Yooper906
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2020
- Messages
- 296
Really good advice! Thanks!One of the things I do to save space is vacuum seal all my survival gear that I know I will never use unless I absolutely have to. I always carry an extra pair of wool socks, hat, gloves and thermals (top and bottom). Vacuum sealed as an entire set they pack down to 1/2" X 11" X 14" flat (think of a 1/2" thick legal size piece of paper) and I slide them down into my water bladder compartment just behind the bladder. Saves a ton of room. You can do this with anything you don't intend on using unless it's an emergency. I do this with my emergency blanket as well and it resides in the same bladder pocket. if you have a packframe convertible pack like a MR or one of the others you can also just sandwich it in-between the pack and the frame along with your vacuum sealed kill kit. You would be amazed at how much room you can free up in your pack by doing this. I run a MR pop up 28 and sandwich the kill kit (4 bags, boning knife, paracord) between the Frame and pack along with my meat tarp, run the wool emergency clothing and emergency blanket in the bladder compartment with the bladder. In that 28L pack I can fit my tent, emergency sleep gear (down hoody, extra long down pants to cover my feet and be cuffed with bands for heat retention), all my day hunting gear, emergency gear, possibles bag, rain gear, fleece, Jetstream vest, 2L water, sh#t shovel, folding saw, Gortex boony hat, day hunt food, knives, two flash light, headlamp and extra batteries. All that and I still have room for my tripod and spotting scope on the side pouches. And that is all in a 28L bag packed for a day scouting trip or day hunt trip. Great setup if I have to spend a night and works well (I have selectively spent the night a handful of times with this setup after an evening kill, knowing the hike out with meat would be more treacherous than just starting a fire, setting camp and getting up in the morning and knocking it out). 25.6lbs total pack weight (food and 2L water bladder included). Weight doesn't include the tripod and scope.
Hunting out of a basecamp this is a great setup but with a bigger pack you can still use a vacuum sealer to save a ton of space. Just remember you should only do this with gear you don't intend to use often. Once it's out of the vacuum seal it's normal size again. You can always find someplace to put it, it's just not gonna be as compact and space saving.