The Argo® Hunting Backpack ARGO® Camouflage features a durable, waterproof camouflage pattern with brown and green leaves and branches, multiple pockets, a central buckle, and a small green and white logo on the top flap. The reflective surface design adds visibility.

Hunting Backpack ARGO® Camouflage

Sale price$36Regular price $49
The Hunting Backpack ARGO® by Argo® is a lightweight green bag with two front pockets, a central buckle strap featuring the ARGO logo on the flap, durable fabric, brown edging, and a flap closure. Its reflection shimmers on a smooth surface.

Hunting Backpack ARGO®

Sale price$36Regular price $49

Ultimate Waterproof Hunting Backpacks, Saddle Packs, Camo Bags, Chairpacks

When you're deep in the wilderness, your hunting backpack is more than just gear - it's your lifeline, your comfort, and your tactical advantage.

Precision-Engineered Hunting Equipment for Whitetail, Elk, and Waterfowl Hunters

Our innovative hunting backpacks are purpose-built for the most demanding hunters, featuring cutting-edge waterproof camo saddle packs that excel in whitetail deer hunting, elk tracking, and waterfowl expeditions.

Revolutionary Seating Solutions

Forget uncomfortable hunts with Hillman Chairpack - the best alternative of Summit Chairpack - featuring integrated built-in chair that outperforms any folding chair technology. Our waterproof hunting backpacks feature advanced technical innovations, including 100% waterproof construction with lightweight, durable materials and integrated seating mechanisms. Designed to be versatile for bow, saddle,  and rifle hunting, our hunting backpacks provide an ergonomic solution for extended field use.

Purpose-Built Performance

Whether you're stalking whitetail deer, navigating elk country, or setting up for a waterfowl hunt, these backpacks combine innovative technology with practical functionality.

Experience the ultimate hunting backpack solution - where cutting-edge design meets the raw demands of the great outdoors.

Frequently asked questions

How much does pack organization actually affect a hunt?

More than most hunters realize until they've dug through a disorganized bag at the wrong moment. Reaching for a rangefinder while a buck is working toward a shooting lane isn't the time to discover it's buried under rain gear and a sandwich. A pack where everything has a place and that place is accessible without noise or movement changes how a hunt actually unfolds, not just how comfortable it is.

Is a built-in chair actually useful, or is it a gimmick?

Anyone who's spent four hours standing at a driven hunt post on wet ground has already answered this question. The hunters who dismiss it usually haven't done the kind of hunting where sitting options are limited, and the wait is long. A stable seat that's always there because it's part of the pack is a different thing entirely from a folding stool that gets left in the truck because it's one more thing to carry.

What's the honest weight penalty for a waterproof pack versus a regular hunting pack?

Less than most hunters expect, and significantly less than the weight of wet gear that a non-waterproof pack fails to protect. A quality waterproof hunting backpack adds minimal weight through construction. What it removes is the mental overhead of monitoring weather and the physical overhead of wet optics, soaked layers, and damp ammunition that non-waterproof packs accumulate on bad days.

Does camo on a hunting pack actually matter, or is it just aesthetics?

Depends on how the pack is used. For a hunter who sets a pack down and moves away from it during a stalk, a camo pack sitting in the open matters less than camo on clothing. For hunters who keep the pack on during active stalking or who glass from positions where the pack is visible, pattern breaks up the outline in ways solid color doesn't. For treestand hunters where the pack stays in the truck, it barely matters at all.

How do you keep pack noise from blowing a setup at the worst moment?

Silent zipper pulls and magnetic closures solve most of it. The rest comes down to organizing the pack so nothing needs to be retrieved during a critical moment. Hunters who've had a metal buckle click at full draw or a zipper screech while a deer was at 30 yards develop very specific opinions about pack hardware. Gear that opens and closes without sound stops being a feature and starts being a requirement.

What size hunting pack actually covers most hunting situations without being overkill?

A day hunt with a stand setup, layers, food, water, and basic field dressing gear fits comfortably in a 25 to 35 liter pack for most hunters. The 45-liter range starts making sense when meat hauling is part of the plan or when the hunt involves an overnight component. Hunters who chronically overpack tend to size up and then fill the extra space with things they never use. Sizing down forces better decisions about what actually needs to come along.

Can a hunting backpack double for fishing trips and other outdoor use?

Easily, and most hunters end up using them that way without planning to. Waterproof construction, silent hardware, and durable fabric hold up to boat use, wet-weather fishing, and general outdoor work just as well as hunting. The camo pattern is the only thing that signals hunting gear specifically. Solid color versions disappear into general outdoor use entirely.