35 pounds and has the same features with a slightly larger capacity.
Though we haven鈥檛 had a chance to test the new pack yet, we鈥檙e excited to see how Osprey鈥檚 attention to comfort and fit for female body types translates to performance in the backcountry.