Sit pretty wherever you roam
The Big Agnes Mica Basin Camp Chair XL is a packable camping and backpacking chair. It offers plenty of plush comfort with a supportive seat and backrest, made from durable nylon Robic fabric. It also sits an easy-to-get-into 16″ off the ground, making it the perfect packable chair to bring along to any camp, concert, picnic, or road-trip adventure
- FEATURES
- SPECS
- MATERIALS
- FEATURES VIDEO
- THE BRAND
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- Compact backpacking chair
- Fully shock-corded design for simple set up and break down, with sturdy yet lightweight aircraft-grade aluminium poles
- Color-coded frame for easy set up
- Patented hub-less frame construction for smaller pack size
- Enhanced comfort through pre-bent poles that create a wider, more stable seat
- Stuff sack included
- Lightweight nylon 100d Robic with a 300d polyester rip-stop fabric for extra tear strength
- High-tenacity Robic yarn that is lightweight and up to 30% stronger than a regular yarn in the same denier
- Waterproof UTS coating gives fabric a soft feel and enhances tear strength
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Trail Weight 1.33 kg Packed Weight 1.42 kg Packed Size 14 x 15 x 56 cm Seat Height 47 cm Back Height 86 cm Width 61 cm Depth 57 cm Capacity 136 kg -
- Robicâ„¢ nylon with polyester ripstop and waterproof UTS coating
- Polyester Oxford with a polyurethane coating
- Pole System: Aluminium
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Big Agnes is a small, independent US outdoor brand out of Steamboat Springs, Colorado – a small ski-town that we’ve never visited but which we like to imagine is full of mountain-loving, trail-hiking outdoorsy types. That would make sense, since the company makes some of the best ultralight backpacking gear around, including the award-winning Copper Spur, Tiger Wall and Fly Creek tents. It is kit that has clearly been designed by a gang of folks who love sleeping in the dirt just as much as we do here at WildBounds.
Oh, and if you’re still wondering where the heck that name Big Agnes comes from, we did try to find out. Depending on who you talk to, it’s either an affectionate tribute to a legendary truck drivin’ mountain mama, or a 12,000 foot peak in the Mount Zirkel Wilderness. We kinda like the first one better.


















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