BackofBeyond
Well-known member
Welp, it's that time of year, and I'm not talking about turkey and pies. It's the time of year I try to take stock of what worked and what didn't during the hunting season. It was a big year for the wife and I, moved back to Idahome, pregnancy (3 weeks out from our due date), and our first backpacking and hunting seasons back home in 6 years! There's plenty beyond this list, but I'm talking about gear, practices, ideas, etc...
First what worked:
1. New Backpack - I've been using the same Gregory backpack for the last 18 years. It's seen countless miles of backpacking, a year of living/working in Haiti, and it's at the point where it almost as much repairs and patches as it is original. I ended up splurging and getting a Kifaru Reckoning. Of course the pricetag was difficult to swallow, but I received a generous profit sharing buy-out from my former employer so I splurged. Glad I did. Hands down, bar none, the best pack I've ever owned (tops of a list of 4 dating back to 1988.) I like how it can be compacted down for a day trip, handle a 5 day backpacking trip with ease, and has enough room plus a meat shelf to really pack a load.
2. Big Agnes AXL sleeping pad - The Mrs. got me this as an early birthday present. Spent 12 nights in a row on it during rifle elk season, and have never slept better on the ground.
3. Merino Wool long underwear/socks - I wasn't happy with the funk coming off my old synthetic long underwear, so last spring I got some less expensive knock-off brand merino long underwear off Amazon, and 2 pair of Merino wool socks. So very happy I made the switch, and so is anybody in a mile radius of me. I swapped socks every other day during the two week elk season, and swapped long underwear after a week. I gave it all a test sniff when I got home and was throwing them in the wash, and couldn't smell a thing. Juxtapose that to the stick that would knock a buzzard off a gut wagon that would come from those synthetics after 2 days, and I'm astounded.
What didn't work:
1. My water system - I've been running with the same MSR pump/filter (I forget which one) for about 10 years. Screws to the top of a nalgene and I'm off and running. It's worked great for me, and me + wife, but this year we were trying to keep 4 guys in potable drinking water and the pump got real old, real quick. I'm sure I'll keep the pump/filter as a back-up (in the truck) but I'm thinking with the expanding family I need to look at something involving a 10L bag and gravity feed it through a filter. Mixed reviews for both the Katadyne and LifeStraw systems on Amazon, anybody got any good suggestions? Maybe just get the 10L bags, plus a Sawyer Squeeze with a quick connect?
2. Backpacking stove - I got my current stove about the same time I did my filter, it's the older pump style with the separate liquid fuel tank. It's an MSR as well. One of my buddies had a JetBoil in camp this year, and I was astounded by how much quicker he was into his coffee than I was. Plus, it's a hell of a lot lighter... negative point is he was basically unable to cook anything in it other than boil water, heat soup etc. I want the lighter weight, and quick boil features, but still like to actually cook while backpacking, not just make water for a Mtn. House.
3. Backpacking Tent - I had a thread on here a while back looking for advice on a backpacking shelter for a family +2 dogs... Hilleberg Kaitum 4 or an 8 Person Teepee type shelter. I haven't pulled the trigger on either one, but the squirrel fund money is just sitting there mocking me. It's about time I got off the fence and got to it. I'm 80% leaning towards the Hilleberg, but the weight and the price tag keep pulling me back. Not that and 8 man teepee plus a stove is any lighter, or less expensive, but either way it's a chunk of change.
4. My Preseason Fitness - Ya, I didn't do enough. I was sucking wind. It wasn't as bad as my buddies that came up from TX (800' above sea level) but still, I wasn't happy with where I was at. Time to get back on the horse and spend more time doing evening hikes, and hitting the gym early morning.
So that's my big hitters for this year... How about ya'll? What worked and what didn't?
First what worked:
1. New Backpack - I've been using the same Gregory backpack for the last 18 years. It's seen countless miles of backpacking, a year of living/working in Haiti, and it's at the point where it almost as much repairs and patches as it is original. I ended up splurging and getting a Kifaru Reckoning. Of course the pricetag was difficult to swallow, but I received a generous profit sharing buy-out from my former employer so I splurged. Glad I did. Hands down, bar none, the best pack I've ever owned (tops of a list of 4 dating back to 1988.) I like how it can be compacted down for a day trip, handle a 5 day backpacking trip with ease, and has enough room plus a meat shelf to really pack a load.
2. Big Agnes AXL sleeping pad - The Mrs. got me this as an early birthday present. Spent 12 nights in a row on it during rifle elk season, and have never slept better on the ground.
3. Merino Wool long underwear/socks - I wasn't happy with the funk coming off my old synthetic long underwear, so last spring I got some less expensive knock-off brand merino long underwear off Amazon, and 2 pair of Merino wool socks. So very happy I made the switch, and so is anybody in a mile radius of me. I swapped socks every other day during the two week elk season, and swapped long underwear after a week. I gave it all a test sniff when I got home and was throwing them in the wash, and couldn't smell a thing. Juxtapose that to the stick that would knock a buzzard off a gut wagon that would come from those synthetics after 2 days, and I'm astounded.
What didn't work:
1. My water system - I've been running with the same MSR pump/filter (I forget which one) for about 10 years. Screws to the top of a nalgene and I'm off and running. It's worked great for me, and me + wife, but this year we were trying to keep 4 guys in potable drinking water and the pump got real old, real quick. I'm sure I'll keep the pump/filter as a back-up (in the truck) but I'm thinking with the expanding family I need to look at something involving a 10L bag and gravity feed it through a filter. Mixed reviews for both the Katadyne and LifeStraw systems on Amazon, anybody got any good suggestions? Maybe just get the 10L bags, plus a Sawyer Squeeze with a quick connect?
2. Backpacking stove - I got my current stove about the same time I did my filter, it's the older pump style with the separate liquid fuel tank. It's an MSR as well. One of my buddies had a JetBoil in camp this year, and I was astounded by how much quicker he was into his coffee than I was. Plus, it's a hell of a lot lighter... negative point is he was basically unable to cook anything in it other than boil water, heat soup etc. I want the lighter weight, and quick boil features, but still like to actually cook while backpacking, not just make water for a Mtn. House.
3. Backpacking Tent - I had a thread on here a while back looking for advice on a backpacking shelter for a family +2 dogs... Hilleberg Kaitum 4 or an 8 Person Teepee type shelter. I haven't pulled the trigger on either one, but the squirrel fund money is just sitting there mocking me. It's about time I got off the fence and got to it. I'm 80% leaning towards the Hilleberg, but the weight and the price tag keep pulling me back. Not that and 8 man teepee plus a stove is any lighter, or less expensive, but either way it's a chunk of change.
4. My Preseason Fitness - Ya, I didn't do enough. I was sucking wind. It wasn't as bad as my buddies that came up from TX (800' above sea level) but still, I wasn't happy with where I was at. Time to get back on the horse and spend more time doing evening hikes, and hitting the gym early morning.
So that's my big hitters for this year... How about ya'll? What worked and what didn't?