Type One Outdoors

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72 hour insulin cooler
Trail Tested
Paul

72 Hr Insulin Cooler

Enjoying outdoors activities during the summertime involves creative ways to keep our liquid insulins cool while away from a fridge.
In this trail-test, I take the 72 hour insulin cooler out on a number of expeditions to see where this product shines and where it doesn’t.

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Post
Paul

Sensor Re-Place Day

What happens behind the scenes when my 3-month Eversense CGM Sensor has to be replaced at the end of 90 days
… In case you’re curious.

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Article
Paul

Eversense: The 1st 10 Days

Being a CGM user for the past decade, I’ve tried a variety of short-term CGM’s, but this was the first time on a “long-(er)-term” implanted CGM. Here’s my experience from the first 10 days wearing the “Eversense”

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Trail Tested
Paul

Trail Tested: Stance Hike

For anyone putting in big adventures in the outdoors, the feet take on a lot of abuse and wear, so comfort and health of our feet, especially for type ones is critically important.

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Trail Tested
Paul

Pocket Size Trail Glucose

Heading up into the mountains for a day hike, I know my blood glucose is the number one thing that will vary wildly on the trail, and most likely, it will drop at some point, so I always pack for it.

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Paul

Training hypos on the Course: Experiments Continue…

The reality is, there is no fix. We can only fine tune the corrections.
It can be a real frustration at times when we think we have found the answer to correcting lows that show up in times and places only to have the blood sugar issue we’ve been chasing make us think we were wrong all along.

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Paul

A Rock Solid Adhesive

A Rock-SolidAdhesive Well, it’s sort of a system.Many type ones who wear pumps and CGM’s struggle to find a method to keep adhesives doing what

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Paul

New Year’s Race & the Glucose battle

Last year I ran this 15k challenge, the New Year’s Race, and approached it with a strategy that I thought would keep blood sugar, fuel supply and endurance in pretty good balance. Last year, that strategy didn’t work.

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Post
Paul

Type one’s have an amazing ability to blend in with everyone else, They’re elusive, stealthy, and even the ones who flaunt their “diabeticness” tend to go unnoticed unless you know what you’re looking for. But what about in the remote regions of the outdoors? Where there’s even less of just about everyone? Is there any hope of seeing another type one out here?

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Trek Waiver

This release basically acknowledges that you understand risks involved with the activity you are signing up for.

Understanding that any outdoor activity comes with inherent risks of injury and even death in the most extreme cases.

You are also agreeing not to do things that may jeopardize the safety of the guide or other participants.

You are agreeing that you will not adversely interfere with the natural environments we will be using (other than normal use of the trails, equipment and infrastructure) This includes wildlife, sensitive ecosystems, manmade structures, maintained trails, markers, safety devices, safety structures, and personnel.

Since you are signing up to join us on this activity, you are doing so at your own will and you understand all the risks involved. (if you don’t, please ask. If you still don’t, Please don’t sign) You’re also agreeing to let your leader know if you have any medical condition that needs to be disclosed before we set out, and you agree to prepare yourself adequately before the activity and be as self sufficient as possible as not to be an adverse burden upon the rest to the party or strangers.

You’re agreeing to indemnify, and to hold Type One Outdoors and its guides, drivers, agents, associates, employees, owners, volunteers, leaders, affiliates, helpers, and participants harmless and promise not to sue.

We take lots of photos on these treks, and participants usually wind up in the pictures shared on Type One Outdoors social media, and web pages in efforts of promoting future and past activities, trips and events. Please indicate below if it’s ok with you, or not, that we can use pictures that include you.

If you agree with the above statements,
please put in your name and email address below, prove you’re not a robot, then hit “Agree”