The following is a tabulation of some prior art that presently appears relevant:
Relevant products available online in April 2020:
R1. “Nike Minimal Handheld 22 oz. Bottle”, https://www.dickssportinggoods.com/p/nike-minimal-handheld-22-ozbottle-19nikumnmlhndhldbgaf/19nikumnmlhndhldbgaf, April 2020
R2. “Nylon Outdoor Hiking Camp Belt Carrier Pouch Water Bottle strap Holder Bag”, https://www.ebay.com/itm/Nylon-Outdoor-Hiking-Camp-Belt-Carrier-Pouch-Water-Bottle-strap-Holder-Bag-/392275230277, April 2020
R3. “Handiwear (2 Pack, Water Bottle Carrier Grip for Running. Soft Band Holder Strap Makes Any Bottle Handheld. Bike, Gym or Jogging”, https://www.amazon.com/s?k=B018ZE50UC&i=sporting&ref=nb_sb_noss, April 2020
R4. “Windspeed Water Bottle Carrier Grip for Outdoor, Soft band Holder Strap Makes Any Bottle Handheld, Water Bottle Bands For Bike, Gym or Jogging 4 Pack (random color)”, https://www.amazon.com/s?k=B01LZ3S9ST&i=sporting&ref=nb_sb_noss, April 2020
R5. “REUZBL Protective Silicone Boot Sleeve for 12-40 oz Hydro Flask Insulated Water Bottles, Anti-Slip Bottom Cover”, https://www.amazon.com/s?k=B07QTY2XBQVZVD&i=sporting&ref=nb_sb_noss, April 2020
R6. “Felt Furniture Sliders Hardwood Floors X-PROTECTOR 16 PCS—Furniture Slider—Heavy Duty Felt Sliders Hard Surfaces—Move Your Furniture Easy & Safely!” https://www.amazon.com/s?k=B07QTY2HC3&i=sporting&ref=nb_sb_noss, April 2020
R7. “VELCRO Brand All-Purpose Elastic Straps|Strong & Reusable|Perfect for Fastening Wires & Organizing Cords|Black, 27 in×1 in|2 Count”, https://www.amazon.com/s?k=B00006IC2R&ref=nb_sb_noss, April 2020
Hiking becomes increasingly popular in U.S., but UC Davis (“Muscle matters: Dr Brenan Egan at TED×UCD” on YouTube) shows that “walking is not enough—we have to lift weights” to avoid sarcopenia (loss of muscle tissue as a natural part of the aging process). Hikers, inventors, and industry have tried to use bottles as dumbbells (patents 5580343, AT4824U1), light plastic bottles with hand-strap (available at sporting goods), bottle-carrying straps (available at ebay.com), and silicon carrier grips for water bottles (available at amazon.com). I have been hiking Bay Area trails for 20 years and I have observed only a handful of hikers a year lifting weights when walking. Why? Let's use math and physics for the explanation and for finding a solution:
Bootstrap converts any hiking bottle into safe and durable workout device. It consists of two main components:
1″-1.5″ plushed strap with low elasticity and high durability;
0.4″ or thicker silicon bumper for bottle bottom.
Embodiments differ from aesthetic and cost perspectives. Some embodiments can be applied to any bottle, other depend on bottle design. VELCRO® brand VELSTRETCH® tape used for the strap comes from industrial applications where it provides comfort for hands in similar circumstances: numerous expansions and contractions, substantial load, and high durability. Moderate pressure to the dorsal side of the hand provided by the strap allows a hiker to relax his/her grip. That minimizes shear stress on hands when bottles collide and reduces hands' fatigue when the hiker carries bottles around. Slight curvature of his/her fingers and support from the strap are enough to control the bottle. The second main component, thick bumper, absorbs impact on the bottles and on the hands when bottles collide. Bootstrap material and design suppress bottle's wiggling and keep the hiker's hand reliably confined between the strap and the bottle. That eliminates head, body, and hands injuries.
Background section thoroughly explains math and physics behind weightlifting exercise with hiking bottles, gives insight why previous solutions fail, and shows the path to the presented solution. Here we extend prior art with what it is, why it is referenced, and to show disadvantages or new usages.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,580,343—bottle with a rigid handle. Rigid handle will cause wrists fatigue and is unsafe to use in 3-4 hour weightlifting exercise.
Patent AT4824U1—dumbbell-shaped bottle. Our solution is for any hiking bottle, and there is no need to manufacture a special bottle for weightlifting.
R1—Lightweight plastic bottle with a hand-strap. The strap and the bottle materials are too weak to scale up to the heavy metallic bottle (that is our object).
R2—Bottle strap made of rigid material. This material will hurt hands if used on heavy metallic bottles at intensive weightlifting exercises (that is our subject).
R3, R4—Silicon bands for water bottles. These bands will squeeze and hurt hands when used with big and heavy bottles. And heavy bottles will be wiggling if controlled by such rubber bands, increasing risk of injuries.
R5—Silicon boot for HydroFlask or ThermoFlask. Its bottom will get chewed up quickly with a common weightlifting exercise where bottles collide up to 1,000 times a trip. With every independent claim we specify thicker bottom of this boot/bumper to prevent damaging bottles and hurting hands. Longer sleeve or a hole in the sleeve for a strap needed to secure boot/bumper to the bottle in some embodiments.
R6—Furniture sliders. In Do-It-Yourself embodiment we found new usage for them as bottle bumpers.
R7—VELCRO elastic strap. It is used in many industrial applications like lumber and cable holders. We claim another usage as a bottle strap. Soft lock should be flipped over to be used as the bottle strap and the length of the strap should be predefined.
Heavy bottle is a different beast than a light-weight (plastic, aluminum, or single-layered metallic without vacuum insulation) bottle. Weightlifting exercise performed hundred times several hours in row is a new experience. The idea of carrying 2-4 lb bottle in each hand several hours may sound daunting. But with new materials' usage, new design, and with the understanding of how hands and arms work with the bootstrapped bottles—we dramatically reduce stress, fatigue, and overall concerns around this exercise.
Many manufactures can add weightlifting elements to their hiking bottles easily. Number of bootstrapped bottle owners will eventually reach critical mass, and other hikers will ask: “What's that for?” and “Where did you buy them?” And voila—weightlifting while hiking is trending and now bootstrapped bottles have a broad base to spread across. Such perspective should petrify manufactures and vendors who have not adopted this idea in the first place:
It is about new market that can be grown to the stage when it becomes self-growing.
It is about new customers coming for two bottles—per person.
It is about old customers coming for another bottle and a bootstrap device for the bottle they already have.
Now it is the time to emphasize benefits of adding weightlifting on top of walking. It is all about health—the actual scope of this invention:
Lungs and heart are pumped in and out at 100% rate and beyond.
Sarcopenia (loss of muscle tissue as a natural part of the aging process) won't be waiting around the corner.
In COVID-19 pandemics, it is not the virus per se that kills, but the inability to breathe with stiffen lungs. Forcing lungs expansion and contraction helps to beat such complication. Preparing your rib cage muscles for such kind of battle is a smart move.
When COVID-19 patients are knocked out and hooked up to ventilators with medically induced coma for several weeks—physically fit individuals have much better chances to come off and to restart their system.
This application claims the benefit of provisional patent application Ser. No. 63/008,672, filed 2020 Apr. 11 by the present inventor.