other then that is it okay to carry your tent on the outside of your back pack or is it better in your pack??
thanks

hellsbellstaz wrote:Hi, just wondering what size back pack people have used for the overland track?
hellsbellstaz wrote:other then that is it okay to carry your tent on the outside of your back pack or is it better in your pack??
hellsbellstaz wrote:other then that is it okay to carry your tent on the outside of your back pack or is it better in your pack??
Azza wrote:I can get 14 days in a 85 litre McMillian.
I know guys that can achieve this with a 75 litre.
ILUVSWTAS wrote:
65 actually.
Azza wrote:ILUVSWTAS wrote:
65 actually.
Not sure the average human being can live on 2 minute noodles and deb for two weeks.
hellsbellstaz wrote:however i can hire a 70L one from the camping store for $20 a week and $2.50 extra days
hellsbellstaz wrote:Thanks everyone for the advice..
I'm not 100% the size of my pack, the measurements i took indicate to me it a smaller size but it could be a larger size then i think.
however i can hire a 70L one from the camping store for $20 a week and $2.50 extra days, which to me a damm good deal.
Mark F wrote:We just spent 6 days on the OT with a 40 litre Macpac Amp and a 32 litre Osprey Stratos. We even had a heavy tent (REI Quater Dome T2 1.8kg). Nothing dangling from the packs and I still could have got in another 2-3 days food without any problems.
Mark F wrote:?..... not approaching your theoretical sd of 1 which is what you would get if you filled your pack with water.
Mark F wrote:Apart from taking only what we need and carefully controlling our food (1.1kg per day for both of us and we walked out with 1 muesli bar and 2 tea bags - but not hungry) I tried a different packing technique I read of on BPL. Inside the pack place large dry bag - big enough for all the things that need to stay dry and with enough diameter to to fully conform to the sides of the pack. Into it I cram my quilt, silk inner and Neoair - all without stuff sacks. Into this soft bed goes other clothes, cooking gear (in stuff sac) and food bags (I use one each for breakfast, lunch and dinner) all intermingled to minimise any gaps. The lunch bag and tent go on top. The tent is packed outside the dry bag if it is wet. The beauty of this system is that by not stuffing the sleeping gear into individual stuff sacks they fill any voids and this seems to save quite a bit a volume. Rain gear goes in the back pocket and other essentials, 1st aid etc in the top pocket.
Foam mat if you use one, can be put on outside of pack will get scratches but be ok.
Solohike74 wrote:If you have polarfleece for your middle layer, jettison it and get a DWR coated down jacket or down vest (vest can be got away with in summers or if staying in the major huts on the OT, but jacket best for all season use). If you can't afford to do this, consider this advice for the next trip after.
stu wrote:Solohike74 wrote:If you have polarfleece for your middle layer, jettison it and get a DWR coated down jacket or down vest (vest can be got away with in summers or if staying in the major huts on the OT, but jacket best for all season use). If you can't afford to do this, consider this advice for the next trip after.
Sorry, I'd ignore this advice like the plague.
Down jackets / vests are fine for use at camp / in huts, but not at all practical as a mid layer for walking in Tassie.
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