How I Tested the Gossamer Gear Mirage 40
In the past 10 years, I’ve thru-hiked 7,000 miles, almost exclusively with some variation of an ultralight pack. These packs ranged from my 2016 Hyperlite Mountain Gear Southwest to a Mountain Lauren Designs Burn at the smallest, and I’ve used packs by just about all of the major ultralight brands. I also spent a few years working in the backpack department at REI and other small gear shops many moons ago, so I have a solid knowledge base of backpacks and how they should fit and perform for a variety of uses and body types.
I tested the Mirage on a three-day winter backpacking trip in Dark Canyon in Utah. This is an early review, so it doesn’t extensively test the performance of Aluula Graflyte V52 over a longer period, like six months, or the course of a big thru-hike. That said, I specifically chose a route that I thought would involve some scraping against vegetation and rock walls to test the abrasion-resistance of the materials.
Dark Canyon is extremely cold in January so I packed a heavier winter kit for this trip. I skew towards the super ultralight side of the spectrum, and my pack totaled around 17 pounds with food and water, well below the bag's 25-30-pound threshold.
Testing Impressions
Comfort
The Mirage is an incredibly lightweight pack, and the fact that it has a frame is all the more impressive. It's leagues lighter than my old Hyperlight Mountain Gear Southwest (29.7 ounces) and ULA Circuit (38.5 ounces) packs. It’s even lighter than my ultraweave Pa’lante Desert Pack (20.9 ounces), which is notable considering that the Pa’lante is fundamentally a featureless stuff sack with straps. Both the mesh pocket and Aluula fabric on the Mirage feel thin—concerningly so—but that’s the point.
The one-size-fits-most nature of the Mirage means that it won't work for everyone, but it will work for more types of hikers than it would seem. Setting up the pack for size isn’t intuitive but it's simple once you watch Gossamer Gear’s instruction video. It’s not a perfectly accurate system so I guessed where the small-medium range would be and felt like I landed on a pretty good spot. Like with every backpacking pack though, it will help to know your torso length. Gossamer Gear does provide instructions on how to figure out your size, if you have a tape measure at home.
My torso is near the bottom of the range at 17 inches, so the frame sat pretty high on me, which is something I’ve never liked about framed packs. I have ardently avoided any sort of frame bag since REI told me to start the Appalachian Trail with an Osprey Aura a decade ago. Everything about them is a little baffling—why do they sit so high above your head? Isn’t it annoying to bump your head constantly? Truly, what is the obsession with airflow? Aluminum stays, maybe. But a real deal frame? No way.
Unfortunately for my super ultralight pretensions, I have to admit that this was the first time I finished a hike without shoulder pain. My shoulders are happy but my ego is a little bruised and that's a far deeper wound. I do think this is a unique benefit of the Mirage that doesn’t apply to all framed packs though—my shoulders were screaming in that Osprey Aura and even lighter packs with stays like Hyperlite's leave my shoulders raw. The Mirage appears to be a particularly great combination of a well-designed frame and ultralight kit, and I don’t think hikers who load the pack beyond its 30-pound capacity will be quite as comfortable. And much as I don’t want to entertain frames in ultralight backpacking, there is definitely a demand for them—just look at the popularity of the Zpacks Arc Haul packs.
I might just be too cautious with fragile materials but I wasn’t able to pull the frame taught enough to get any real airflow from the frame. Realistically, this is not your overbuilt REI pack that advertises to folks who can’t bear the thought of a little bit of sweat. I don’t think that kind of design has a place in ultralight backpacking—It’s hiking! You’re going to sweat!—so I didn’t feel a great loss in this, but hikers transitioning from maxed out lux packs to lighter gear may bemoan their new sweaty backs.
I did have one complaint about the frame, though I don’t think it will apply to the Mirage’s target audience. Hiking in southern Utah tends to be an engaging endeavor, involving down climbing, butt scooting, and ledge crawling. Whenever I would move in a way that wasn’t an upright bipedal stride, I could feel the frame’s adjustable buckle press into my spine. I didn’t notice it when I was strolling along normally, which is what I expect most hikers using this pack will be doing, but it seems like an odd placement for a large metal and plastic buckle. There is a flap that covers the buckle in larger sizes so this is an issue for shorter torsos only.
I don’t have a ton of comments on the shoulder straps and hipbelts because the EVA foam and shape are comfortable and did their job well. They’re neither beefy nor too thin. Gossamer Gear’s Skala pack (which I love) doesn’t have a great way of carrying a camera case so I was glad to see the daisy chains on the Mirage’s straps. The sternum strap positioning is easily adjustable, which is key for women hikers. The webbing on the hipbelt pulls inward, which is something other users were particularly clamoring for because it’s a more ergonomic shoulder movement to make the adjustment. I honestly don’t feel like it makes that much of a difference but I’m down with better design, even if it's incremental.
I did struggle with the add-on hipbelt pockets though and am certain that I would lose at least one of them on a thru-hike. They slide onto the hipbelt easily but they slide off even more easily with gravity when you take your pack off. I felt like I was doing something wrong but I think you really are supposed to just slide it on; to stay in place, it needs to have some sort of attachment more like the shoulder pocket. There’s no way of doing this though so I don’t really have an answer for this one.