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Reddit mentions of Tender Ben's 0006-7081 100% DEET Mosquito, Tick and Insect Repellent, 3.4 Ounce Pump

Sentiment score: 3
Reddit mentions: 3

We found 3 Reddit mentions of Tender Ben's 0006-7081 100% DEET Mosquito, Tick and Insect Repellent, 3.4 Ounce Pump. Here are the top ones.

Tender Ben's 0006-7081 100% DEET Mosquito, Tick and Insect Repellent, 3.4 Ounce Pump
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    Features:
  • Ben's 100% DEET mosquito, tick and insect repellent offers the maximum DEET concentration available. DEET is recommended by the CDC for protection against mosquitos, ticks and biting insects.
  • Offers 10+ hours of protection against insect-transmitted diseases including Zika Virus, West Nile Virus, Eastern Equine Encephalitis, Lyme Disease, and Dengue Fever and other infectious diseases.
  • Ben’s 100% DEET was the first 100% DEET product in the country to be registered with the EPA. And as always, it's made in the USA.
  • Easy to apply, the spray pump bottle provides thorough coverage for complete protection. Fragrance free so you'll smell the great outdoors, not your repellent.
  • The 3.4-ounce spray pump fits in your pocket so you can take it anywhere. TSA-compliant size.
Specs:
ColorOrange
Height5.5 Inches
Length2.5 Inches
Number of items1
Size3.4 Ounce Pump Uncarded
Weight3.4 ounces
Width1 Inches

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Found 3 comments on Tender Ben's 0006-7081 100% DEET Mosquito, Tick and Insect Repellent, 3.4 Ounce Pump:

u/flynnski · 15 pointsr/motocamping

SO! I've done I guess 5 total months over a few trips with this gear, and I'm pretty happy with it all. Here's how I pack.

REI's stuff has served me well for a few months on the road at a time. In particular, their Polar Pod sleeping bag has been cozy in shorts and t-shirt to the 40s. I don't think they sell it anymore, but whatever replaced it should be fine. I sprung for the name-brand Thermarest ProLite, and it works great. Just wide enough, just long enough, and packs down well. I sleep in an ALPS Mountaineering Lynx 4 tent. It's big enough for two people and their gear, so if you're willing to double up with a buddy.

I pack the sleeping bag and a week's worth of clothes into (separate) Sea-To-Summit eVent compression dry bags (medium). They're absolutely bulletproof and I love them.

All of this (including the tent, in its original bag) packs down into the main compartment of a North Face Base Camp duffel bag (large) that gets cam-buckle strapped (two straps!) to the top of my V-Strom. The bag isn't properly waterproof, but I've ridden it through a day of steady rain that culminated in literally blinding rain, and finally forced us off the road. The bag only let a few drops of water in through the zipper. There's room to spare, so I also carry a hatchet, shock cord, bottle of whisky, fire starters, a ziplock of laundry pods, etc. etc. in the spaces between. Also an extra pair of shoes at the end, for going into town etc. Also flipflops for showers.

This leaves room in the Wolfman Expedition side bags for a Jetboil Sumo, the rest of the camp kitchen, about a week of food, and some assorted other stuff — like an REI Flexlite camp chair, which has been really invaluable. Rocks and logs are hard and offer no back support, and that matters a lot around day 3-5. Also chain lube and cleaner.

I have an older design of the Wolfman Rainier tank bag that carries all the stuff I might through various stops — the first aid kit (I put my own together), a Luci solar powered inflatable lamp (seriously, buy this), some no-shit 100 DEET Bug Spray (even works on Maritime Canada levels of bugs!), a bag of 80 disposable ear plugs (seriously cuts fatigue, and there's enough of them that you can use a new pair every day), wet wipes, sunscreen, ibuprofen, and a super cheap battery pack for the cell phone that I got from Target.

I keep thinking that I want to carry my Osprey Stratos 34 with 3 liters of water in it. With the exception of one day, when the heat index was 125F and constant hydration was essential, I keep being wrong about this. It's just too damn bulky and awkward. I keep stuffing it in the duffel. (Yes, with all the other stuff. It's a good bag.) Maybe get a camelbak or similar though, because I always miss the constant hydration (just not the back pain).

Here's a photo. And here's how it all looks on the bike.

This is all pretty heavy if you're going to be doing anything more intense than fire roads, but anything up to that and I've been fine. Just throttle up and keep your momentum going and it's fine. You can cut weight largely in the pans and the food, if you can stop every 2-3 days for food instead of once a week.

EDIT: Camp towel. I forget which brand I have, but this one should work okay. The medium is fine. Also I have a Petzl headlamp that lives in the Rainier bag.

u/storunner13 · 8 pointsr/Ultralight

Can you clarify if you're looking for gear for your own tripping in the BWCA? Or for your work as a tow boat driver?
Either way, this will be a good start:

https://smile.amazon.com/Mosquito-Repellent-Protection-Fragrance-Approved/dp/B00TV2J5IG

This and a head net for mosquitoes. You can try Picaridin too. Head net is a MUST for portages.

If you're doing your own tripping, a carbon paddle is fantastic. As much as I wish I could like a beautifully bonded and carved wood paddle, after using a 13.75oz carbon paddle, 20oz is way too heavy. J-stroking with a carbon paddle is so easy and light. I have an older Barton Paddle (not made anymore AFAIK). The Wenonah Black Lite is reasonably priced, though I've never handled it.

I've always been fine with an old pair of running shoes for summer tripping, so I'm not much help there. If you want more suggestions, you should be more specific.

u/koottravel · 2 pointsr/onebag

Definitely agree. I've traveled everywhere with this, including staying in remote areas of the Amazon and it's been a great lifesaver.