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To Pack or Not to Pack? What constitutes an ‘essential’ item in a lightweight hiker’s overnight pack?


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Home Forums Campfire Editor’s Roundtable To Pack or Not to Pack? What constitutes an ‘essential’ item in a lightweight hiker’s overnight pack?

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Viewing 8 posts - 1 through 8 (of 8 total)
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  • #1230176
    Addie Bedford
    BPL Member

    @addiebedford

    Locale: Montana
    #1443117
    Bob Bankhead
    BPL Member

    @wandering_bob

    Locale: Oregon, USA

    Both of the following are totally weightless and essential to a good experience

    1) knowledge

    2) common sense

    #1443153
    Carol Crooker
    BPL Member

    @cmcrooker

    Locale: Desert Southwest, USA

    So true, Mark!
    Your head – don't leave home without it!

    #1443157
    Dale Wambaugh
    BPL Member

    @dwambaugh

    Locale: Pacific Northwest

    Most of the hiking mishaps I have read about involve breaking two rules: not having the basic essentials and not telling anyone where you are going.

    You need the basic essentials any time you leave the pavement. I carry many of them ON the pavement and in my vehicles as disaster support too:

    1. Map
    2. Compass
    3. Flashlight / Headlamp
    4. Extra Food
    5. Extra Clothes
    6. Sunglasses
    7. First-Aid Kit
    8. Pocket Knife
    9. Waterproof Matches
    10. Firestarter
    11. Water / Filter / Bottles
    12. Whistle
    13. Insect Repellents or Clothing
    14. Sunburn Preventative

    I have a much more extensive survival kit that I carry that has many small items that can help me spend a few unexpected nights out. A great deal of my hiking is solo and I prepare for getting lost, an injury that might curb my mobility, or the loss of my pack or shelter. A little duct tape, some extra line, a spare water container and treatment tabs, redundant fire starting materials, a spare compass, etc, can help you MacGuyver your way out of a tight spot.

    I carry extra clothing, food, a poncho shelter and a space blanket bivy on day hikes, even in the best of weather. Stuff happens, and those few extra ounces can make the difference between just an uncomfortable night out and one that is life-threatening. It may help me render aid to someone else too.

    I've had quite a bit of first aid training and I've cast a wary eye at some of the lists people put together for SUL kits, cutting their first aid items down to a couple bandaids and some duct tape. You don't need a suitcase full of stuff, but a small first aid kit doesn't weigh a lot and can make your trip safer and more comfortable.

    The reports of people leaving things like sleeping bags behind is just plain ignorance and poor judgment. People do stupid things all the time, so there's no reason to leave backwoods travel out of the picture.

    IMHO, it's sad a commentary on how we live and how we raise our kids. I remember when I was taking a physical geology class and many of the students were having a difficult time grasping the concepts of stream and river morphology and I can to realize that they simply hadn't spent any time wandering stream banks or watching a stream change over time– things I had done since I could walk.

    I was a Boy Scout too. With that and my family camping trips, I gained skills like fire-making, basic knots, navigation, signaling, and first aid. This stuff isn't rocket science and the information is easily found.

    #1443237
    David Olsen
    Spectator

    @oware

    Locale: Steptoe Butte

    I also think an essential is something that enables me to
    finish the hike and get at least some minimal enjoyment from
    it.

    Once got an eye infection from a combination of soft contact
    lenses and lots of horse poo dust on the trail. Kind of like
    snow blindness, I had to have help hiking out. A tiny tube
    of mercuric oxide or neosporine would have made all the
    difference. Could have been a potentially maiming situation.

    Another trip I caught a staff infection – barber's itch-
    from a cowpond where I went swimming. It spread everywhere
    the pack contacted my body. Not to the point of being
    life threatening, but I got no enjoyment from the trip for
    the next 6 days. If I hadn't been responsible for a dozen 10 year
    old boys I would have left the field the first day. Reminded me of chickenpox when I was a kid.
    Again, a tube of antibiotic cream would have helped a whole
    bunch.

    #1443529
    W I S N E R !
    Spectator

    @xnomanx

    Beautiful! Well written Mark, I'm with you.

    #1443595
    jason quick
    Spectator

    @jase

    Locale: A tent in my backyard - Melbourne

    A timely piece of writing.

    Your ideas serve as a nice reminder, which can also be applied to the forums and attitudes that are drawn to our conversations. Too often, forum threads and opinions become overwhelmingly personal, and quite nasty.

    Like you said, it is all about fun. Let's keep it that way, and enjoy.

    Thanks Mark.

    #1743934
    Perry H
    BPL Member

    @hphock

    Locale: Midwest

    I really like your list! A few things to I do to personally modify it (and why):

    1. Map (if available)
    2. Compass
    X 3. Flashlight / Headlamp
    4. Extra Food (granola bars and vitamins)
    5. Extra Clothes (depending on where I am trekking)
    X 6. Sunglasses
    7. First-Aid Kit
    8. Pocket Knife
    X 9. Waterproof Matches
    10. Fire starter
    X 11. Water / Filter / Bottles
    12. Whistle
    X 13. Insect Repellents or Clothing
    X 14. Sunburn Preventative

    + 2, big ziploc bags
    + water purification tablets
    + Magnesium fire starter
    + signal mirror
    + Emergency Blanket
    + Approx 50 feet of dental floss/twine (to hang the food), it’s strong enough to hang 3 granola bars, vitamins, and a ziploc bag!

    Sunglasses, Insect Repellents, and Suntan lotion are 'nice to have', but you can survive without them. I admit I carry them but they are not 'essential' to wilderness survival. I carry a headlamp, but not as an 'essential'. Items I carry incase I need to be found are a whistle, signal mirror, and the magnesium (I can spark it at a steady pace to create a strobe light effect). Magnesium fire starter works in any condition, matches can be temperamental.

    I know ultralight and SUL people frown upon extra clothes, but if you get wet, you need to be able to put on dry clothes. Otherwise, all you have to stave off hypothermia is a space blanket and hopefully warm fire.

    I, too, find it funny that people keep reducing and dwindling items out of their first aid kit. Before we know it, its just a needle, few matches, knife, and fishing line (ya, its meant to sound like something Rambo would carry). If you have your sleeping bag, then you can forgo the extra clothes as long as your bag is in a dry sack. This way you can remove your clothes, use your bag to stay warm, and use the emergency blanket as a tarp to keep the bag dry (assuming it’s a down bag).

    Use a ziploc bag as a makeshift water bottle – much lighter, no need to build a fire to purify water. Plus, if one plans on using fire to purify, what is going to hold the water?

    Mud makes a great sunburn prevention (ugly, yes, but works). I find the funkier I get, the less the insects bother me.

    This is how I pack my Items:

    Ziploc bag 1:
    1. Map (if available)
    2. Compass
    3. First-Aid Kit
    4. Pocket Knife (actually a small, sorta heavy, Gerber multi-tool)
    5. Magnesium
    6. Fire starter
    7. Whistle
    8. Signal mirror
    9. Emergency Blanket
    10. Approx 50 feet of floss

    Ziploc Bag 2:
    1. Extra Food (granola bars and vitamins)
    2. Extra Clothes (depending on where I am trekking)
    3. Water purification tablets

    And yes:
    3. Insect Repellent
    4. Sunburn Preventative

    Notice all the ‘Consumables’ (except for the first aid kit, and we hope that isn’t used) are in a separate bag for easy access and to hang if having to overnight.

    I know it’s redundant – but don't divide up the essentials between 2 or more people. Too often I see people divide up, or share, some of the things listed above. I REALLY frown at that since the whole idea is these items are what is necessary if you get separated from your partner/group. For that reason, my son carries the all the same items in his pack. Also, for my peace of mind, he MUST wear an additional whistle around his neck at all times (he’s 10). That way, worst case he goes to ‘use the facility’ and gets turned around, he can whistle easily. I'll be just out of sight, but definately within range of the whistle.

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