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Where did you take that class Rob?
Ok...so are you planning on bringing all that into a backcountry situation?Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I intend to increase the amount of food and drinks I take into the backwoods....
Quote from: SilkOnTheWetSide on April 06, 2014, 09:27:20 PMOk...so are you planning on bringing all that into a backcountry situation?Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkNot sure I follow the intent of your question.Planning on something very close to the list I posted and having a smaller kit built for my daypack. Should take up about 1 to 1.5 liters of space and come in around 1.82 lbs total. my current kit is about 3/4 of a liter in size and .688 lbs. The item count seems high, but 70 or so of the items are individual pills like Tylenol, ibuprofen, etc and will basically occupy a pill bottle.I have been shedding weight at every turn for the past couple years, the idea of adding a pound is not exciting to me, however being able to help myself or a friend in danger is worth it.But to each their own. It is a rather personal decision.
I get that and agree to some extent. There are a few things in there I may not need-most of them I pray I never need!I think a lot of people see a big list of stuff that I put in a pack and say wow, that's a lot of stuff, you must really overpack! But I bet if they (honestly) listed every single item out line by line, they would get a similar list. I also expect that many people think they have an overnight pack that weighs 35 lbs, but once they get done packing it, putting water in it, and adding the last minute items, they end up closer to 40-45 pounds. Perception and reality are often different.I'm betting that a look at that list would make you think that it would occupy a stuffed gallon ziplock bag or larger. I think it is going to be less than half of that - and weigh about the same as 14 ounces of water. So would you carry a can of pop and an airline shot of booze with you on every hike if you thought it might save someone's life?My list lives in Excel and is part of a larger packing list that I have. I can pack my backpack in excel before I even start looking at gear and it will end up within 1/4 of a pound of my estimated weight when done. I almost never forget something at home!
Ya...I just don't understand why you need band aids, gauze, surgical mask, barrier, etc.Duct tape and clothes cover most of that.Scalpel? Buy a havalon.Things like that.Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: SilkOnTheWetSide on April 07, 2014, 07:58:54 AMYa...I just don't understand why you need band aids, gauze, surgical mask, barrier, etc.Duct tape and clothes cover most of that.Scalpel? Buy a havalon.Things like that.Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkYeah, Surgical mask is probably not needed. But the idea of having to give CPR and having someone vomit in my mouth makes me want the barrier... I don't want to swap out my hunting knife for a havalon, and a scalpel is a lot lighter than adding another knife. Cutting a flap of skin off or working on dressing a nasty blister with a hunting knife that I just finished cleaning a deer with is not on my list. Could use clothing to sop up blood and make a bandage, but 4x4 gauze are sterile, weigh 40 grains according to my reloading scale, and doesn't stick to wounds so why not? Probably could ditch the band-aids... those are more of a nice to have.