hikingmaineac
New member
Poll: Do you typically carry overnight gear on a winter 4K day hike?
Question: Do you typically carry overnight gear on a winter 4K day hike?
Qualifier: I consider the following items to be overnight gear:
1: A sleeping bag
2: A windproof, waterproof barrier for the sleeping bag.
3: Something other than a backpack to sleep/sit on to separate your body from the ground. (This is the least important in my opinion as you don't HAVE to sleep to survive a night out - so sitting on a pack is acceptable to me.)
Background:
For the most part I am a fair-weather winter hiker as I drive 2 hours to get to the Whites and enjoy a number of winter activities besides hiking. I was having a discussion with my wife about how heavy our packs were for our Mt. Washington hike this past weekend and I told her that I'm sure many folks out there carry even more gear than I was - namely those who always or often carry a sleeping bag and something more than a space blanket bivy such as a goretex bivy or tent on winter hikes.
Solo vs. Group Preparedness:
Personally when hiking with others I don't bring quite as much emergency gear as when I hike solo. (Although I understand and sometimes agree with the notion that those who have more experience have the responsibility to be over-prepared to help out those in their party, or otherwise, who do not have as much experience and are under-prepared.) When solo, I would have to attend to my own broken, bruised, or otherwise injured body. That might mean at worst - crawling into a sleeping bag and emergency bivy and praying that I'm found before I expire.
So, that being said - I always:
1: Have an emergency space bivy in my pack
2: At least 1 dry base layer top, bottom and socks in case I have to stop moving for an extended period of time (I'm lost, sudden bad weather, or unable to walk but not life-threateningly injured).
3: I bring a puffy down jacket with me for hikes with extended periods above the treeline.
4: I often hike with plastic-bottom, roll-up foam sled that I could use as a seat/mat. If I don't have a sled I carry a mini z-rest closed cell foam seat.
In summary: When solo, I pack the sleeping bag AND down jacket, and consider the goretex bivy depending on mileage. When with a group, the sleeping bag and goretex bivy stay at home.
Question: Do you typically carry overnight gear on a winter 4K day hike?
Qualifier: I consider the following items to be overnight gear:
1: A sleeping bag
2: A windproof, waterproof barrier for the sleeping bag.
3: Something other than a backpack to sleep/sit on to separate your body from the ground. (This is the least important in my opinion as you don't HAVE to sleep to survive a night out - so sitting on a pack is acceptable to me.)
Background:
For the most part I am a fair-weather winter hiker as I drive 2 hours to get to the Whites and enjoy a number of winter activities besides hiking. I was having a discussion with my wife about how heavy our packs were for our Mt. Washington hike this past weekend and I told her that I'm sure many folks out there carry even more gear than I was - namely those who always or often carry a sleeping bag and something more than a space blanket bivy such as a goretex bivy or tent on winter hikes.
Solo vs. Group Preparedness:
Personally when hiking with others I don't bring quite as much emergency gear as when I hike solo. (Although I understand and sometimes agree with the notion that those who have more experience have the responsibility to be over-prepared to help out those in their party, or otherwise, who do not have as much experience and are under-prepared.) When solo, I would have to attend to my own broken, bruised, or otherwise injured body. That might mean at worst - crawling into a sleeping bag and emergency bivy and praying that I'm found before I expire.
So, that being said - I always:
1: Have an emergency space bivy in my pack
2: At least 1 dry base layer top, bottom and socks in case I have to stop moving for an extended period of time (I'm lost, sudden bad weather, or unable to walk but not life-threateningly injured).
3: I bring a puffy down jacket with me for hikes with extended periods above the treeline.
4: I often hike with plastic-bottom, roll-up foam sled that I could use as a seat/mat. If I don't have a sled I carry a mini z-rest closed cell foam seat.
In summary: When solo, I pack the sleeping bag AND down jacket, and consider the goretex bivy depending on mileage. When with a group, the sleeping bag and goretex bivy stay at home.
Last edited: