Borax for Backpacks
Posted: Jan 13 2025 3:08 pm
A cleaning tip.
I bought my (Boltoro) backpack in 2019 to travel to Chile to see a total eclipse. It saw a month's use, mostly as a suitcase.
After that, it sat in a closet until 2023, when I started some mild training hikes at a local park in Phx. And then a about ten backpacking trips after that.
It has all of maybe 20 nights in the field.
And now, since my last backpack trip in April last year, about one hundred more strenuous training hikes, including the summer. (About 1.5 to 2 hours each.)
All in all, it hasn't had much time to become dirty. And a few times during the past two years I've hung it on the clothesline and sprayed it down with water, sometimes taking a bristle brush to scrub the back synthetic material with a little Oxy something to remove sweat absorbed into that surface.
Even so, it was beginning to smell a little ripe again this past week.
I recently discovered Borax for clothes washing/freshening. So I filled a bathtub with lukewarm water, put in a little bit of Borax, and dunked my backpack. (No soap.)
I'm surprised to report that, after an hour, the bath water took on a yellowish brown hue.
Rinsed until water stayed clear (2x) and hung it to dry.
I can't say that it smells fresh, because, ideally, fresh has no smell. But it doesn’t smell ripe anymore. Which I figure is good for not attracting animals.
And I expect that periodic cleaning of one's equipment helps it to last longer, since sandpaper is made from dirt and dirt in fabric acts as sandpaper.
I bought my (Boltoro) backpack in 2019 to travel to Chile to see a total eclipse. It saw a month's use, mostly as a suitcase.
After that, it sat in a closet until 2023, when I started some mild training hikes at a local park in Phx. And then a about ten backpacking trips after that.
It has all of maybe 20 nights in the field.
And now, since my last backpack trip in April last year, about one hundred more strenuous training hikes, including the summer. (About 1.5 to 2 hours each.)
All in all, it hasn't had much time to become dirty. And a few times during the past two years I've hung it on the clothesline and sprayed it down with water, sometimes taking a bristle brush to scrub the back synthetic material with a little Oxy something to remove sweat absorbed into that surface.
Even so, it was beginning to smell a little ripe again this past week.
I recently discovered Borax for clothes washing/freshening. So I filled a bathtub with lukewarm water, put in a little bit of Borax, and dunked my backpack. (No soap.)
I'm surprised to report that, after an hour, the bath water took on a yellowish brown hue.
Rinsed until water stayed clear (2x) and hung it to dry.
I can't say that it smells fresh, because, ideally, fresh has no smell. But it doesn’t smell ripe anymore. Which I figure is good for not attracting animals.
And I expect that periodic cleaning of one's equipment helps it to last longer, since sandpaper is made from dirt and dirt in fabric acts as sandpaper.