The Algonquin and Killarney gear checklist: what to rent and what to bring
A backcountry Algonquin or Killarney canoe trip needs a canoe, bear proof food storage, treated water, and shelter. Rent the big items, own the personal ones.
Read the postPractical writing on renting, borrowing, and earning from what you already own. Real math in Canadian dollars, honest tradeoffs, and no pretending the platform does things it does not.
A backcountry Algonquin or Killarney canoe trip needs a canoe, bear proof food storage, treated water, and shelter. Rent the big items, own the personal ones.
Read the post
Rent or buyRent or buy? The five uses a year ruleA simple rule for deciding whether to buy a tool or rent it. If you will use it fewer than five times a year, renting usually wins. Here is the math in Canadian dollars.
Earn from your stuffWhat the stuff in your garage could actually earnIdle tools and gear lose value whether or not you use them. Honest math on what renting them out can bring in, what the work looks like, and when it is not worth it.
Rental appsWhat happened to Fat Llama, and what to use instead in CanadaFat Llama no longer exists. It became Hygglo on November 24, 2025. Here is the timeline, and the rental platforms that actually operate in Canada now.
Rent or buyPressure washer math: rent, buy, or borrow from a neighbourRenting a pressure washer for $20 to $40 a day CAD beats buying a $350 machine unless you use it five or more times a year. Full math for all four options.
Renting in TorontoWhere to rent camping gear in Toronto: every option comparedToronto has rental shops, gear libraries, park outfitters, and neighbours renting out their own tents. A weekend kit runs about $30 to $240. All compared.Questions the journal has not answered yet probably live in the FAQ. New posts land in the RSS feed the day they publish.