[pct-l] my first post: a test. *GEAR*
Paul Robison
paulrobisonhome at yahoo.com
Wed Nov 24 09:26:21 CST 2010
Thank you so much for the input !
i work for Indiana Underground so as my job i walk 12 miles a day right now. at
work i wear a 22 lb pack (i run a RADAR). i basically planned on just going
slow and getting used to the trail from mexico to big bear, and then pushing
miles from there. not going to be one of those 'oh i have to get my 20's in' in
the very beginning. my wife doesn't work but she's been 'training' on a
treadmill... We're just planning on finding a naural pace and letting our
conditioning adjust, then pushing hard out of wrightwod depending on how early
we are set to get at KM. we started a 2010 thru hike but we had an attrocious
amount of gear (think survival camping load out)... and then we got into a
little bit of legal trouble which ate up 3 weeks of our time and 5,000$ in
lawyers fees; so we decided just to put the wholething off until 2011 and
approach the trail more educated and financially ready.
please note i'm hiking with my Wife; so 2X neo-airs is one for me and one for
her. my wife's rainjacket is the arcteryx paclite and it's significantly
lighter, but i do love my MHW Typhoon. i used to use the MHW Phantom 32
sleeping bag but i've been making Quilts since i was 11; so i ended up sewing a
high tech one, and we just used it at 22 F and we were plenty warm under it
together. that's 2lb 2 oz to share, so we save a LOT of baseweight on the MYOG
top quilt.
the neo air and the Z lite weigh the same... and i tried a montbell ultrathin
foam mat and that thing was impossible to sleep on. i have a few foam rolls
like the ridge rest, but they actuall weigh more than the neo air. BTW, our
are the thigh length version. Actually i saw shroomer useing the neo air and i
bougth one later this year for smaller excursions but after feeling how nice it
was i couldn't resist buying a second for my girl.
i dont have a lot of expirience with the Meta 2P yet... i've used it for a 4 day
trip on the AT and a 5 day trip in michigan and just a few overnighters... but
it's held up to so pretty good storms. and stays DRY. what i love more about it
is the ENOURMOUS vestibules and the peak height is on either side of the tent
instead of in the middle. obviously a small tarp would be better, and maybe is
the right choice until idyllwild etc. but based on how cold the beginning of
2010 was; i'd like the protection of the tent. and past there, it's bug proof
which is kind of nice.
ahh the canister stove issue. honestly, i've never tried alcohol. i do like
the idea of it because i realize my kitchen is the last place i have that i can
really shave some weight (that and my trekking poles; but the mont bell
ultralight poles i keep hearing about snapped poles and with them being my tent
poles i wanted some heft.) my worry is with cooking for two, the added fuel
needed for the alcohol almost offsets the weight of the cannister. that and
'ease of use' of the alcy stove, it's familiar and comfortable. i suppose
around the new year i should make an alcohol stove and play with it then decide
closer to april which to take.
How do you guy measure your baseweight? does it include all your worn
clothing? if it does not include your shoes or the clothes you wear i can see
us being under ten pounds each as possible, if we can do that we'll be
laughin'.
thanks again for the reply and advice,
~Paul
________________________________
From: Austin Williams <austinwilliams123 at gmail.com>
To: Paul Robison <paulrobisonhome at yahoo.com>; pct-l at backcountry.net
Sent: Wed, November 24, 2010 2:49:30 AM
Subject: Re: [pct-l] my first post: a test.
How many miles per day do you pan to hike (roughly)? Are you thinking 10-15, or
(more commonly) 19-21 , or (faster) 25+?
Or (same question, phrased a different way) how long do you plan to take
(roughly) to complete your hike?
The answers to these questions might help me be able to make better gear
recommendations.
By the way, your gear list looks pretty awesome so far!
I would recommend leaving the canister stove at home and going with either and
esbit or (more commonly) an alcohol stove. That'll save you some weight if you
choose to do that.
BTW, the MHW typhoon jacket is freaking awesome. Good choice. There are much
lighter ones out there, but that jacket is rad.
2 X neo air.... you do like your good sleep don't you! I (as f you couldn't
tell already) am a UL gram weenie.... and I think my knees might buckle under
the wieght of this thing! LOL. I recommend trading it in. But then again, I'm
one of the guys that use a half-length closed cell foam pad (4oz). Just a
thought. Don't ditch anything you can't enjoy your hike without.
And the tent is awesome... I love it. But for a thruhike I'd bring a tarp
instead... you'd cut about 2 lbs off your shelter weight. Then again... it
*is* an awesome tent and frankly 26 pound split between 2 people is only a 13
pound base pack wieght for each of you. You're already starting off on the
right foot.
I usually hike with an 8-9lbs base packwieght.... but if you pictured me
basically sleeping with just a little piece of plastic between me and the
ground, beating the midnight rain rain with a little squar of Tyvek, and cooking
over a burning match - you wouldn't be far off from the reality of the
situation. :)
But I'm comfortable that way. Your comfort zones (and your girlfriends) may be
different.
Good list so far.
Man you are in for an awesome 2011!--
Austin Williams
www.PlanYourHike.com
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