180ls1
WKR
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2020
- Messages
- 1,970
Older kuiu ultra 1800 will save you 3lbs and still have a meat shelf. You could do a light load on the way out with it and grab your bigger pack for the next trip. Might be worth a shot.
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OP. Here is a picture of something I put together that might offer a solution for you. I use this mainly for training and when I’m just coming to help pack meat, but have used it for hiking trips with the family or as a light and fast option too.
All good man, that’s the problem with trying to have a conversation through text format. You miss out on like 90% of communication.^^^we aren’t that far apart. Sorry for the overreaction.
The deer I packed was 40+ pounds plus my bino, rifle, extra jacket, knives, extra flashlight and batteries, etc. so maybe 60(?) total?
It wasn’t as comfy as a proper pack would have been. Maybe 1.25 miles. But it was downright easy compared to dragging her or carrying her (I carried her 1/4 mile, gutted, before I gave up and deboned her). It was an absolute breeze compared to toting the whole deer.
I’ll freely admit that bringing a half-load of meat back to the truck in the first trip isn’t as efficient as having a proper pack with you. But if having a lighter pack for the initial hike in makes me lighter and faster I’m more likely to kill something, more likely to get up and do it the next day, and so on.
There’s no easy button.
Haha! No worries man.K_pem, showing my ignorance here but what went into that build?![]()
When I hunt, I am moving through the woods looking around, being quiet,, looking for sign and listening for sounds.I find it real hard to effectively hunt trying to slip through brush and rocks with a frame pack on.
My daughter's day pack weighs less than a pound. It's tiny, but held what she needed. Mine probably weighs two pounds.All good man, that’s the problem with trying to have a conversation through text format. You miss out on like 90% of communication.
But I mean idk what kind of daypack you’re using, but my EXO weighs about 5lbs (I could shave a half a pound ditching the hip belt pockets and Nalgene holster) the way I have it kitted out. I can’t imagine you’re saving more than a couple pounds by carrying a “daypack.”
And yeah, carrying an animal out whole sounds good and fine until you’re doing it… ask me how I know (pics attached), you ain’t doing that with a daypack haha, kidding of course.
Like I said, you do you; but I think you’re missing out lol.



Zero gravity water in that pack?My daughter's day pack weighs less than a pound. It's tiny, but held what she needed. Mine probably weighs two pounds.
The issue isn't just weight, though, it's cost. Lightweight hiking gear gets spendy. And bulky. I can be a bit clumsy as is; the bigger my pack gets, the worse that gets, especially the moment I go off-trail.
As for carrying an animal out whole....when I was much younger and a bit dumber, we did it a lot, between two of us - we'd throw it on our shoulders and take turns toting a smaller deer, or lash it to a pole like the old paintings would depict the Indians doing at Thanksgiving. That frankly was terrible. Or we'd just drag it. The doe I keep referring to, I did tote her a quarter mile or so. The weight wasn't terrible, what was terrible was that the weight was off-center. Every step was a balancing act. But once I got her deboned and stuffed into a pack, honestly, it wasn't that bad. With the daypack more or less full and some other random gear lashed to the sides of it I couldn't really sling my rifle and had to carry it alternately port arms or balanced in one hand, but the 1.25 miles I packed her went much faster than the 0.25 miles I carried her.
I didn't get pictures of any of that. I shot her at dark and gutted her, toted her about a quarter mile and knew I was either going to hurt myself or be out there half the night or both, so I dropped her, pulled out my little tarp and knife and headlamp and started deboning her, and the rain started. So I finished that in the rain then packed her out in a light mist. Definitely a 'type 2 fun' sort of night.
ETA: wait, I did get one picture of her. Yes, that’s a 30-06 I walloped her with. She was an older doe. Not sure her weight is obvious in the picture but photography isn’t my strong point.
Per Google earth, she was about 2,830 yards from the truck when I shot her. So 1.6 miles. Fun night.
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