ARTICLE OUTLINE
- Episode No. 1: Weigh Your Stuff
# WORDS: 70
# PHOTOS: 1
Member Exclusive
A Premium or Unlimited Membership* is required to view the rest of this article.
* A Basic Membership is required to view Member Q&A events
ARTICLE OUTLINE
# WORDS: 70
# PHOTOS: 1
A Premium or Unlimited Membership* is required to view the rest of this article.
* A Basic Membership is required to view Member Q&A events
Ryan Jordan is the founder and publisher of Backpacking Light. Ryan has spent more than 35 years in the outdoor industry as a guide, educator, university researcher, journalist, and publisher. His engineering background (Ph.D., Montana State University), expedition, and multisport experience inform his investigative approach to gear design and performance in response to adversarial conditions in all seasons.
Join Our Community
Unrestricted access to all forums, plus the ability to post and start new threads.
Unrestricted access to all 2,300+ articles, gear reviews, skills, stories, and more.
Post new content to the community including gear swaps, reviews, trip reports and more!
Get unlimited access to all our online education (*Unlimited membership required).
Pack less. Be more. Become a member today!
Discussion
Become a member to post in the forums.
Companion forum thread to:
The 60-Second Backpacker, Episode No. 1: Weigh Your Stuff
When I first started this crazy weighing adventure I was a little skeptical. One of the first items I weighed was a 1970's era stuff sack. Why even bother to find out the burden imposed by a mere stuff sack? The weight was about 6 ounces IIRC. Equivalent volume stuff sacks are now available at sub one ounce weights. I quickly became hooked on weighing everything.
Yeah, I agree John. It really is surprising how much some stuff weighs. I would say the next steps (after these) are:
* Ask people for advice. They will suggest all sorts of things (lighter gear, leaving it at home or different types of gear).
* Find your own compromise. So what if someone else uses a tarp? Bring a tent if you want a tent. But maybe you can find a lighter tent. Don't assume that there is only one way to "be ultralight". There are plenty of ways of reducing the weight, but it is hard to find those ideas if you don't ask.
I have both a digital scale, and just purchased a hanging scale for larger things. I could not figure out how to weigh larger items like a gore tex jacket so I purchased the hanging scale. Now I can weight larger awkward items as well as smaller stuff, and it will work for my total pack weight as well.
I have always been a traditional backpacker, carrying large weights. From the first trip at 16 by myself on the AT in Pennsylvania, to the US army infantry carrying large loads. Either I was carrying the family stuff, or just wanted to bring along extra items to make the back country experience "better." In the end it just killed my back and my longing to go. Then I started to read about this lighter is better thing… and am slowly going over to the ligher side.
This year I purchased a HMG 4400 cubin pack, a warbonnet down comforter, a marmount rain jacket, a titanium cooking kit, several types of stoves, a sawyer mini filter, Solomon trail runners… wow. The list is long, and I haven't weighed the entire kit yet, but I know I have dropped a lot of weight off my back and feet. Next month my family will go back to Jasper lake in Colorado to revisit a trip that several years saw me carrying 55-=60 lbs and now will be around 35. The difference should be amazing for these old bones. I still have a 5.5 lb tent, a go-lite shangri la 5 to change out in the future, but on the road to getting lighter. Not ultra light by any means, but light for me. It helps that my son can now carry his own gear in a ULA circuit. And he will help with the tent.
I couldn't have done some of this without backpacking light. This site motivated me to start looking at my equipement seriously in terms of weight. Wish I had done it sooner.
For weighing clothing, just roll it up and put a rubber band around it or put it in a stuff sack. If you're really anal about it, you can use TARE to zero out the rubber band weight, or the weight of the stuff sack if it's not actually used. I've done this so many times I can tell you the typical rubber band I use weighs 0.4g
Not for nuthin', "analyze" does begin with "anal" :^)
Just use the bowl of your digital kitchen scale (tare it out). Works with most items. Hanging scale (park tool) for heavier items are ok, but usually only +/- 10grs accurate…8
There is a useful tool: https://www.geargrams.com
(I am NOT related to the guys at geargrams.com in any way, just started to use their tool a couple of months ago and found it more comfortable than my spreadsheets…)
Become a member to post in the forums.