Back from the woods, but had a lousy night - the weight but also the bulk, and the faff of it all. The big rucksack is wholly filled with the sleeping bag, which I can't get packed down much further. & this is before I add any food or a pan to cook it in. I can't work out where to make savings. I think the weight would be less of a bother if it was better-distributed.
It's 10.2kg of stuff i can measure, but i've not weighed the entire pack on a scales. Google tells me I should be aiming for 9 - 13.6kg. Apparently, military people carry up to 45kg but the context for the article i learned this from was veterans with back pain issues so I'd like to stay under that threshold.
Use-case:
More wild camping than hiking any real distance - building up to living in the woods for a few days. Mostly chilling, doing camp crafts, building lil shelters, watching the world. None of it very far from civilisation or in extreme weather situations.
My current plan is to sort it into two bags, rope one bag up a tree, have a daysack for wandering with till I find a nice camp, and then schlep the sleep stuff up there. Like establishing a series of base camps. Probably incorporating walking in and out of town for refils of water and food/disposing of litter. But I'd like to do some wandering about & feeling like a rugged man of the wilds. And there's also some small risk (tho only to property) of leaving half my setup unattended for much of the day. Ideally, I'd just like to carry what I need.
Currently carrying:
FOOD
- Kelly Kettle (trekker) - [0.47kg]
- 1.2liters of water in 2 flasks [1.198kg + flasks from supermarket]
SLEEPING
- Salamander OEX hooped bivi [1.24 kg]
- inflatable sleeping mat (eurohike - cheap, but doesn't feel heavy)
- reflective aluminium mat (reclaimed food packaging - weightless)
- wool roll mat
- Fesca/british army sleep system [4 or 4.5kg]
[light: 2-2.2kg; winter: 2-2.2kg]
SHELTER
- OEX bush tarp [0.55kg]
- cord
- rope
- tent pegs
CARRY
- one big rucksack (lichfield explorer 70+ - 80liters)[2.24 kg]
- one small rucksack
- everything is rolled & bound with cord, no stuff sacks
GENERAL
- camp lantern
- head torch
- oppinel knife
- hiking stave
- small first aid kit
- small sewing kit
- firestarting kit
- 2x empty bag-for-life
- notepad & pen
- poop kit (loo roll/hand san/poo bags)
- phone
CLOTHES
- wool blanket
- poncho
- hat
- snood
Things I'd like to add to my setup:
- hygiene
- change of clothes/pajamas
- food
- multi-purpose cooking container/cup/pan
- mini axe or a roll of pre-prepped wood
- book
- hammock (for relaxing at camp)
Kit thoughts:
- Not loving the hooped bivi. it's claustrophobic & hard to get comfy in, & tricky to balance all the sleeping bags and layers of mat. and like the worst of both worlds between a bivi bag and an actual tent. I feel like for the same weight, I can probably get a pricy tent that's a little more generously sized. It's a lifesaver for midges over a bag-type-bag, but it's just no fun to curl up in with a book.
- I'm also not loving the kettle. It takes up space & is wobbly to operate (you definitely can't put the pot-rest on top of the kettle with a pot on it safely). The space is very small to make a good enough fire for cooking on. i can now make a decent coffee, but 2-minute-tortellini eludes me - and that's sat at home with pre-prepped wood. In general, too, there's some obvious ethical issues about wild fires (even in stoves - there was a lot of spitting sparks last night) and using wood from the wild and health implications, and maybe I should just cut that aspect entirely - fire is a tricky, time-consuming, resource intensive thing. That would also cut out the spare water, wood, fire kit, and axe. But hot meals and drinks are satisfying.
- I AM enjoying my absurdly cosy arctic-rated sleeping bag, but it's so huge packed. It's not even heavy, really, just bulky & unbalanced.
- I love my freezer-bag-for-lifes, they're so great. You can sit on them, use them for carrying & gathering, you can sort things into them when rummaging for something at the bottom of a rucksack, they weigh nothing, you can use them for extra sleep insulation, you can probably carry water in them. Ridiculously useful things. And great for chucking everything into if you need to get back to the car in a hurry.
It's 10.2kg of stuff i can measure, but i've not weighed the entire pack on a scales. Google tells me I should be aiming for 9 - 13.6kg. Apparently, military people carry up to 45kg but the context for the article i learned this from was veterans with back pain issues so I'd like to stay under that threshold.
Use-case:
More wild camping than hiking any real distance - building up to living in the woods for a few days. Mostly chilling, doing camp crafts, building lil shelters, watching the world. None of it very far from civilisation or in extreme weather situations.
My current plan is to sort it into two bags, rope one bag up a tree, have a daysack for wandering with till I find a nice camp, and then schlep the sleep stuff up there. Like establishing a series of base camps. Probably incorporating walking in and out of town for refils of water and food/disposing of litter. But I'd like to do some wandering about & feeling like a rugged man of the wilds. And there's also some small risk (tho only to property) of leaving half my setup unattended for much of the day. Ideally, I'd just like to carry what I need.
- What should I cut?
- Any recommendations for things to get instead?
- Any light recommendations to meet the things I want to add to the kit?
- Anything I can swap out for something more multi-purpose?
Currently carrying:
FOOD
- Kelly Kettle (trekker) - [0.47kg]
- 1.2liters of water in 2 flasks [1.198kg + flasks from supermarket]
SLEEPING
- Salamander OEX hooped bivi [1.24 kg]
- inflatable sleeping mat (eurohike - cheap, but doesn't feel heavy)
- reflective aluminium mat (reclaimed food packaging - weightless)
- wool roll mat
- Fesca/british army sleep system [4 or 4.5kg]
[light: 2-2.2kg; winter: 2-2.2kg]
SHELTER
- OEX bush tarp [0.55kg]
- cord
- rope
- tent pegs
CARRY
- one big rucksack (lichfield explorer 70+ - 80liters)[2.24 kg]
- one small rucksack
- everything is rolled & bound with cord, no stuff sacks
GENERAL
- camp lantern
- head torch
- oppinel knife
- hiking stave
- small first aid kit
- small sewing kit
- firestarting kit
- 2x empty bag-for-life
- notepad & pen
- poop kit (loo roll/hand san/poo bags)
- phone
CLOTHES
- wool blanket
- poncho
- hat
- snood
Things I'd like to add to my setup:
- hygiene
- change of clothes/pajamas
- food
- multi-purpose cooking container/cup/pan
- mini axe or a roll of pre-prepped wood
- book
- hammock (for relaxing at camp)
Kit thoughts:
- Not loving the hooped bivi. it's claustrophobic & hard to get comfy in, & tricky to balance all the sleeping bags and layers of mat. and like the worst of both worlds between a bivi bag and an actual tent. I feel like for the same weight, I can probably get a pricy tent that's a little more generously sized. It's a lifesaver for midges over a bag-type-bag, but it's just no fun to curl up in with a book.
- I'm also not loving the kettle. It takes up space & is wobbly to operate (you definitely can't put the pot-rest on top of the kettle with a pot on it safely). The space is very small to make a good enough fire for cooking on. i can now make a decent coffee, but 2-minute-tortellini eludes me - and that's sat at home with pre-prepped wood. In general, too, there's some obvious ethical issues about wild fires (even in stoves - there was a lot of spitting sparks last night) and using wood from the wild and health implications, and maybe I should just cut that aspect entirely - fire is a tricky, time-consuming, resource intensive thing. That would also cut out the spare water, wood, fire kit, and axe. But hot meals and drinks are satisfying.
- I AM enjoying my absurdly cosy arctic-rated sleeping bag, but it's so huge packed. It's not even heavy, really, just bulky & unbalanced.
- I love my freezer-bag-for-lifes, they're so great. You can sit on them, use them for carrying & gathering, you can sort things into them when rummaging for something at the bottom of a rucksack, they weigh nothing, you can use them for extra sleep insulation, you can probably carry water in them. Ridiculously useful things. And great for chucking everything into if you need to get back to the car in a hurry.