CamelBak Zoid great for resort riding
CamelBak Zoid
- Pros: Low-profile design; Horizontal interior pockets; Doesn’t move around on back while skiing or riding
- Cons: No elastic straps to secure unneeded clothing layers; Hose port only on right shoulder; Likely need to refill bladder midday
- Bottom Line: The CamelBak Zoid is a small winter hydration pack that’s comfortable while active, and the low-profile design isn’t bulky on a chairlift making it great for skiing or snowboarding.
- MSRP: $50
For long days of resort skiing or snowboarding, you don’t typically have tons of gear or need a huge backcountry pack.
But many of us prefer to ski or ride with a hydration pack that has enough storage for some snacks, keys, wallet, phone or whatever else we don’t want in our pockets.
However, most of us don’t like hitting the slopes, namely riding a chairlift, with a pack that pushes us forward giving the “I don’t want to fall” feeling.
CamelBak’s Zoid pack is the answer.

- CamelBak Zoid
Completely skeptical the first time I used the pack, I thought the Zoid would be cumbersome while skiing and I’d have to take it off on the chairlift. Wrong and wrong.
The kid-sized, adult-oriented hydration pack has a low profile that sticks out no more than six inches when completely full of water and snacks.
It took a couple chair rides to fully feel comfortable with it, but by mid-day I barely knew it was there.
The unisex pack, which fit my wife as well as it did me, has a sternum strap to help keep it in place. It also has an insulated bladder hose that zips into the right shoulder pad for extra insulation and to help keep the bite valve in reach.
But people who like the hose over their left shoulder are out of luck as the only port is on the right.
CamelBak incorporated its 72-ounce bladder that uses a flexible plastic divider that runs the length of it to add stability and keep it from ballooning out away from your lower back. Instead, the bladder fills more evenly across your back.
To store snacks, a camera, wallet, keys, phone and whatever else you don’t want in your pockets, the 120-cubic-inch pack was redesigned for 2010.
The one big internal pocket that runs the length of the pack has three horizontal mesh dividers as well as space to store larger items. The dividers keep your gear evenly spread out throughout the pack and prevent it from bunching at the bottom.
But I was disappointed that the Zoid doesn’t have any elastic straps on the outside to secure layers as the temperature changes.
While I think that’s a substantial gripe, it wouldn’t deter me from buying a Zoid.


