If your gear bag couldn’t survive last season’s hunt, trash it. You need something that can take a beating, drag through the mud, hold your tools, ammo, snacks, and maybe your soul if the woods get weird. Enter the Grizzly Coolers Gear Bag 20—a beast built for the type of hunter who doesn’t flinch at bad weather, long stalks, or a pile of busted equipment.
This isn’t some overpriced, pretty-boy tote for weekend warriors. This is a gear hauler made by Grizzly Coolers, a no-compromise, made-in-the-USA company that cranks out badass products for people who actually live this life. And yeah, they make coolers too. Damn good ones. But today we’re talking about the gear bag that deserves a spot in your truck, tree stand, blind, or back seat next to the wrappers and empty brass.
This Bag’s Built to Get Dirty
The Grizzly Gear Bag 20 doesn’t give a damn about staying clean. It’s made with burly, abuse-ready fabric that shrugs off dirt, water, blood, and God knows what else you toss in there. Got tools? Throw ‘em in. Ammo cans? Yep. A half-eaten protein bar from two weeks ago? Still room.
It’s got a 20-quart capacity—translation: it holds more than enough gear for a long weekend or a hot day at the range. The mesh zip lid locks your stuff down, and it folds flat when you’re not using it, which is rare, because once you use this thing, you’re not going back.
It weighs next to nothing, so you can pack it heavy without throwing out your back like some old fart who forgot leg day.
Grizzly Coolers Ain’t Playing Games
This isn’t imported junk slapped together in a sweatshop. Grizzly Coolers is straight-up American made, by folks who hunt, and shoot. Their gear is built with the same attitude: do it right, or don’t do it at all.
From the Gear Bag 20 to their lineup of coolers, drinkware, and range-ready gear, they’ve got one rule—make it tough enough to earn its place in the field. No fluff, no fake camo patterns, just gear that’s harder than your in-laws’ meatloaf.
Their Coolers Are Built Like Tanks
Grizzly’s hard-sided coolers? Certified bear-proof. As in, literally tested against grizzlies with attitude problems. These coolers will keep meat cold long after you’ve forgotten what day it is. Whether you’re quartering elk, chilling beers, or keeping your lunch safe from the dog, these are coolers that show up and shut up.
Check the lineup here: Grizzly Hard-Sided Coolers. You’ll find sizes for everything from quick day trips to full-blown kill missions.
Soft Coolers for the Fast and Light Crowd
Need something smaller and less rigid than your ego? Grizzly’s soft-sided coolers still hit like a truck. They’re leakproof, tough as hell, and ready to ride shotgun in your UTV, blind bag, or duffel. If you’re hiking in, glassing for hours, or just need to keep your Mountain Dew cold while zeroing in, this is your play.
Perfect for hunters who move fast, pack light, and drink cold.
Gear That Doesn’t Flinch
Let’s be real—if your gear can’t handle blood, dirt, weather, and the occasional meltdown, you’re wasting your time. Grizzly Coolers doesn’t make dainty accessories. They make bags, dry sacks, drinkware, and other kit that’s built for people who carry more than just Instagram-ready EDC.
The Grizzly Gear Bag 20 is just the start. Toss in their dry bags, pouches, and stainless tumblers and you’ve got a full kit that doesn’t need babysitting.
For Shooters. For Hunters. For the Real Ones.
Grizzly Coolers doesn’t care how many stickers are on your gun case or how many patches you’ve got on your bag. They care if your gear works. They build stuff for the shooters, the trackers, the bowhunters, the long-range junkies, the duck slayers and the deer stand veterans.
They build it right here, in America, and they don’t apologize for it.
So if you’re tired of gear that taps out halfway through the hunt, grab a Grizzly Coolers Gear Bag 20. Abuse it. Stuff it. Drag it through the season. It’ll take the hits and keep your gear in check.
You can grab yours right now here. Or don’t. But if you show up to the range with that old busted duffel again, don’t say we didn’t warn you.