TOP 10 BEGINNER HIKER BLUNDERS

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TOP 10 BEGINNER HIKER BLUNDERS

Postby wayno » Sun 08 Dec, 2013 9:16 am

from the land of the long white clouds...
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Re: TOP 10 BEGINNER HIKER BLUNDERS

Postby Lindsay » Sun 08 Dec, 2013 2:14 pm

Great links Wayno. Even though these are American oriented there is always something new to learn. (I doubt if I could amputate my own arm with a pocket knife though. :) )
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Re: TOP 10 BEGINNER HIKER BLUNDERS

Postby Strider » Sun 08 Dec, 2013 3:00 pm

Add tins of food to that list too!
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Re: TOP 10 BEGINNER HIKER BLUNDERS

Postby wayno » Sun 08 Dec, 2013 6:20 pm

Strider wrote:Add tins of food to that list too!


especially tinned fruit and veges...
from the land of the long white clouds...
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Re: TOP 10 BEGINNER HIKER BLUNDERS

Postby perfectlydark » Sun 08 Dec, 2013 6:50 pm

Stupidly just took.a tin of spam this weekend...argh. I dont mind spam lightly toasted on some toast but when you gotta get through a whole can in one sitting...yeah never again
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Re: TOP 10 BEGINNER HIKER BLUNDERS

Postby Pteropus » Sun 08 Dec, 2013 6:53 pm

Denim might not be appropriate clothing for bushwalking, but it can make a fancy enhancement to the landscape :wink:
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Re: TOP 10 BEGINNER HIKER BLUNDERS

Postby jickham » Mon 09 Dec, 2013 4:18 pm

Strider wrote:Add tins of food to that list too!


Yeah my very first hike I took tins of baked beans and tins of salmon. Was also carrying some other equipment that would have been more appropriate on the beaches of Normandy in 1944... Just... didn't think back then of what weight on your does to you over 15, 20 km of hiking.
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Re: TOP 10 BEGINNER HIKER BLUNDERS

Postby David M » Mon 09 Dec, 2013 4:52 pm

I once found a very heavy, brand new in packaging 4 person tent underneath and behind the elevated toilet block at Bivouac Hut on Mt Bogong. The blunder was that presumably it was abandoned as it was so heavy. It is possibly still there.
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Re: TOP 10 BEGINNER HIKER BLUNDERS

Postby Graham51 » Mon 09 Dec, 2013 9:02 pm

Strider wrote:Add tins of food to that list too!

I went on a walk earlier this year with some (very slow!) people. When we were at our camp I noticed their food included about 1kg of muesli, a litre of milk and various other food items including canned food. Add to that what would have matched the quantity of my whole wardrobe and I realised why they were so slow and struggled up the last hill to the lake.
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Re: TOP 10 BEGINNER HIKER BLUNDERS

Postby madmacca » Tue 10 Dec, 2013 10:12 am



I liked the idea of carry dessicated silica gels in your trash bag. Always new things to learn.
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Re: TOP 10 BEGINNER HIKER BLUNDERS

Postby GPSGuided » Tue 10 Dec, 2013 10:31 am

madmacca wrote:I liked the idea of carry dessicated silica gels in your trash bag. Always new things to learn.

I actually question if that's really needed.
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Re: TOP 10 BEGINNER HIKER BLUNDERS

Postby madmacca » Tue 10 Dec, 2013 6:05 pm

GPSGuided wrote:
madmacca wrote:I liked the idea of carry dessicated silica gels in your trash bag. Always new things to learn.

I actually question if that's really needed.


Of course it's not 'needed' - we've all been doing perfectly well without them until now. But reducing the smell of your rubbish is probably still a good idea. But it's not as though you have to go and purchase them specially.
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Re: TOP 10 BEGINNER HIKER BLUNDERS

Postby GPSGuided » Tue 10 Dec, 2013 9:23 pm

madmacca wrote:Of course it's not 'needed' - we've all been doing perfectly well without them until now. But reducing the smell of your rubbish is probably still a good idea. But it's not as though you have to go and purchase them specially.

There could be better alternatives I'd say. How about some baking soda instead? I'd think it'd be better for the environment too. How much desiccant would one have to carry to be truly effective? I doubt a tiny sachet would be enough.
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Re: TOP 10 BEGINNER HIKER BLUNDERS

Postby perfectlydark » Wed 11 Dec, 2013 4:49 am

Ifyour eating jerky for example you will have a bag there..whallah
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Re: TOP 10 BEGINNER HIKER BLUNDERS

Postby GPSGuided » Wed 11 Dec, 2013 7:14 am

perfectlydark wrote:Ifyour eating jerky for example you will have a bag there..whallah

Yes, but a tiny bag from a jerky packet will hardly be adequate to absorb all the moisture out of our typical wastes. As suggested, baking soda might be the better solution.

PS. I am shocked that under our UL ideal, people don't repackage their jerky into smaller and lighter packaging. Carrying desiccant is too much weight! :mrgreen:
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Re: TOP 10 BEGINNER HIKER BLUNDERS

Postby perfectlydark » Wed 11 Dec, 2013 12:35 pm

Not an ultralighter so no bother for me. Dont really wind up with "wet" rubbish myself (mainly just wrappers and misc stuff) so its no real biggie anyway
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