Hallu wrote:Kathmandu make you pay extra for the pan handle ? lol
You say it's a 9 day walk but you only have food for 6 - that is a good way to lower weight![]()
The biggest place you will save weight is going to be your tent and pack, but that can be a relatively expensive exercise.
Very true Simon. I ended up making my own rucksack which is about 1400g, and 80-90l ( it needs to be large, as I often carry ski boots in it in winter, or a packraft and helmet). I also use a Zpacks hexamid twin for summer hiking. It is about 500g (or less). There are some newer model Zpacks shelters which are bigger, and look ideal if you want to share a tent with someone.
PS Why do you need a cooking pan, as well as a pot?
A
Moondog55 wrote:Shared gear is usually shared weight so realistically just show the carried weight for each of you
neilmny wrote:First aid wise 4 Panadol aren't going to stretch over 9 days if you get the aches.
Some anti inflamatory tabs would be good to have too.
andrewa wrote:With your sleeping mat, does that have insulation in it? If its purely air core, it's rather heavy, but if it's insulated as well, then there's not a lot around that's much lighter. I've used torso length air core mats in summer which are about 250g, but I think I'd rather carry an extra few hundred grams for a longer, thicker and warmer mat, especially as this allows me a slightly lighter weight quilt.
Watch the weights of things like raincoats/pants/outer insulated clothing. I try to keep them as much under 300g as possible. Your jkt is a good weight. Remember fleece is quite heavy, often 7-800g for a 300 wt jkt, and anything made out of thicker goretex is also up around the 500g+ weight. I regularly wear my goretex packlite pants as long pants, and just take shorts/thermals, but it depends so much on what I'm doing (my trips are rarely pure bushwalking - normally also flyfishing, packrafting or skiing, so I have different "multiuse" clothing.
Empty wrote:Everyone raves about those OP packs. Seems a bit of an extravagance to buy another. You appear to be carrying more than your fair share of the tent though.
Empty wrote:I meant another pack rather than another OP pack. It just seems odd that you scrimped on the tent and now want to lash out on another pack. A lighter tent would have been a much better investment in my view.
Gadgetgeek wrote:As rough as it is to have a heavy pack, its probably better to have a sturdy pack that can handle more weight, than save a kilo on the pack, but have it be overloaded. I would keep that pack until the rest of your gear lowered in weight enough that you know you will be under the limit of a lightweight pack, then upgrade.
Gadgetgeek wrote:As rough as it is to have a heavy pack, its probably better to have a sturdy pack that can handle more weight, than save a kilo on the pack, but have it be overloaded. I would keep that pack until the rest of your gear lowered in weight enough that you know you will be under the limit of a lightweight pack, then upgrade.
Return to Bushwalking Discussion
Users browsing this forum: Google Adsense [Bot] and 10 guests