Odor proof food-bag liner

food bag liner

I’ve been using an odor proof sack to line my food-bag,  since 2003.    They are supposed to be odor proof so the animals can’t smell your food.

I sleep with my food so it is a comfort to me to believe that the bears can’t smell my food bag;  I don’t really believe it but it is a comfort never the less.

Anyway it’s good to know that if anything gooey breaks open in my food bag that it is contained and won’t leak all over my gear.   I buy the 12X20 size.

The closure breaks right away but I just roll the bag under and call it good.   The rest of the bag will last for an entire thur-hike.

Because ideas and information should be free

booksYou probably know about Google Books;  you can type in any word or phrase and they will show you a bunch of books with that word or phrase and then you can preview the books.

It’s supposed to be like browsing at a book store but there are also books and magazines in their entirety for download.

Here is something Laen turned me on to.  It’s called Google Book Downloader ; it finds all the pages it can of a book and downloads them.  Then you can save it as a pdf and read it.

It’s a program you have to download.   Once you download it you need to read the instructions because it’s not that intuitive.

Then you put in the link for the book from Google Books or the ISBN and it starts finding your book, one page at a time.

On a dial up it is pretty slow, but eventually,  I end up with almost the entire book.

My favorite drink powders

I carry drink mixes on the trail.     I think they help, but it might just be my belief that they help that makes them help.  I don’t care.  As long as they keep me drinking fluids and I keep hiking.    These are my favorites:

and B vitamins   I’ve discovered this in 2007 and have been packing it ever since.    I don’t carry a stove any more so this is what I drink in the morning instead of coffee or tea.    Cheapest place to get it is at Walmart; it’s 2 dollars a box there.

msminfo

Emergen-C lite with MSM.    I have been packing this since 2001.  Cheapest place to buy it, is at Lucky vitamins.


  • Cal-Mag Fizz I read somewhere that taking calcium will reduce your chances of getting a stress fracture,  so I started takinCAL-MAG FIZZ INFOg this.   I like the way it tastes and it rejuvenates me like no other drink mix I have tried.

Cheapest place to buy it is at iHerb.com. Buy 4 and the shipping is free. Lemon-lime is the best tasting.

Trail scrubby

head netI usually bring half of a washcloth hiking because it’s hard to scrub off dirt without a rough cloth, but I usually lose it along the way.

This last trip I had the epiphany to use my mosquito head net for this purpose.

It scrubs better then a wash cloth and dries faster.

Another way I used it, was when encountering a shower with no soap, I pumped some soap out of the dispenser at the sink into my Summer Buff(like a bandanna), put it my head net, popped in the shower, and scrubbed away.

Bear stories

I had to drive down to the little store to pick up my new bag. While going there I met my neighbor on the road and stopped to talk to him.

He said that a bear had tipped over his porta-potty, ripped his tent, and knocked over his wood pile.

Then at the little store, there where all these stories flying around about bears crawling in through peoples open windows and trashing their cabins.

For some reason there are a lot of bears in the area this summer.

Probably a baby boom of bears a couple years ago and now we have a bunch of adolescent bears wrecking havoc.

Gear Review: Z-Rest (Full Length)

R-Rest

My pad of choice is a
full length Z-Rest. I have been carrying one since 2003.

I carry a full length because a single-walled sil-nylon tent can be a wet place to be and my full length pad is an island to sleep on; too many mornings I woke up with my feet in a puddle of water to go with anything less than full length.

I rarely put up my tent; with a full length pad I just whip it out, pull out my bag and I’m ready for bed. No ground cloth required.

I unfold my pad at every break to lounge on. When the ground is wet it’s nice to have something dry to lay on that won’t absorb water.

The Z-Rest stays comfy for a whole thru-hike; I usually replace my pad every 3000 miles or so.

A Z-Rest can be cut up and used for splinting material.

They are now called Z-lites and the manufacture is saying it weighs 14oz.(396 grams) Mine weighs 15oz.

Other pads I have used:

The Mt. Washington– 8oz for a 60inch pad–went flat fast; it wasn’t full length; the little air holes in it held water

Ultra light ThermaRest 3/4 -16oz–not convenient for breaks; needs to be protected from the ground; wasn’t full length; required carrying a ground sheet for camping without a tent.

Gear Review: Western Mountaineering Hot Sac vapor barrier liner

hot sac I’ve been caring a Western Mountaineering Hot Sac vapor barrier liner, instead of a space blanket, since 2003.

It’s like having an electric blanket in your pack. Just crawl inside and it offers up instant warmth. Stay too long and you will wake up in a pool of sweat but you will be warm.

At first I also used it as a pack liner but that’s hard on the reflective coating.

It weighs 4.5 ounces; worth it to know that no mater how cold and wet my world gets, I’m going to be sleeping warm.

A zipper would be nice so that a person could control the temperature. That would also make it useful as a sun tarp.

Western Mountaineering says it’s a proprietary fabric; too bad because it would be nice to make my own.

Backpack liner

Pack liner
I always line my backpack with a plastic bag, even if it doesn’t look like it will rain, because I might slip into the water at a water crossing and a backpack liner can make the difference between my pack floating or it become dead weight in the water.

White or clear are best; a black plastic garbage bag makes it hard to see the contents.

I usually use a pack liner from Gossamer gear. They weigh 1.2 ounces. One will last a whole thru-hike but sometimes I have to add some duct tape patches to it.

I never use a stuff sack for my sleeping bag, I just stuff it into the pack liner. It’s faster, doesn’t compress it so tightly, and I can fill up every inch of the bottom of my backpack.

Connected

Yesterday, I got the phone turned on at my cabin, so, I can now report things like, a bear just tried to jump into my open window.

At around midnight, the witching hour for bears, I hear something jumping up and hitting my cabin. I went out to investigate; it was a black bear; it ran away.

Every bear I have seen at night, I have seen at midnight.

Trail Twitter

  • Sitting at the Char Burger in Cascade Locks. #
  • Waiting for a ride to Portland. #
  • Going to get dry and clean. #
  • Swap out some gear and then head out for more. #
  • Plans have changed. #
  • Time to find a place to rest and regroup. #
  • Then stash my truck somewhere and rejoin the trail. #
  • It's hard to travel light when you have a truck with you. #