Hiking Noob wrote:Well the Aldi sleeping bag bit me hard, I threw a thermal liner in but that alone was not enough. However, long pants, rain pants, two merino shirts, two thermal shirts, bed socks and a balaclava saw me through.
I also regret sleeping in the cabins on the OLT, camping out made it much easier to get a good night sleep as the temperature change was much more gradual than the huts.
Hiking Noob wrote:Well the Aldi sleeping bag bit me hard, I threw a thermal liner in but that alone was not enough. However, long pants, rain pants, two merino shirts, two thermal shirts, bed socks and a balaclava saw me through.
I also regret sleeping in the cabins on the OLT, camping out made it much easier to get a good night sleep as the temperature change was much more gradual than the huts.
walkerchris77 wrote:1 roll of loo paper will be heaps.
perfectlydark wrote:sticks, jelly packets and rocks
walkabout wrote:perfectlydark wrote:sticks, jelly packets and rocks![]()
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walkerchris77 wrote:walkabout wrote:perfectlydark wrote:sticks, jelly packets and rocks![]()
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Hope the jelly is not in the packet. That stuff sets.
[/quote] Think i'll give the head torch a miss & stick with the toilet roll....walkabout wrote:perfectlydark wrote:sticks, jelly packets and rocks![]()
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"Before toilet paper and Sears catalogs, there was a wooden spatula called the stick. If you were in the outhouse after dark and you had to find the stick in the dark, you had a good chance of finding the wrong, dirty, *&%$#! end of the stick. Not everyone could afford candles or lanterns, and sometimes the wind would blow them out anyway."
Thank heavens for head torches.[/color]
vicrev wrote:[Think i'll give the head torch a miss & stick with the toilet roll....
walkabout wrote::lol: Dan, that happened to me a few weeks back on the way to Chapter Lake - as I put my foot down the snake shot out from under a bush, across the track, about an inch in front of my toes. It moved so fast, that by the time I realised what had happened all I saw was it's rear half disappearing in the bushes on the other side.
Maaxxx wrote:Just back from walking from Lake Mackenzie to Nameless and through to the Walls and out. Amazed to see only 2 snakes for the entire week. Normally come across heaps more in that area. (Maybe it was a bit cool for them.) I must admit, not being able to see where one's feet are heading in some of that scrubbier stuff does make one a little tentative.
Johnnie Walker wrote:In-between the morning walk (12 km) and the afternoon walk (12 km) a big lunch at a local fish & chip shop, everything deep-fried washed down with ginger beer.
north-north-west wrote:Johnnie Walker wrote:In-between the morning walk (12 km) and the afternoon walk (12 km) a big lunch at a local fish & chip shop, everything deep-fried washed down with ginger beer.
I remember a mate doing that between dives over at Mount Gambier. You ever seen someone throw up underwater?
Mervyn wrote:Walking with some one who is scared of every insect. Ants, spider, moths, bugs etc. Those people exist but I suggest you do not walk with them.
walkerchris77 wrote:Yeah funny stuff when you walk between two trees and cop a full spider web in your face.
Lophophaps wrote:walkerchris77 wrote:1 roll of loo paper will be heaps.
But not, i hope, in one roll. if that roll is compromised then you are reduced to sticks, jelly packets and rocks. In colder weather snow can work. I decant paper into smaller rolls, kept in the first instance in the food bag. When needed the small roll is moved to a dedicated bag.
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