In July my son Joel and I embark on a quest to complete the 430 mile Oregon section of the Pacific Crest Trail in under 30 days. Joel (trail name, Squints) is an experienced PCT thru hiker and I'm just a typical weekend day hiker. Follow along as we get back to nature along the Oregon Pacific Crest Trail and experience the joy and pain of long distance hiking together.
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Equipment Change
Sunday, April 24, 2011
The Big Three Gear List (keeping it light!)
All new gear from the ground up for me. Last time I owned backpacking equipment was in 1976 as a sophomore in high school. Let's just say gear technology has come a long way since then. I should have everything by the end of this month so we can make a gear test trip when the snow clears a bit off the passes. Last September I hiked a 15 mile PCT section from Timberline to Lolo Pass. For our test trip we're going to hike the last 29 mile leg from Lolo Pass down to Cascade Locks so I can claim the whole Oregon section when we finish at Timberline in late July.
1.) Most important gear first, the pack: I chose the Osprey Aethos 60. This pack has really high marks from current owners in on-line reviews. It felt molded to my back right away with an especially comfortable hip belt system. It's a balance between light weight, capacity and durability. Osprey's longstanding reputation for well engineered packs is legendary. On this trip our longest carry without a resupply will be seven days in southern Oregon so my goal was to keep the pack as light as possible and still have a decent capacity. A personal fitting at REI was extremely helpful.
2.) Tent: Big Agnes Fly Creek UL 1, Jeremy used it on his 2010 PCT thru hike and raved about how light it is and how easy it is to set up and tear down. It kept him dry through several days of rain in Oregon and Washington. Extremely durable and well designed Big Agnes FLC1 is an ultra-light one person tent. It weights in at only 1lb, 13 ounces including poles. I also popped for the Big Agnes FLC tent foot print as well.
3.) Sleeping Bag: The North Face Cat's Meow (+20) synthetic bag. Although heavier than a down bag, synthetic is the way to go if you plan on getting wet, and after all we are hiking in the Pacific Northwest. This bag has several excellent reviews on-line by current owners especially with the most recent re-design of the exterior material. It's light weight at only 2lbs, 12 ounces. Included with the bag is a compression sack that really compacts the bag into a size that just fits into the bottom sleeping bag compartment of the Aethos 60.
4.) Everything else: The guys have me convinced that less is the best so I'll be carrying a minimal amount of everything else. It's a fine balance between comfort and carrying too much weight. Example: my mess kit is one cup, one titanium cook pot, and one aluminum spork. For each of us Jeremy designed and built an alcohol stove made from beer cans. It works amazingly well and the fuel is dirt cheap and light weight. I'll have one change of hiker clothes, two nylon base layers, polyester thermals, two pairs of nylon/polyester underwear, Omni-Tech rain gear from Columbia and three pairs of Wigwam hiking socks to rotate out for the entire month. I can't wait to get on the trail!