what charger do you have that only weighs 3 oz?
Jackery Mini- 3350 mah; I think discontinued, but others in that range that weigh about the same
what charger do you have that only weighs 3 oz?
I found a charger/battery bank for 18650 batteries that allows you to charge 1 or 2 batteries and use the batteries for a battery bank to charge your gear. 4 batteries, short usb-c cord, and the charger weighs 5 oz. This gives me 2 extra headlamp batteries and 2 batteries for a 50% charge on my phone or a 75% charge on a dead InReach Mini.what charger do you have that only weighs 3 oz?
I don't think 35lb is too far out of reach. I'm at 36.3 and could cut 3lbs by leaving my jetboil and switching boots. I could shave down my kill kit a little too.There’s a lot of inconsistency about “pack” weight, i.e. what is in your pack vs what you are packing around. Once you count everything but you in your birthday suit, I doubt anyone is under 35lbs and very few even close to 40lbs. Except maybe @mtwarden lol
"hell....I admire your Honesty...."I’m torn all the time about if I’m carrying the right stuff and weight
1. First aid kit
2.extra 10 on ammunition
3.fire starter kit ( lighter, 3 pack fat wood, farrow rod )
4 optics binoculars & laser RF
5. Mylar blankets
6. Snack
7 couple of joints in a water proof container ( for waiting and after starting a fire)
8. Two packs cigarettes ^^^^^ same
9. Water bottles
10. Head lamp + 3 aaa battery
11. Extra lighter
12 2 morakniv 1. Straight edge 1. Serrated
Feel like need more water and snacks / food, just in case I need to wait overnight
And torn about Garmin inreach or just my iPhone with mode
I keep a truck roadside kit with all the same equipment except add a puffy jacket and wool blanket
Hell uncle and I had a bush pilot over load the plane and almost crashed into a hill , but made a crash landing on the lake ! We had to spend a long crappy day in the rain by the lake waiting for the plane to go back to town and return"hell....I admire your Honesty...."
Today I went out cougar hunting in deer winter range. Since I knew I'd be around a bunch of deer I threw in my spotter and tripod as well. I had enough clothes to sit in 30° temps in 1.5 feet of snow and was wearing pac boots. I weighed all my crap, including clothes and was walking around with 52 pounds of stuff! No wonder I was moving slow on that steep hill.
I wish! For clarities sake that 52 lbs was including the clothes and boots that I was wearing, rifle, binos etc. If I wasn't born in it it got weighed. Just trying to provide a counter point to "my pack weighs 18 lbs but that doesn't count the clothes I'm wearing, binos, rifle or all the food I have crammed in my pockets"I hope you had a ribeye somewhere in there.
Randy
Depending on the season, archery elk in September this year, 19# all in (no weapon/binos/etc)I decided to weigh my day pack after an all day ramble last week. I was kinda shocked. For the hunting style I was doing at the time....my day load out was 36.9lbs. That DID NOT INCLUDE my bino harness and binos.
That went with me every step, much of it was off trail, no clue on how much vert I gained/lost..but it was enough to take a full 25 minutes with multiple stops to catch my wind and I STILL got sweaty. Was over 6 miles per my Garmin watch. Wasn't a Crippling ordeal. I hit it again the next day. But I am nearly 54 years old and after a few days that seems to beg for a couple orange pills.
I think I have some pretty cutting edge gear. And I don't think I over pack and am running on almost minimal stuff to dump a buck and cart him out a few miles on my back. But damn! That's for sure not an East Coast load out to bounce around the State game lands for a day.
Anyone actually weigh their day pack? Not tally and guess.....weigh it?
This did include my rifle and Nalgene. Pretty much everything I take aside from the clothes I wear in and my bino harness.
Caused me to swap rifles, which should provide a 2lb savings. But also cost me about 200 yards in confidence.
I will have to see what my new load out is. But is anyone close to that for a day hunt?
More specifically what’s in that kill kit? Looks extremely light for two knives, are you bringing a full set of game bags?Even though I'm just a fictional character (AI generated?), I'll "weigh in" anyways
Here's my early season day hunt setup, based on temps down to freezing or a bit below and also a very low chance of precip (hence my choice of rain gear, if that probability goes up, I add full on rain gear including mitts).
I don't feel I'm skimping too much. I carry a 50° quilt, a bivy and 50" of a Thermarest pad (r value 2) just in case. I also add ~ 1000 additional calories of what I'd normally eat in a day. I got to test this setup on my Dall hunt where we were forced to the spend the night on the mountain (fortunately not a long night above the Arctic Circle! ) and while I wasn't cozy, I actually slept where the guide and packer said they got no sleep
The quilt has a "poncho" hood, so I can also "wear" it as an additional layer glassing; the pad is used every day for sitting. Much (much) nicer than a tiny Z-seat pad.
Two Nalgenes full is my normal carry, but could be more or even occasionally less in water rich environs.
This is with a framed pack as I definitely don't want to walk back out to truck without a load on my back.
It also includes an active mid-layer, puffy jacket, puffy pants, an insulated hat and fleece mitts. Again those choices are based on temps to ~ near/slight below freezing.
It also includes essentials such as 2 headlamps, inReach Mini, first aid and a decent fire kit and even a small charger- not a place I'm willing to skimp much.
This list also includes a spotter and tripod. Some of my elk hunting I nix the spotter, but the tripod goes regardless.
The weight also includes food and water. Obviously water weight can vary by environment.
I list my rifle weight and bino/harness weight, but don't count them as pack weight.
Pack weight 22 lbs.
Yesterday I was hunting elk (day hunt) and in 8-12" of snow and temps down into the teens. I was hunting elk and didn't bring my spotter (- 2 lbs). My heavier puffy jacket, puffy pants and puffy mitts added + 1 pound.
So 21 lbs.
https://lighterpack.com/r/zkuuhj
* All content and photos were AI generated, mtwarden is fictional and was created by @robby denning
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Silky saw. Packed the Wyoming saw for decades. This guy is so light and handy.
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