Important understanding about camping stoves... What type of camping, hiking, or backpacking do you do? Do you camp at parks, out of your car, or do you carry everything on your back? Do you camp only in North America?Do you positive need a camping burner for winter camping or do you mostly cam... Full Article
Ten Essentials For Backpacking Trips Ive had backpacking trips that included rain, snow, lightning, rockslides, altitude sickness, and twenty-mile days - all in a summer weekend. Wilderness trips may be dangerous, but you may generate then less so, by having the following ten essential... Full Article | | | Winter Backpacking Tips |
Winter backpacking can mean your footprints are the only ones out there. That enhances
to the beauty of the knowledge, but also to the danger. Alone and in a cold enviroment, its important to understand
what to do in an emergency. Learning a few basic cold weather survival skills may save your life.
Fire Making
Imagine slipping into a stream and soaking everything with you, when you are more than a day from the nearest roadway
and its below freezing out. What would you do? Start a fire, of course, but can you?
Always carry waterproof matches, and practice starting a fire in the cold BEFORE you go winter backpacking. Learn which tinders work even when wet. Birch bark, for example, will burn when wet, and so will sap from pines and spruces. You can have only minutes before your fingers get too cold to function, so speed is of the essence.
Winter Backpacking - Survival Shelters
You will
most likely have a tent with you, but you still can want to learn shelter building using snow blocks. Sometimes you may stomp out blocks without tools, using your feet, and then liff them from beneath. Just play around in your backyard until you get the hang of it. In an emergency, or if the weather turns extremely cold, you might
want to put your tent behind a wall of snow blocks, to stop the wind.
If it isnt raining, a quick survival shelter for warmth is a pile of dry leaves, grass, braken ferns or other plants. I once collected enough dried grass from a frozen swamp in thirty minutes to contruct
a pile several feet thick. I slept warmly in the middle of it (half the insulating grass above, half below) with just a jacket, in spite of
below freezing temperatures.
Staying Dry
You could be
wet and warm when it far below freezing, as long as you are active. The moment you stop moving, however, you beginning to lose your body heat. Once you get chilled through, it is difficult to get warm again. Hypothermia (a lowered body temperature) kills many many people
every year.
If you get wet, try to get dry before you go to sleep. Put dry clothes on if you have them, and use a fire to dry any wet clothes. Earlier in the day, you can be able to hang damp clothes on your pack to dry in the sun. Often when it is coldest, the air is dryer.
Try not to sweat. Adjust your layers, removing and adding shirts, sweaters and jackets as necessary to keep from getting too hot or too cold. Sweat, and clothes damp with sweat, will cause you to lose body heat fast once you stop moving. Stay dry to stay warm.
There are many other cold weather survival skills that you can want to learn. (You might
generate heat by eating fatty foods, for example.) You dont positive need
to understand
hundreds of skills and techniques, but why not learn a few basics, like the ones above, before your next winter backpacking trip?
| - |
|
|