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Obviously you don't camp in Montana.If in an area with very few bears and no history of interactions, sure, food in the tent.
You are not invited to backpack hunt with me. LOLI’m less worried about bears while I am in camp than bears or any number of other critters eating my food and destroying my gear to get at my food while I am not around. I’ve had mice and packrats eat holes in my tent, backpack, sleeping pad, sleeping bag, dry bags, packraft, life jacket and boots both while asleep and while away from camp. I’ve had a wolf knock over my teepee and steal my friends brand new sleeping bag. That was day 2 of an 10 day packraft moose hunt in Alaska. Thankfully I found it a couple hundred yards down a bear trail and we were able to patch it up with some tyvek tape.
Other friends have had bears destroy their camp. One guy I know even had his tent completely trampled and chewed up by mountain goats. I’m practically paranoid about it anymore and don’t leave anything on the ground at night or while away from camp. Sometimes I even pack up my sleeping setup and hang it in a drybag.
I wish I did it more often. But don't forget I said "an area with very few bears and no history of interactions", which rules out most of the camping/backpacking areas in Montana! My home state of Washington is a different story.Obviously you don't camp in Montana.
I sew my own. Lightweight, breathable ripstop.So what bags are you all using?? A quick Google search gives a wide swath of bear bags. Anyone have a favorite go-to bag?
Just a standard roll top dry bag. Nothing crazy or expensive. I might add some reflective tape this year to make it easier to find in the AM. I usually hang mine a couple hundred yards from camp.So what bags are you all using?? A quick Google search gives a wide swath of bear bags. Anyone have a favorite go-to bag?