JoHNI_T
Active VIP Member
Same rule in our group: no major adventures will be initiated after 4 pm!
430 sometimes....
Same rule in our group: no major adventures will be initiated after 4 pm!
My list of items.
In my Avy Pack:
- shovel
- spare gloves
- mid layer
- flint
- dryer lint
- torch
- wetfire
- lighter
- first aid kit
- beef jerkey
- trail mix
- leatherman
- head light
- saw
- flash light
- inReach
- Garmin 650
- water
- probe
- bivy sack
- cell phone turned off in pelican case
- odds and sods of parts, zap straps, hose clamps etc.
- SOL small survival kit (see pic)
On my sled:
- Jet Boil
- dehydrated food
- orange hand smoke signal
- bear bangers
- flares
- pencil flare
- variety of tools
- tea lights
- small lantern
- bivy sack
- tow ropes
- canned food
- spare gloves
- zip loc bags
- wetfire
- saw
- tea
- Sam splint
- glow stick
- collapsible bowl
- barrier device
View attachment 163781
Anyone ever try the solo stove? small and light, burns twigs/branches. It has an alcohol burning insert and a pot everything fits in. Think I may buy one to try and add to my pack. Any thoughts???
Anyone ever try the solo stove? small and light, burns twigs/branches. It has an alcohol burning insert and a pot everything fits in. Think I may buy one to try and add to my pack. Any thoughts???
See pic below.Okay I will be the next to ask. What is the Bivvy ? Sure I saw picture of the bundle in the palm of someones hand but open it up and reveal the secret. Is it a small tent,sleeping bag,orrrrrr? Just want to know what I am going to ask for. Thanks
See pic below.
I was just about in for an all nighter last year and it definately makes a person a little nervous.In March it will be 3 years since I spent the night at Blue Lake. The temperature went down to -17. The most important thing in my pack was my skill folding saw, I cut 4" to 6" trees and bucked them up into 3' lengths to keep my fire going. It was a busy night sawing wood to keep the fire going ( that was a good thing for me). The wood dos not burn well and my fire went out twice so I made sure I had enough wood after that. branches worked ok for fire but became hard to get after a while, the tree wells make it difficult to get to. At 5:30 am my buddy and 2 from search and rescue came down and cooked me hot chocolate on my fire.
If you cross long logs over the fire it wont sink those. Or put long logs in a circle with the ends all pointing to a center point and light the middle and keep pushing them inward to keep the fire going.
That is good in theory but after riding for 12 to 15 hrs, your dam tired and in our case we had close to 100cm of new snow, everyone was dead tired, and wind was howling like you never have seen, thus pitch dark conditions... And snowing very heavy...It's just not that practical to be able to do some of the technics mentioned here, and this is why a fire would be questinal if I did again
Also feel that a unexpected sleep over and a expected sleep over or two different animas and not much learning will be gained when a unexpected happens... No one ever wants to spen a night at minus twenty... After a long day in the bush and in a big storm... And for caring pots and pans, heaters that just does not happen
best preparness is watching suvior man, two of us had watched just prior a episode of his making the caves in snow and it helped a ton, we took a few pictures of them if I could find them.... They were the answer