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Traveler's Gear Box: Working Watches, Not Fashion Pieces

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Dakota watches, functional, not gaudy.

Designer watches are nice, but in the backcountry you want a sturdy timepiece that simply tells you the time. Flashiness isn'™t the point, which makes the 'œclip watches' from Dakota Watch Co., dare we say, timely?

This Cincinnati, Ohio, company has a wide selection of watches '“ fashion pieces included '“ but what caught our eyes was their clip-on series. These timepieces, from $25 up to $70, all revolve on a clipping mechanism, usually a carabiner or something similar, to attach to your belt loop or one of your pack'™s shoulder straps.

The Aluminum Backpacker Clip Watch, (above, right) for example, has a black military dial with luminescent hands and hour markers for night work. The crystal is mineral glass, the carabiner is aluminum and is connected to the watch by a nylon strap, and the watch itself can withstand a 100-foot-deep dunking...not that you'™d want to be attached to it at that point.

More versatile is the Dakota Knife Clip. (above, left) This is a handsome, stainless steel watch that is also a multi-purpose tool. There'™s a fold-out knife and scissors, perfect for the fly fisherman who finds himself in mid-stream retying a fly. There'™s a red diode flashlight, and a small compass as well. And the clip on this timepiece is spring-loaded to keep it secure.

Another watch that caught our attention was Dakota'™s Cover Clip Backpacker Clip. This watch features a spring-loaded cover to protect the dial. It comes with a lobster clasp, which doesn'™t seem quite as durable as the '˜biner on the Backpacker Clip, and certainly not the mechanism on the Knife Clip.

The watch movement on these timepieces comes with a five-year warranty to keep accurate time.

They'™re functional without being gaudy. What a concept.

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