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Am I being foolhardy?


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Home Forums General Forums Philosophy & Technique Am I being foolhardy?

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  • #1225590
    Jonathan Marshall
    BPL Member

    @marshallj9

    Locale: Bay Area

    In the interest of further shrinking my pack, I propose to take for shelter on one-night summer backpacks to the Sierra only an ultralight 6 oz. bivy not fully waterproof) and for rain gear, just an emergency 2 oz. rain poncho. Naturally, I'll have to watch weather reports before going. Given that I'll only be gone one night, is this feasible or foolhardy?

    #1406881
    Mark Verber
    BPL Member

    @verber

    Locale: San Francisco Bay Area

    I would not recommend a DWR bivy and 2oz rain poncho. Yes, the sierras are pretty dry, but you can get surprised by rain (at least I have) and the nights in the high sierras can drop down pretty low.

    A much better option would be to take a poncho/tarp. You could easily get down to 8oz (your projected weight) with better protection when hiking and in camp.

    –mark

    #1406943
    Paul Tree
    Member

    @paul_tree

    Locale: Wowwww

    Sometimes you can get unforecast rain, but for one night you'll survive and hike out wet. Any sleeping bag or pad?

    #1406965
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    I'd second the suggestion to take a poncho/tarp and perhaps add a Gossamer Gear Thinlite 1/8" pad one of those Mylar emergency bags that weigh ~2.5-3 oz to climb into instead of a non-waterproof bivy bag-they're windproof AND waterproof. Both of these items together weigh about 5 oz. Assuming you also have adequate clothing and food, you should be OK for a night or 2. I'm not saying you will sleep like a baby, but you will more than likely survive. One further suggestion: pay real close attention to campsite selection, with an eye to shelter from wind and rain, and, if below treeline, the availability of vegetation(including pine boughs in an emergency) for insulation. Good luck!

    #1407068
    Jonathan Marshall
    BPL Member

    @marshallj9

    Locale: Bay Area

    Just to be clear, I certainly plan to carry a warm sleeping bag (albeit down, so I would be more vulnerable if it does rain). I just encounter rain so rarely on short outings, when I pay attention to weather reports, that I'm wondering about the risk factor of jettisoning a waterproof shelter.

    #1407070
    Rick Dreher
    BPL Member

    @halfturbo

    Locale: Northernish California

    So long as you're not up there during thunderstorm conditions you'd be fine. I can recall more than one Sierra night when I never had to change out of my hiking shorts and slept halfway out of my bag.

    Short of getting wet and hypothermic, the worst that might happen would be a sleepless, cold night. We've all had a few of those.

    #1408238
    D.H. Bathon
    Member

    @bathond

    Locale: North America

    This is an interesting thread nonetheless…

    Does anyone know of any WARM hikes that I could take my father, who is a first timer, on this December? I live in Georgia and he lives in Massachusetts, he has never asked to go camping with me before so I want to make it memorable, but I also want it easy enough that he will want to do it again.

    A wilderness area would be preferable to some place more popular, touristy.

    Any suggestions would be helpful, email me at [email protected] or reply at my post here:

    http://www.backpackinglight.com/cgi-bin/backpackinglight/xdpy/forum_thread/10352/index.html?skip_to_post=75126#75126

    #1408256
    John S.
    BPL Member

    @jshann

    Southern states…Big Bend National Park in the desert, southern california, south florida?

    #1408656
    Dave T
    Member

    @davet

    .

    #1408696
    D.H. Bathon
    Member

    @bathond

    Locale: North America

    Hey ya'll, apparently I offended some people by "shotgunning" this forum thread. My apologies, I mean to be a positive contributor to this forum, not obnoxious.

    I might be doing it again by posting this apology, but I wanted to make sure everyone knew it was a mistake.

    Regards,
    D.H.

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