Garrett.Stump
FNG
Lets see what you carry
only 1 Ibuprofen per day?4 knuckle bandaids
2 small antibiotic ointment packets
1 role gauze
1 small container of alcohol hand sanitizer (works wonders for taking pine sap off your hands and gear as well as a disinfectant)
1 role of dental floss
1 Tylenol per day
1 ibuprofen per day
4 Imodium
4 tums
4 gauze pads
Moleskin
Role of Medical tape
And adding this year 1 CAT tourniquet (after listening to a meateater podcast)
I kind of figured you didnt take them daily. I just figured for an adult body size 1 a day would not even be effective, my wife would probably agree with yours...lolFunny you ask, I had this conversation with my wife packing for our next trip. I don’t always use it each day. But 2 wouldn’t be a bad idea. No real weight penalty. I rarely take medication so one gets me by late afternoon thru morning. If I am up a mountain with a 60lb pack I wouldn’t hesitate to take two per day. She said as much as I complain at the end of the day I should have 4...
i always have some imodium and laxatives in my kit for sure.Heard a good suggestion somewhere about including stuff for the runs or if you can’t go... might be a life saver.
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Good on you for adding a tourniquet! A lot of those things will make you comfortable but not save your life, a tourniquet will. I suggest everyone should carry one for hunting trips or even firewood cutting.4 knuckle bandaids
2 small antibiotic ointment packets
1 role gauze
1 small container of alcohol hand sanitizer (works wonders for taking pine sap off your hands and gear as well as a disinfectant)
1 role of dental floss
1 Tylenol per day
1 ibuprofen per day
4 Imodium
4 tums
4 gauze pads
Moleskin
Role of Medical tape
And adding this year 1 CAT tourniquet (after listening to a meateater podcast)
Alot of actual knowledge in these forums for sure.Wow some great information here! Thanks guys
Great informationI break med kits into two categories, comfort kit and life saving.
Comfort kit
3-4 Tegaderms (2 3/8 x 2 3/4 size)
4 or 5 Nexcare bandaids
A few tabs of Allegra
12 (or more) 200mg ibuprofen
8 (or more) 500mg Tylenol
Small body glide stick
Life saving kit
SWAT-T (heavy at 4.5 oz, but multipurpose)
1 triangular bandage
1 mylar blanket
Multipurpose gear that would be used medically if needed
1 small hemostat (life saving)
Sewing kit (4 needles, 15 lb test fishing braid)
Pack straps (life saving)
Cordage
Trekking poles (life saving)
Knife (life saving)
Water filter (wound irrigation)
Gorilla tape
Electrical tape
Shelter, insulation, stove, pot, food (hypothermia treatment)
Electrolyte tabs
Nice to haves (that I don't carry) would be homeostatic gauze (Quick Clot, Cellox), 1g IM cefazolin.
As a side note, almost all belts make terrible tourniquets as they are too stiff and you cannot effectively tighten them with a windlass (I doubt anyone alive can cinch a strap tight enough to cut off arterial blood flow on an adult with even a moderate amount of muscle mass). 1 inch pack webbing would work better, though you increase the likelihood of nerve injuries when compared to wider options. If a tourniquet does not hurt when you put it on, it is not tight enough. Improperly applied tourniquets tend to result in amputations due to compartment syndrome, as well as not effectively stopping arterial blood loss and magnifying venous bleeding.