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Sitting PrettyThe best portable beach chair.
By Tom BartlettPosted Tuesday, July 3, 2007, at 7:21 AM ET
Nature is, among other things, uncomfortable. This is a fact often overlooked by chroniclers of the outdoors. They are too busy remarking on its alleged beauty and so-called charm to notice that there's nowhere to sit.
And so God, in His infinite wisdom, gave us lawn chairs. But old-fashioned lawn chairs, with their flimsy aluminum frames and fraying, crisscross mesh, leave much to be desired. Fortunately, these days there are innumerable options when it comes to alfresco seating—so many choices, in fact, that you might feel overwhelmed.
Take heart, however: Slate, in the form of me, has invested considerable time and significant effort evaluating portable outdoor chairs in order to find you the best one. This has meant hour upon hour, day after day, of sophisticated, scientific testing that would be, even if I had room to explain it here, incomprehensible to the layman. OK, mostly I sat in them. But I did enlist the assistance of several family members, including my mom, dad, and sister. They sat in them, too. We Bartletts have long been known as judicious sitters. It's a point of family pride: We don't put our butts in just any old place.
Methodology
Portability (10 possible points): An outdoor chair must be portable. If portability weren't a factor, you'd take your Barcalounger to the beach. It should be relatively light and not cumbersome. A carrying strap is nice, too.
Ease of setup (10 possible points): If a chair takes more than, say, eight seconds to set up, I want no part of it. Also, it shouldn't require instructions. Why? It's a chair, that's why.
Comfort (10 possible points): No bar should hit me in the back of the neck or knee. While I don't expect it to be as comfy as my couch, I don't want to feel like I'm being tortured, either.
Design (10 possible points): A catch-all for attractiveness and features, with an emphasis on simplicity. I like a nifty cup holder as much as the next guy, but let's not get too fancy.
The results, from crappy to cushy:

Office To Go Ergolounger, $59.95
First, some faint praise: The Office To Go Ergolounger is ambitious. Other chairs are happy just being chairs. The Office To Go has a detachable laptop table, an ottoman, a large side pouch for books, and an adjustable lumbar support. A definite A for effort.
But an F for execution. While the laptop table holds a laptop, it's difficult to attach; I'd rather use my lap. The ottoman fell apart every time I used it. The lumbar support did nothing for me. And heaven help you if you forget to lock the legs in place before sitting down.
It's ugly, too.
On the upside it's … uh. Did I say ambitious already?
Portability: 4 (out of 10)
Ease of Use: 3 (out of 10)
Comfort: 4 (out of 10)
Design: 2 (out of 10)
Total: 13 (out of 40)

Travel Chair Teddy, $31.50
Eh. That pretty much sums it up. But for your benefit, I'll pad this out a bit. It's hard to get out of the Travel Chair. And once you're in it, you'll want to get out, because it's not very comfortable. For example, it has these little plastic things at the edge of the seat that will scratch the underside of your legs. What's more, your rear end will hang low, causing you to scrunch over like you're prematurely old. If you already are old, it will make matters worse.
Portability: 6
Ease of Use: 6
Comfort: 4
Design: 5
Total: 21

The Wilderness Recliner, $49.99
The Wilderness Recliner is classy. Maybe too classy. The armrests are made of fine mahogany, for goodness' sake. All right, that's probably not real mahogany. But still.
Unfortunately, the insulated cup holder doesn't quite fit a can of Coke—or at least not my can of Coke. The straps that connect the seat to the back make it hard to rest your arms on those "mahogany" arm rests. Everyone who tried this chair had the same complaint. While this may not sound like a big deal, it is. If you don't believe me, come to my house and I'll show you what I mean. On second thought, don't come to my house. I don't know you.
Portability: 6
Ease of Use: 8
Comfort: 5
Design: 5
Total: 24
Remarks from the Fray:
He missed one very important aspect of his "best chair ever" - quality of construction. I purchased this chair approximate two months ago and loved it - for about a month. Then, the poles that serve as the canopy broke at the joint where they connect with the poles that hold it up. (Is there a better way to say - where they connect to the ones pointing up?) First one snapped and almost immediately the other. I wasn't rough housing with it and hadn't opened and closed it more than half a dozen times. Now it's practically worthless and the extra money I spent to have this "cool" canopy could have been better spent on a beach umbrella that could have done the same thing. Buyer Beware!
--omeomi
(To reply, click here.)
A $10 no name beats them all. Mrs. LG66, always on the bargain lookout, bought two chairs at Roche Brothers (a grocery store chain in the Boston area) for $10 each. They have all the desired features, are very comfortable for two adults. The reviewer would score them high. We'll take them to the Pops concert/fireworks (best in the nation) on the Esplenade tonight.
Now, I have no idea who made them or where, how much child or slave labor was exploited, or much an anything else. Maybe the fabric will give us skin cancer. But, we wouldn't know such things about the other chairs, either.
--libera_guy66
(To reply, click here.)
(7/5)
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