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[pct-l] Pack Design Help
- Subject: [pct-l] Pack Design Help
- From: Lonetrail at aol.com (Lonetrail@aol.com)
- Date: Thu Dec 2 09:06:53 2004
Hi
I use a Suunto watch that has a compass, altitude & temperature indicators.
They now have one with GPS. I hate having to be slowed down by a hand held
GPS. Being one that don't know my left from my right or east from west. The
guide books sometime will read go east at junction. So I just hold my hand up
and check my compass. Also when I get on one of those endless mountains and I
need to know exactly were I'm at (Peace of Mind) especially if running out of
day light for my camp site or water. I can look at guide book/topo and check
my elevation and pretty well know were I'm at.. I have a GPS which stays in
my closet along with other my other junk.
Hope your home made backpack hold up on the trail
Lonetrail
On the PCT, you really won't need a compass, GPS, etc. very much, or at all.
So, if you carry one, stash it out of the way - emergency use only.
As for maps, most just use the guidebook sections - no extras. And they can
be folded or rolled up.
The data book sections are also somewhat useful - very small. But, often it
is difficult to figure out where you are: 2nd road, big stream, old jeep
track, etc. are a little cryptic. Yogi's sections also can be useful. You
could transcribe data from multiple sources onto one book.
In easy to reach pocket: camera, maybe snacks.
Pocket should be waterproof - or contents can be put in plastic bags.
I normally just rolled up the guide book section, put it in a plastic bag,
and stuck it next to my water bottle.
Consider small pockets on a hip belt - like the ULA or Six Moon Designs
packs.
Marshall Karon
Portland, OR
m.karon@comcast.net
----- Original Message -----
From: "Michael Lissner" <mlissner@benchpro.com>
To: <pct-l@mailman.backcountry.net>
Sent: Wednesday, December 01, 2004 10:47 PM
Subject: [pct-l] Pack Design Help
> Hey. I'm working on designing a pack that is similar to the Gossamer
> Gear G4, but with a map pocket of sorts on one side. I was planning on
> making it fit a regular map and compass, but then I realized that odds
> are good that those are not what I would be using during the trip.
>
> This question goes out to past thru-hikers. What did you use as a map
> during the trek, and was there anything that you kept with it? I'm
> thinking about making it fit the cut-up guidebook sections, but I am
> not sure if it should fit them, the databook, and yogi's little book,
> something else altogether, or just the guidebook sections.
>
> Feel free to think outside of the box. The real question is, if you
> had one pocket that was really easy to access with the pack on, what
> would you put in it, assuming you had another that was much bigger and
> fairly easy to access with the pack on.
>
> Hope that makes sense. If not, ask me what I am driving at, and I'll
> be glad to try to explain further what I want this pocket to be.
>
> Thanks
>
> -mike
>
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