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RE: [pct-l] I carry less overall weight......
- Subject: RE: [pct-l] I carry less overall weight......
- From: Brick Robbins <brick@fastpack.com>
- Date: Thu, 20 Jul 2000 09:48:48 -0700
At 08:53 AM 7/20/00 , "Reynolds, WT" <reynolds@iLAN.com> wrote:
>Brick-
>I think we are making two different points
I disagree with your basic assumption.
My point is from looking in MY pack and knowing what I carry.
If I am going to be lugging the stuff around on my back I take special care
to bring good-tasting no-cook, or soak-and-heat meals. I have lived on the
stuff for several thousand miles and several months of backpacking. It is
possible, it just takes more pre-trip work and planning that a quick trip
to the store.
You are approaching this from a weekender point of view, but promoting your
conclusions as a general solution. This long distance hiker looks at things
differently.
>Look at what you cook at home. You have to SIMMER all the time. If no simmer
>food tasted better why not eat it at home?
I don't eat the soak-and-heat meals at home, because I fail to see any
reason to do the dehydrate, then rehydrate a meal I could have just eaten
out of the pot (or spend the extra money on commercially prepared meals).
My soak-and-heat meals have ALREADY been simmered on my gas range at home.
No need to simmer them again in the field.
>So why not take what you LIKE to eat on the trail?
Generally I do LIKE what I eat on the trails. I even eat lots of it at home
(at least he no-cook stuff) I will also put up with more boring hot meals
while backpacking to save the weight, just like I will put up with a mat
instead of a bed, and no showers.
If food was as important to me as it seems to be to you, I may do things
differently. As long as I have my 5000 calories a day (for 25-30 miles a
day), and the food doesn't offend me, then I'm fairly happy. Trail hunger
can do wonderful things to the taste of de-hi food. If course, if you are
sitting around in camp all day, and not hiking, you probably don't have the
same kind of trail hunger.
>Therefore I leave for a weeks walk with about 12 ounces [fuel+container] and
>3.5 ounces [stove] for a total weight of 16 ounces for 8 overnights.
>Theirfore the most weight you can save is a pound.
That assumes that you start a week's walk with a full container each time.
Once again a weekender point of view. What if you are going for a 3 day
section between mail drops?
I bring a one ounce stove, and 3 oz of fuel in a 1 oz bottle. You bring a
3.5 oz stove, a partial container of fuel (5-6 oz?) and a full one (12 oz)
because the partial might not last.
I have 5 oz, you have 20+ oz........... For folks who chop off toothbrush
handles, that is quite a difference.
> However I'll still eat real spaghetti.
Spaghetti works just fine as heat and soak. There is no need to "simmer"
it. I don't even simmer it at home.
My weight savings is in the fuel, not the food.
-Brick
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