Hiking Journals Preserve Your Hiking ExperiencesHiking is a grand way to escape the rat race and be one with nature. Alas, your hiking experiences can fade with measure . The best way to prevent this is to keep a hiking journal for your trail experiences. Hiking JournalsTake a minute to give some... Full Article
Sleeping Pads For Lightweight BackpackingUltralight backpackers want to give up weight, not comfort. Sleeping pads are pretty much a necessity for backpacking comfort, but who desire to carry those monstrous old inflatables down the trail? Try some of these lightweight options instead. You ... Full Article | | | Ultralight Backpacking - Getting Started |
Want to run up that ridge, just to see whats there? Want to easily carry your pack up those fourteeners, so you can go down by any route you choose? Want to feel successful
at the finish
of a twenty-mile day? Its instant to liighten your load.
Ultralight Backpacking - The First 3 Steps
1. Buy a light backpack. Mine weighs 14 ounces, and Ive used it on week-long trips. Dont go over two pounds.
2. Buy a light sleeping bag. I stay warm in my 17-ounce bag down to freezing. Dont go over three pounds.
3. Buy a light shelter. My tarp weighs just 16 ounces with all strings, but if you prefer a tent, keep it to three pounds.
The "big three" above are where you save the most weight. After those, consider each merchandise
carefully. Do you absolutely need it? What happens if you dont bring it? Are there lighter alternatives? After youve cut down your weight, you might
always add back a luxury or two. But then, ultralight backpacking is a luxury in itself.
Money helps reduce weight. The lightest gear can be expensive. If you do not
have much money, well...decent rain jackets cost a sixth of the effective ones, and weigh almost the same. There are many options.
Learning Ultralight Techniques
Knowledge allows you to make use of
a tarp instead of a tent, to carry only a pint of water (depending on location) by filling up at every stream, and to eat a belly full of berries instead of carrying fruit. Read, learn, practice, and backpacking will be lighter AND more safe.
In the meantime, walk a few times a week on uneven ground (not down the sidewalk). This strengthens your ankles. You will
love hiking in running shoes instead of clunky boots, and you may safely do this if your ankles are ready.
Problems Of Ultralight Backpacking
There are limitations to ruminate on
with lightweight backpacking. Some techniques require practice, for example. Learn to pitch your tarp, or you will
get wet. Keep your down sleeping bag dry, or youll get cold. Dont try to carry thirty-five pounds in your new ultralight backpack, which brings up the next point.
Ultralight gear might
be fragile. My 14-ounce waterproof/breathable rainsuit, for example, is not as tough as an expensive, heavier nylon/Gortex one. Still, Ive used it for ten months, from Michigan forests to Ecuadorian glaciers. At $50, compared to $300 for high-tech rainsuits, I figure I might
replace it a couple times in my life, and still save funds
and weight.
Bottom line: The problems of ultralight backpacking are small compared to the advantages. Become an ultralight backpacker and you will not
go back to the traditional routine of struggling and suffering.
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