Neil said:What would be going through your mind after you decide to crawl into your bag, lay down on the ground and wait? Happy thoughts?
My kids need me.
Neil said:What would be going through your mind after you decide to crawl into your bag, lay down on the ground and wait? Happy thoughts?
I went through that and decided that better "2fer's" were a good down parka with hood, fleece pants and an extra change of capilenes and wool socks. All those I can use regularly as well as layering up for a night in the woods in my VBL bag trying to start a fire with wet wood while melting snow with my esbit.Neil said:I think the only way to survive a cold night out with no fire is with a sleeping bag, pad and bivvy. End of discussion for me. Time to shop for a bag. I think a zero bag would be sufficient.
Happy thoughts !Neil said:What would be going through your mind after you decide to crawl into your bag, lay down on the ground and wait? Happy thoughts?
sleeping bear said:Skinny people don't make it because they have no insulation.
A snowshoe can also be used as a shovel in an emergency.sleeping bear said:I call my shovel the "11th essential" and usually carry it in winter. The main purpose of it being that I could easily excavate or build a snow shelter.
hikerfast said:If anyone can get hold of the older guidebooks, or some other older winter hiking material, you will notice how much more seriously they take it.
sardog1 said:Or you could look in my pack.
As one small example: Some of the "after-action" news coverage from Lafayette includes references to the importance of the insulating pad that the subject carried with him. Its importance was made plain to me years ago when I was being indoctrinated in things montane out West. Don't see nearly enough of them being carried around here, IMO.
One of my packs uses a rectangle of closed cell foam as a framesheet. All I have to do is pull it out.sardog1 said:insulating pad that the subject carried with him.
bikehikeskifish said:The "MacGyver" factor
Second mention of "can you" -- I can't. How do you?
Tim
You have to make a pad (wet wood will do) and build your fire on top of it. Otherwise the melting snow is likely to put your fire out.bikehikeskifish said:Thanks... Now I'm curious about building a fire on snow -- you state "fires on snow do not work" but sleeping bear says "am capable of making a fire from wet wood in the snow."
Another good multi-use thing to carry is a length, maybe 6' to 10', of a medium guage wire. This can be used for repairs, traps , bindings, etc as well as to make a mesh pad to build a fire on.bikehikeskifish said:Thanks... Now I'm curious about building a fire on snow -- Tim
Chip said:Care to share your specifics ? I'm interested in what you had for clothes and how cold you were prepared to go. I assume you did not carry a gore-tex type hard-shell in addition to the rainsuit ?
DougPaul said:You have to make a pad (wet wood will do) and build your fire on top of it. Otherwise the melting snow is likely to put your fire out.
Doug
A little heavy for the backcountry...bikehikeskifish said:a propane torch makes an excellent (and low-smoke!) fire starter.
Enter your email address to join: