Winter backpacking gear advice

Jtb.kfd

FNG
Joined
Oct 3, 2024
Messages
89
Location
Eastern Washington
Three more things came to mind but these aren’t specific to your hunt but are necessities for me in the backcountry.
- battery pack (I have a fairly small one)
- Solar charger for each group.
- Flextail mattress pump. I use this to pump up my mattress daily when we move locations but also use the light on the end in our hot tent. I have a small string attached to it and tie it to the center pole. It lasts for days and is recharged by the battery pack or solar charger during the day while we are out. Nights come early in November and you are sitting in your tent for a while. You can see it hanging in one of the photos.
 

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OP
NILowe

NILowe

FNG
Joined
Feb 13, 2023
Messages
87
Three more things came to mind but these aren’t specific to your hunt but are necessities for me in the backcountry.
- battery pack (I have a fairly small one)
- Solar charger for each group.
- Flextail mattress pump. I use this to pump up my mattress daily when we move locations but also use the light on the end in our hot tent. I have a small string attached to it and tie it to the center pole. It lasts for days and is recharged by the battery pack or solar charger during the day while we are out. Nights come early in November and you are sitting in your tent for a while. You can see it hanging in one of the photos.
Man this is extremely helpful but costly lol. I was on the fence about the graksaw boot dryer, spikes and flextail. My thought was to bring to two battery packs cause I can’t get myself to trust a solar charger. Obviously you have had good luck with them it sounds like so maybe I need to look into it more. Just trying to find a good balance of necessities and weight. Not wanting to pack 70 pounds around up there. Appreciate your response though this was exactly what I was looking for.
 

Jtb.kfd

FNG
Joined
Oct 3, 2024
Messages
89
Location
Eastern Washington
Man this is extremely helpful but costly lol. I was on the fence about the graksaw boot dryer, spikes and flextail. My thought was to bring to two battery packs cause I can’t get myself to trust a solar charger. Obviously you have had good luck with them it sounds like so maybe I need to look into it more. Just trying to find a good balance of necessities and weight. Not wanting to pack 70 pounds around up there. Appreciate your response though this was exactly what I was looking for.
I hear you on costs. My first trip into the Frank we were not very prepared. We spiked out on a knife ridge one night with 30mph winds ripping through our one man 3 season tents. I had on my clothes on and cracked three of the large 18 hour hot hands and was still cold. I asked my brother if he was cold and his response was “I just hope I wake up in the morning”. That was a long time ago so I can laugh about it now. It wasn’t that bad but we were uncomfortable most of the trip but survived that one and every trip since. None of the things I listed are necessities, more nice items to have. I also agree with you on weight, I have really good gear now and my pack weight for 3-4 days is around the 35lb mark and fits in an EXO 3600 bag. It is also super expensive stuff I have accumulated over a lot of years. I hunted just fine without it when I was younger.
I won’t delve into the good old days when you could do that hunt as a non resident every year and also count on buying leftover deer tags so we each had two on every trip.
 

Matt5266

WKR
Joined
Sep 19, 2021
Messages
801
Location
SW Idaho
It goes without saying make sure you have emergency communication and tourniquet. Take atleast a in reach, zoleo etc.

It may help if you give us your list of what your are taking.... just a thought but up to you.
 
OP
NILowe

NILowe

FNG
Joined
Feb 13, 2023
Messages
87
it’s definitely nice having all the resources to figure this stuff out these days but I wish I would’ve done this hunt 15 years ago i bet that place was something special.
 
OP
NILowe

NILowe

FNG
Joined
Feb 13, 2023
Messages
87
It goes without saying make sure you have emergency communication and tourniquet. Take atleast a in reach, zoleo etc.

It may help if you give us your list of what your are taking.... just a thought but up to you.
I do have a inreach and tourniquet. I will see if I can put a list together later this evening. I feel like I have all the essentials. Just wanting to fine tune it.
 

Jtb.kfd

FNG
Joined
Oct 3, 2024
Messages
89
Location
Eastern Washington
it’s definitely nice having all the resources to figure this stuff out these days but I wish I would’ve done this hunt 15 years ago i bet that place was something special.
It was something special back then but it still will be on your hunt too. I did that late deer hunt from 1998-2014 but still bear hunt in the region each year. Deer numbers are down but you will have an amazing time. Spending time in the Frank is right at the top of my favorite places to hunt.
 
OP
NILowe

NILowe

FNG
Joined
Feb 13, 2023
Messages
87
Here’s an attempt at my gear list
Exo 7200 pack
Seek cimmaron an large stove
Thermarest persac 0 degree bag
Big agnes qcore pad
Ground sheet tyvek
Jetboil w 2 small canisters
Hydro flask water filter and two 2 liter bags
Sitka puffy coat black ovis puffy pants
2 extra underwear and socks
Trekking poles
Vortex 85mm spotter
Vortex 15x binoculars
Sig rangefinder and extra battery
Dark energy poseiden power pack
Garmin inreach mini
iPhone w onx
Sitka dewpoint rain gear
10x8 tarp
Black ovis game bags
Tikka 300wm
Sitka goretex gloves
Toiletries
Small folding saw
2 knives and a sharpener
2 lighters and fire starter (open to suggestions)
Tripod
Glassing pad
Small med kit with tourniquet
I’ll have extra clothes and food at basecamp
Planning on adding
Titanium pot
Water purification tablets
Graksaw boot dryer
Either one more battery pack or solar charger
Micro spikes
I won’t necessarily be carrying this myself but will be split between everyone in camp
Im sure im forgetting something but that’s about it
 
OP
NILowe

NILowe

FNG
Joined
Feb 13, 2023
Messages
87
It was something special back then but it still will be on your hunt too. I did that late deer hunt from 1998-2014 but still bear hunt in the region each year. Deer numbers are down but you will have an amazing time. Spending time in the Frank is right at the top of my favorite places to hunt.
Looking forward to it! Hopefully i have some great photos to share here in a few months
 
Joined
Jun 15, 2017
Messages
2,761
Location
San Antonio
Three more things came to mind but these aren’t specific to your hunt but are necessities for me in the backcountry.
- battery pack (I have a fairly small one)
- Solar charger for each group.
- Flextail mattress pump. I use this to pump up my mattress daily when we move locations but also use the light on the end in our hot tent. I have a small string attached to it and tie it to the center pole. It lasts for days and is recharged by the battery pack or solar charger during the day while we are out. Nights come early in November and you are sitting in your tent for a while. You can see it hanging in one of the photos.
You're not worried about those trees in the first pic coming down?
 

Jtb.kfd

FNG
Joined
Oct 3, 2024
Messages
89
Location
Eastern Washington
You're not worried about those trees in the first pic coming down?
I wasn’t on that hunt no. I try to avoid areas like that to camp but some places are so steep its hard finding a flat enough area for that tent. We usually bivy in that location but due to rain being expected on that trip we took the hot tent/stove. Thats the reason I used the full liner also. Its in WA and the moisture can be obnoxious.
 

Matt5266

WKR
Joined
Sep 19, 2021
Messages
801
Location
SW Idaho
If your only means of boiling water/food drinks is the jetboil, more fuel .

Throw some wraps of duct tape and electrical tape on your tracking poles.

Mole skin for your feet

Tenacious tape in case anything gets a hole

Fire starter, I like is cotton balls with vaseline in a old pill bottle. Lightweight and easy to carry.

Fero rods are light and cheap. I keep one as a backup in case the lighter gets wet.
 

tttoadman

WKR
Joined
Oct 3, 2013
Messages
1,747
Location
OR Hunter back in Oregon
Why the 85 spotter and 15 binos? seams like you shed the 15x for a lighter pair of binos??

I assume the ti pot will be a spare left at base camp. The jet boil should be all you need. I always leave my pot over night and during the day purched under the corner of my tarp to collect water. It can be a free 1/2 liter every day.

We spiked about 6 miles out from the air strip. We dropped 5 or 6 days of food and some water and hung in a tree about 2 miles up. Trims some pack weight and saves a few restock miles. We could easily hump down and restock and make it back up for a couple hrs sleep. I hate missing out on hunting hrs.
 
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