- Joined
- Jan 13, 2022
- Messages
- 11
Appreciate the review. I've got a havlon and a fixed blade ESEE. Yeah, I just read the a thread about that. Definitely have to rethink that.I definitely wouldn’t rely on a Swiss Army knife as my only meat cutting tool. I personally wouldn’t take bear spray in non-griz country. I would get better rain gear based on locals on here saying it’s basically a swamp in the mountains right now. Looks like a pretty solid list though.
Of course the second you say that I go back and see it lol.Appreciate the review. I've got a havlon and a fixed blade ESEE. Yeah, I just read the a thread about that. Definitely have to rethink that.
Extra Sleeping Pad:I definitely wouldn’t rely on a Swiss Army knife as my only meat cutting tool. I personally wouldn’t take bear spray in non-griz country. I would get better rain gear based on locals on here saying it’s basically a swamp in the mountains right now. Also, why two sleeping pads? Looks like a pretty solid list though.
Gotcha. Now that you changed your name I see you’re a fellow Hoosier lol.Extra Sleeping Pad:
Last year my buddy and I went during rifle. The sleeping pad I brought got a hole in it and couldn't patch it. It was in the 20s and 6 inches of snow on the ground. I've never been so cold in my life and don't plan on it again.
Haha yeah. Great place to be from and live but a long haul from where a lot of my interests lie.Gotcha. Now that you changed your name I see you’re a fellow Hoosier lol.
Thanks, I've got some XL ones that some packed small and sealed. I'll add them to the list.WET WIPES! I won't go into the backcountry without them.
Thanks for the review and I appreciate it.Things I would change, didn’t really look to add. Have fun and good luck!
- Ditch bear spray
- would not want my only water filtration to be a bottle filter, at least take tabs as back up
- replace bear bag with regular dry bag and hang food
- wouldn’t bring the bag liner, they are a pain, just wear puffy layers
- carry one pad and good patch kit. Yes that sucks what happened but the likely hood of it happening again is slim and it’s earlier season, don’t pack your fears… also pine boughs, the deflated pad and anything else you can stick between you and the ground (pack) will do in a pinch
- leave the saw at truck
- doesn’t say what’s in emergency kit but 2lbs seems heavy
Thanks for the insight. I take it a lot people just hang in the backcountry?I’d absolutely ditch the extra pad (bring it but leave in the truck) and bag liner. 15-degree bag and your mid layers will be fine. As someone else said, don’t let one bad deal make you neurotic and over-pack. Bear sack and bear spray can stay home too. Those four things will lighten you up dramatically. I’d also have storage capacity for bare minimum of 3L of water plus the 1L filter bag, water almost for sure won’t be in short supply around you but that’s just my rule of thumb.
Ya, hanging is the easiest. I’m more worried about chipmunks chewing up my gear than bears, chipmunks are a pain. I usually run a 3L cnoc dirty bag threaded to my filter plus a 3L bladder/hose and a 1L smartwater bottle (for shaking up liquid IV and preworkout). Unless it’s a backcountry base camp, then I take a 10L MSR bag to leave at camp.Thanks for the insight. I take it a lot people just hang in the backcountry?
I've been kicking around getting something else for water, just the overpacking came to mind.
Tenacious tape will fix just about any hole in a sleeping pad barring on a huge rip. Take an alcohol wipe from first aid kit wipe it good blow it dry and tape that mug up. Got one that’s been taped up 2 years and still isn’t leaking. Leave extra pad in truck for sure.Extra Sleeping Pad:
Last year my buddy and I went during rifle. The sleeping pad I brought got a hole in it and couldn't patch it. It was in the 20s and 6 inches of snow on the ground. I've never been so cold in my life and don't plan on it again.
Interesting to hear about the panel. I'm going to so some test next couple days on the power bank, but definitely will rethink the panel.I would leave the solar panel behind and just use your pre-charged power bank to top off your devices as needed. I have the 7 watt version of the Nomad panel and have been thoroughly underwhelmed by it.
You have two sets of binos listed. If you're hunting thick timber, the 8x32's would probably be a better choice. If the terrain is mixed or mostly open, I'd take the 10x42's. Either pair will work, but I definitely wouldn't take both.