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ultralight

  • cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/15055750

    > Who came up with this, and when? I got the impression that this is a relatively new invention, even though it seems so simple that it makes you wonder how this could even be something new. You still meet people who have not heard about it, even though they have a modern sleeping pad that could be shnozzled. > > Love the shnozzle.

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  • Happy February, ultralighters! Here’s a place to catch up and chat and discuss things that might not warrant their own post.

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  • Hello dear ULemmings,

    I'm looking for a thermos (UL, of course) and for some reason I don't know where to start at all.

    Maybe it would be nice to have a cup that I drink of.

    What are some important features to look in a thermos? What should be avoided? What system do you prefer (screw / click mechanism / something g else)?

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  • Happy New Year, ultralighters! Here’s a place to catch up and chat and discuss things that might not warrant their own post. Did you do anything cool or get any nifty gift this holiday? Did you make any New Year's Resolutions?

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  • Here's a place to catch up and chat and discuss things that might not warrant their own post.

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  • Title. I'm moving into late fall for the Valley weather, and looking down the barrel of winter. What is your coping strategy?

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  • The 60.4g one is here. It has a 2.45 inch screen, 1100mah removable battery, has been around for a while, and runs Android 8.1. By its dimensions it MIGHT fit into an Altoids tin (which would of course block RF signals from reaching it, good or bad depending). I emailed the company and they replied there are no plans to update it, unfortunately. They have a newer "Jelly Star" version that runs Android 13 and has more features, but is 2x as heavy. I suspect the lighter one didn't catch on because the battery was too small, but it might be ok if you don't actually use the phone much.

    The 560g version is here. It is that heavy because it has a 22000mah(!) non-removable battery. It also has a built-in 1200 lumen flashlight, 6.81" screen, accepts 65 watts USB PD fast charge, and generally looks like a capable modern (8gb ram, Android 12) phone, though it is 4g only. They do have some 5g models that are smaller.

    Why is a 560g phone ultralight? Well on Reddit r/ultralight they always talk about power banks, and the lightest 20000mah power bank is around 300g and it is popular there. This thing combines the power bank and a phone, so saves the weight of a separate phone. They also like to spend days on the trail and then duck into a restaurant for a recharge, so they like fast charging. Most phones and power banks recharge at 15 watts so you don't get that much in an hour, even with separate chargers for your phone and PB (i.e. 30 watts using both at once). This thing supposedly takes an almost full charge in under 2 hours. Finally, it is good to get rid of the cable between the power bank and the phone. Not for weight (you still need to bring a cable) but because USB connectors are way too fiddly and they break all the time. So the less often you plug and unplug a phone, the better. Huge batteries from that perspective are good.

    I should also mention, the above is supposedly a ruggedized phone. If that means you don't need an add-on protective case, that saves some more weight.

    I have never used or seen either of these phones (just heard about them last night) and don't feel likely to buy one (especially the Tank), but both are interesting enough that I thought I'd post here.

    Update: there is an even bigger (666g, 31mm thick) follow-on with Android 13, 5G radio, 16GB ram, and 120 watt charging: https://liliputing.com/unihertz-tank-3-smartphone-has-a-23800-mah-battery/

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  • Sorry for the wall of text, but as we put it all down, we realised that we had to add more and more criteria.

    We are planning our last trip for this year and are based in Germany. Our plans/funds unfortunately don't allow something as far away as Scotland/Sweden/... so we are looking in Germany, Denmark, BeNeLux, Western France, Austria or Switzerland.

    Ideally, this trail is not too much of a misery in autumn. We are fine with lots of ups and down, but not equipped for mountains or very alpine terrain in this time of the year. We would be fine with huts or shelters, but could also wild camp (if it's no too much of a hassle). Doing just a certain section (5days max) would be fine for us as well.

    Bonus points for remoteness and beautiful nature. Walking along roads, forestry roads or villages all day is a bit monotone after a while.

    Might be that this does not exist; we enjoyed e.g. the West Highland Way very much and are looking forward for Sweden/Norway.

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  • Jack’s trip is extraordinary, he did a ton of research, assembled a good kit and even made some of his own gear before taking a leap of faith traveling across the Atlantic to hike the stunning Canadian Rockies solo. I was inspired by his trip, the quality of his videos, and fascinated by his MYOG backpack.

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  • cross-posted from: https://iusearchlinux.fyi/post/1294232

    > So we did the trip! Winter gear shakedown in place of a Wind River trip that got weather'd out. We did 8 miles in to Alaska Basin (9500', trailhead at 7100') in the rain/snow on Friday. Stayed up in the basin overnight, temperature dipped to 30 F (at least - maybe was colder overnight, but I moved the thermometer into the tent). Weather was overcast but no precipitation on Saturday for the hike back out. > > > Lower elevations still have autumn > > ! > > > Beautiful weather > > ! > > > Fresh black bear tracks (I think) > > ! > > > Basin lake > > ! > > More Alaska Basin > > ! > > Good morning snow > > ! > > Some kind of pawed critter (coyote?) > > ! > > Gorgeous day back out > > ! > > Things I learned for backpacking in the rain/slush/snow: hell yeah dry bags kept the gear from getting damp from a day's worth of rain and snow. I need a better fleece solution. I also need a better puffy solution and a better camp shoe situation. My boots were waterlogged (which was fine while hiking, they are not waterproof, but no way am I going to wear them around camp) and the Crocs flats I brought did Not provide any protection from cold/wind/snow. My random Columbia Sherpa fleece is way overkill for hiking and doesn't dry quickly. My (non technical) down jacket got soaked in the back when I put it over the fleece. My wool gloves also got wet and became useless. Yikes. > > Other things I learned: it was really nice being out there in different weather, in a different season, with no one else (except my husband) around. I loved it. Would do again. Also I am glad we nixed the Winds trip, the weather would have been worse and we would have had a much harder time of it. Getting this experience was good, before we got hit with it on the trail unexpectedly.

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  • abcnews.go.com How El Nino will affect the US this winter

    Fall may have just begun, but meteorologists are already looking at the upcoming winter season's forecast with the help of El Nino.

    Welp, this is an interesting forecast for the 2023-2024 winter in the USA. Hiking season may start earlier in the Northern Rockies, later in the SoCal region. All a probability forecast though, so we shall have to see.

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  • cross-posted from: https://iusearchlinux.fyi/post/1047974

    > In late July, I took what was intended to be a four-day, three-night hike in the Sawtooth Wilderness area in Idaho, USA. We intended to take the trip in early July, but the snow over Sand Mountain pass was still quite bad according to the ranger. > > > The trip was to start from the west Yellow Belly Lake trailhead (7076’), pass by Farley lake (7745’), go up the pass by Edith lake (8720’), past that knot of passes and by Sand Mountain and down the pass (9219’) to Rendezvous lake (8861’) for Day 1, with a total of 8.6 miles and about 2950’ climbing elevation. Day 1 started late, around 2 pm (yay driving) and we hiked in the hottest part of the day; but we did it! Unfortunately we had to tack on 2 more miles hiking because Google was not reliable in getting us to the intended trail access point and sent us to the farther one. Live and learn… Total mileage, 10.6 mi. > > Edith lake > > ! > > > Rendezvous lake from the pass > > ! > > > Sand mountain (it's not sand, but it's super eroded and looks like it), with the final knife-edge pass > > ! > > > Day 2 was to be the lake tour! Starting from Rendezvous lake, pass by Edna lake (8404’), Vernon lake (8460’), Ardeth lake (8288’), Spangle lake (8585’), Rock slide lake, Benedict Lake, and finally camp at Everly lake, in the shadow of Mount Everly. This involved a ton of up-and-down bouncing us between about 8050’ and 8700’, and would have entailed 3 full passes and a final climb up to Everly lake over 11.2 miles total. However, my knee was starting to complain about the repetitive stress injury I’d sustained earlier in the season. In the interest of safety, DrBohr and I decided to stop at Spangle Lake and chill out for the day, explore the area, and enjoy the quiet. Total distance: 6.3 mi, 1449’ climbing elevation. > > > Rendezvous lake at sunrise > > ! > > > Looking down from a pass toward Edna and Vernon lakes > > ! > > > I don't remember which lake this was... > > ! > > > Little Spangle Lake > > ! > > > Day 3 was supposed to be a descent from Everly Lake down to Smith Falls and then back to Rendezvous lake or one of the other nearby lakes on the western side of the pass for a total of 12.5 miles and 2700’ of ascent. However, that didn’t happen due to bailing out early at Spangle lakes. Instead, we retraced our path from Spangle Lake. We intended to stop at Edith Lake or Farley lake that day, leaving us with 6-8 miles to hike out on the last day. That really seemed like it would happen given that my knee started getting pissed off on the descents again. > > > Big Spangle lake > > ! > > > One of the small lakes at one of the wide, flat passes > > ! > > > However, I decided to try something: ibuprofen and Tylonol together - I’d heard this was a pretty great painkiller combination. Heck yeah it is! It was amazing. My knee pain…disappeared. I think I was getting some nerve involvement along with the inflammation. I thought I would be able to hobble out to Edith or Farley lake, but it turns out… we hiked out the entire rest of the way, 16.3 miles, 2862’ ascent. We were motivated to get home back to our two dogs. Never have I ever been so glad to see the car! > > > Looking down towards Farley lake (near) and Yellow Belly lake (far), with the White Cloud mountains in the background and remaining snow in the foreground > > ! > > > I was afraid I’d have trashed my knee, but the pain meds and shifting my weight more forward for the descents gave me just general knee fatigue the next day. Success!

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  • Day 0 (mile 0-5) New York-Denver-Vernal-East Park Reservoir - Walk. Train. Walk. Bus. Walk. Plane. Walk. Plane. Hope to walk a lot more on the 105 mile Uinta Highline Trail. This trip is an effort to moderate my life. To hold a job, be there for my partner yet still have hiker dreams that occasionally become reality. I’ve never been very good at moderation but maybe it’ll work this time. Walk past the terminals in Denver Airport, think I should study this place in more detail. DEN is a portal to many places in the America west I would like to go. Not much of a view outside, inside I’m rocking secondhand clown shoes and MYOG backpack, sun hoody and shiny 2 oz windpants. “Most people call months in advance” says Vernal taxi driver Brad, as I repackage my haul from Walmart in the backseat on the way to McKee Draw. 4 days of food, water bottle and Ozark Trail trekking poles. I examine the plastic flick locks and frown. We talk winter weather, passport bros and Ley lines. I laugh and nod. Half a mile in, Vince from West Virginia sits astride a four wheeler smiling. He reminds me of my dad. Vince has cancer and is selling his houses and seeing as many wild places and animals as he can with the time he has left. The sky is clear and the sun hangs low in the thin, cool air. The silent pines surround me in this alpine oasis above the harsh desert below. 5 miles in I hit the reservoir, get water and make camp, anchor my tarp to a pine tree and recline on the duff. I eat, massage my sore feet and lay peacefully listening to the nothingness. Making it all the way here in one day was my best case scenario and I drift off delighted.

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    UHT Day 1 (mile 5-27) East Park Reservoir, Leidy TH, Gabbro Pass - As I walk down to East Park Reservoir at dawn to fetch water, 3 large birds take off from the lake, bellowing like dinosaurs as they rise. Their calls reverberate off the surrounding hills. 19 miles to Leidy, long water carry. Camel up freezing cold water. Ice cream headache. Head hazy from the altitude. Right hip gives me trouble all day, must’ve slept on it weird. Slower going than expected due to altitude, blowdowns, navigating the sometimes-disappearing trail and rocky terrain. Meet Alder from Colorado Springs, habitual sectionhiker on day 4 of his eastbound thru-hike. He’s going about my speed in the opposite direction. Says he’s had good weather and seen 2-3 westbounders and a handful of section hikers per day. Why go eastbound? “2,000 ft less elevation gain.” 😆 At Leidy TH meet Walt from SLC, on his annual pilgrimage to Leidy Peak, this year recovering from knee surgery. Still made it all the way up. Slept last night in a jacket in his truck. Around Leidy to Gabbro the wind is relentless and the trail rocky and elusive. Wind so strong you can’t even stop and take a break, reminds me of the PCT. Must keep going. Tough end of day. Want to climb Gabbro to Deadman but it’s 5 miles and I lose light and willpower. Camp at marginal site nestled amongst wind-beaten shrubbery.

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    UHT Day 2 (mile 27-41?) Gabbro Pass, Deadman Lake, Chepeta Lake, North Pole Pass - Wind howled all night and brought scattered showers. Tarp pitched storm mode. Wake with clear head and fresh legs. Today I get to “the good stuff”. Go over Gabbro, lovely breakfast at Deadman Lake. Reflected ripples of sunlight dance in the trees. Feel distinct sense of gratitude during pleasant morning hike to Chepeta Trailhead where I meet thru-hiker Justin trying to bail out due to altitude sickness. On the way to North Pole Pass meet local Randall who says next 3 days will rain, with snow likely above 10k. Shit. Meet father and son bow-hunting who repeat forecast. Shit. Start going through scenarios. Walk in intermittent rain until I can see North Pole, socked in at 12:04pm, way too early. Shit. Shit. North Pole is 4 miles long and totally exposed. I am prepared for rain and waiting out thunderstorms but not 3 days of cold rain and snow. If I go forward I will walk for 2 hours through a rainstorm, and bailing out becomes significantly harder from Painters Basin on the other side. Nothing to do but bail out now. Turn around, walk back to Chepeta. It’s windy, cool and overcast. Find Justin and wife Jen trying to stay warm sitting on a log wrapped in foam pads and tyvek. Rains off and on, start getting cold about 2pm. Move to more sheltered location, still near the road so we can flag down cars. Start boiling water to stay warm. Only a few cars at trailhead, hope someone stops. Check map to see how far the walk out is — it’s far. Randall stops by at 3pm and drives us down. We talk fishing, cars and tribal politics. Drops us in Roosevelt, eat pizza and try and fail to rent a car within a 30 mile radius. Justin’s dad Grandpa Jerry drives 3 hours from SLC to pick us up. Talks nonstop on the ride back, lovely man and crystal clear at 80. Watch dark stormclouds wrap the Uintas as we drive west on 40. Get into SLC around 10pm. Shower. Borrow clothes. Cotton feels good, feet do not. Pet dogs. Sleep in camper van. What a day. Still a bit in shock and saddened to have picked such a rotten weather window. Hope everyone still up there is OK.

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    Utah Day 3 Salt Lake City - Wake up in camper van in driveway, knock on house door at the polite time of 8am. Like me Justin and Jen are frugal but occasionally invest in something nice if it’s worth it — I start my day with an amazing cup of gourmet coffee from their prosumer-level coffee machine and proceed to cook up the cheap remains of my food bag: summer sausage, cheddar cheese and tortillas. Just pop tarts, tuna, ramen, sweets and trail mix left; this might be the first time I didn’t overpack food. I play with friendly cat Blackie and dogs Boots and Odin. Boots manically craves attention while Odin is a happy-go-lucky pup stuck in the body of a direwolf from Game of Thrones. We drive up to Hayden Pass to pick up J&J’s car and go from warm, sunny SLC to socked in, cool, all-day drizzle. Hypothermia weather. On the drive back Justin runs an errand a few blocks from his house, then hands me his car keys in the parking lot, tells me to be back by dark and then walks off. I try to figure out what hikes I can do in the Wasatch in a few hours and realize that everything is really high and really steep. The larger peaks are out of the question. I just want to get a decent view of the city so I settle on modest Ferguson Canyon and after the guys with beer bellies and families with little kids I scramble up as high as I can in search of a place that I can sit comfortably with a decent view, which is surprisingly hard to find amongst the steep, jagged, crumbly terrain. I drive back by dark and sit on the front porch with J&J. They’ve never even heard of the trail even though it’s 20 minutes away 😆 we debate dinner but Justin has been feeling off all day and turns in early. Jen and I eat pizza and share our life stories. I’m not really used to talking about myself much but I do my best. She has had things harder than I have. We talk and pet the animals for a few hours while we watch the neighborhood in the dark.

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    Utah Day 4 SLC, Antelope Island, Frary Peak - Eat breakfast out of my food bag, then at J&J’s suggestion head to Frary Peak Trail on Antelope Island, a rugged chunk of land an hour away in the Great Salt Lake, connected by causeway and host to its own herd of bison(!) Hit up Walmart for some sunscreen and an Arnold Palmer, pay the entrance fee and head up. First climb is through a sea of the unprepared who are walking up a steep, exposed trail in full Utah sun in t-shirts, no hat and some carrying no water. Crowd thins rapidly and only see a handful of the prepared afterwards. Trail is solid, the climb steady and the views expansive throughout, fantastic. Some fun twists and turns along the way with an absolutely banger view from the top. Make it up in time for a late lunch. The most scenic and enjoyable couple of miles this whole trip, Uintas included. Loved everything about it, except forgetting my lunch in the car. Whoops! Drink celebratory beverage, walk down, drive back, home-cooked pasta dinner, then figure out how to AirPlay photos to the TV and spend the night sharing pictures and telling stories. Supposed to rain tomorrow… considering Mt. Olympus but we’ll see what happens. Fall asleep to the pitter-patter of raindrops on the van roof.

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    Utah Day 5 SLC - Fly out tomorrow morning, on my trip’s downslope now. Rainy morning. Freezing rain in the Wasatch. Won’t clear up in time for any side trips today. Uintas have gone from bad to worse over Labor Day weekend with snow at Mirror Lake; the NWS describes “winter-like conditions” above 10k feet. Warm up with cappuccino. Jus still recovering from altitude sickness. We talk Grand Staircase and I try to soak it all in. Down the rabbit hole we go with trip photos, then YouTube videos, then Steve Allen guidebooks. Watch a documentary on legendary dirtbag climber Fred Beckey. Jen shares an Instagram story on Swiss via ferrata, I send her a link to via ferrata in Utah. “$109 to walk on some metal pegs? No thanks.” ❤️ eat some great Indian food and spend the night in the living room with the tv off, talking and occasionally sitting in silence, listening to the nothingness. Nice to find others completely comfortable doing so. Sort out morning plans, fall asleep reading Grand Obsession.

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  • flying tomorrow, had to double-check some of these on the tsa.gov whatcanibring website so i thought i’d share:

    | carry on | checked | item | |:-:|:-:|:- | | ❌ | ❌ | fuels | | ❌ | ❌ | bear spray | | ❌ | ✔️ | tent spikes | | ✔️ | ✔️ | knitting needles | | ❌ | ✔️ | hiking poles | | ❌ | ✔️ | walking sticks | | ❌ | ✔️ | ice axes/ice picks | | ❌ | ✔️ | razor blades | | ✔️ | ❌ | power banks | | ❗ | ❗ | camp stoves | | ❗ |❗ | bug repellent | | ✔️ |❗ | disposable and zippo lighters | | ❗ | ✔️ | bottled water | | ❗ | ✔️ | crampons | | ❗ | ✔️ | hand sanitizer | | ❗ | ✔️ | oils and vinegar | | ❗ | ✔️ | peanut butter | | ❗ | ✔️ | scissors | | ❗ | ✔️ | umbrellas | | ✔️ | ✔️ | flashlight | | ✔️ | ✔️ | navigation GPS | | ✔️ | ✔️ | sleeping bag | | ✔️ | ✔️ | safety pin | | ✔️ | ✔️ | toothbrush | | ✔️ | ✔️ | tweezers | | ✔️ | ✔️ | utensils |

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  • > Comfortable and safe are vital! Anyone can go out into the mountains with a tiny amount of gear and suffer — you need to be warm, well-fed and ready to deal with safety issues. Ultralight camping should be delightful, not stressful. The challenge is to succeed with only the gear that’s absolutely needed.

    > The first-aid kit is a good metaphor for your lightweight camping mind-set. It would be foolish to travel without one, right? But what is truly required? What can you effectively improvise? There is a blurry line between TOO heavy and TOO light. You can still go out in the backcountry with a very light pack and be comfortable and safe (see tip 55).

    Excerpt from Ultralight Backpackin’ Tips by Mike Clelland

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  • Where and when: McKee Draw to Hayden Pass (westbound), first few days of September

    What temp range and weather do you expect: 40F-70F, high exposure, potential multiple daily thunderstorms, hail possible, worst case heavy rain and/or below-freezing conditions

    Goal Baseweight (BPW): somewhere ~6 lbs, I’d be willing to add stuff

    Budget: <$100

    Non-negotiable Items: nothing’s non-negotiable but not enough time or money to make major changes

    Solo or with another person?: Solo

    Additional Information: I’ve backpacked the AZT/PCT/CDT with similar kits but never in Utah outside brief peakbagging trips in the La Sals. I’d love to skip to Leidy TH. I’d enjoy meeting like-minded hikers but am comfortable alone. Considering adding a small cook kit to give me something to do if/when riding out thunderstorms

    Lighterpack Link: https://lighterpack.com/r/262b1g

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  • https:// lighterpack.com /r/uigv2q

    Where are you going and when: Colorado late summer

    What temp range and weather do you expect: Low/mid-30's to 70's

    Goal Baseweight (BPW): Pretty happy with things, but I'm always down with going lighter.

    Budget: $0. I got bills to pay.

    Non-negotiable Items: Honestly don't know what I could cut out. If anything, I might be forgetting something.

    Solo or with another person?: Solo, 2p gear list is heavier.

    Note: A lot of this gear I bought used or on sale/clearance. UL gear doesn't have to be expensive. There's plenty floating around, if you keep an eye out. Thrift stores or Craigslist in more outdoorsy cities will have decent stuff. If our community on Lemmy gets large enough, it'd be cool to have a ULGeartrade at some point. I bought the pack and the poncho tent off there.

    Caveats: For cooler temps I'll bring a down vest or jacket. If I want more comfortable sleep, I have an inflatable sleep pad. For buggy conditions I bring the net tent. All this would bring me up to 10 lbs.

    Lighterpack

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  • Triple-Triple Crowner breaks down his 6-8 lb baseweight headed NOBO in Creede, CO.

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  • Original post by dahlibrary

    https://imgur.com/a/J4gyw50

    I had both a cirriform min (long) in silpoly and the splitwing. I sold the Cirriform. The splitwing is the best shaped tarp out there (for me...) Here's why

    • I'm 6'4" and sleep on my stomach. I'm basically 7ft long once I'm in a sleeping bag. The splitwing and cirriform both handled this okay. BUT...
    • I can sit up in the splitwing. Because the height is flexible due to the front wings I pitch it with a 49" trekking pole at the front and still have enough side coverage to not worry about wind blown rain. The cirriform design does not allow me to sit up in it unless I pitch it about 8-10" off the ground.
    • Splitwing 10D sil/sil fabric is magical. It dries really fast (I once dried it out in 5 minutes during a 10mph breeze on a summit by holding the front wings and flying it like a kite), doesn't need to be seam sealed, and packs to the size of an apple. The 30D reinforcements are superbly designed and make a huge difference.
    • Splitwing design goes up fast. I always pack it so the back end goes in last to the bag. Regardless of whether it's super windy or rainy I can get it up in 90 seconds. Shake out the back of the tarp, leave the rest in the bag. Stake the back two corners, wrap the rear middle line around my trekking pole and stake it out so the back wall is vertical. I also put the tip of the rear trekking pole through a loop on the rear middle stakeout point. Then pull the rest of it out of the bag while walking forward, jam the front pole in, pull out the front lines and stake them. Pull the two front corners taut and you're done. I set it up in a hailstorm right below Mather pass on the PCT in 90 seconds. Tossed my stuff inside and I was dry while the other hikers cuddled a boulder trying to stay dry getting pounded by pea gravel sized hail.
    • Splitwing with Paria 1.3mm guylines and Lawson line on the front/rear apex is 250g in stuff sack. The vestibule is 60g extra but I rigged my ULA rain skirt to be a vestibule and it works great. With an extra extra long Borah DCF bivy (147g) I'm at ~400g for a (tiny!) double wall shelter. The cirriform I had was 375g.
    • The cirriform with side entry sounds great, because that's my biggest complaint about A-frame type tarps, but in reality that side entry point zipper is under a lot of tension and it seems like a bad idea to really cinch that down. With the splitwing I put insane amounts of tension on my guyline stakeouts and never worry about it. The cirriform entry point also needs to be switched from one loop to the other to shift from side to front entry which is difficult to do with it under tension.
    • Splitwing stakeout points are perfect. Due to having 4 along each side, plus a fifth midway up the side of the a-frame, you can stake out the splitwing to handle any weather. And due to the closed foot, I'm never worried about wind blown rain. I typically carry 6 ruta locura carbon fiber stakes and 6 8.5" lawson titanium skewers. That combo allows for pitching in any type of terrain really well. I used the Splitwing plus ULA rainskirt along a 500 mile section hike this year on the PCT (Sierras) mid July to mid August. It rained every day for half those days (monsoon season baby!) and I was really happy with my choice. I was going to use an 8x6 custom built poncho tarp but believe it or not the weight difference is about 100g between the poncho tarp and the splitwing plus dedicated rainjacket and rainskirt. That 10d sil nylon fabric in the splitwing really is incredible. I've also used the splitwing for about 9 months prior to that section hike. It's been durable. Now there are some downsides with the splitwing.
    1. I could totally cook in the pitched tarp, and did numerous times, but not with anything setup. I'd usually pitch the tarp, toss my stuff in, cook dinner, then setup my bivy and bag. It's not super spacious when you're sitting up. During one driving rainstorm that dumped a half inch overnight the dry area was almost exactly the size of my bivy. It will keep you dry, and your backpack, but not much else.
    2. There's no way it's a two person shelter, unless you're not expecting any wind, you're both short, and you're really good friends/partners who sleep on their backs. It's wide enough at the front, but the rear is a fixed 36" wide. As a one person shelter it's great.
    3. I wish it were about 6" longer and 6" wider at the rear. Probably because I'm 6'4" as mentioned.
    4. I'd love it if it wasn't front entry, but that's the tradeoff. I generally get into bed and never get out until the morning. So twice a day I wish it was different but I practice yoga, I'm nice and flexible. I've never tested the mesh interior, but the attachment points for it are well thought out and it's probably a nice inner if you're shorter. The vestibule I think is well worth the money but you can rig something out of your rain skirt like I did, or even just a jacket if you're not needing absolute 360 degree protection. It's also a lot less of an issue if you're shorter since you can burrow down towards the closed foot more. It's silnylon so it does stretch a little while wet. But it's never been enough for me to adjust the pitch to compensate. I just stretch it tight when pitching and it does fine.
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  • https://piped.video/watch?v=wNkdfrSjSP4

    Tathaniel hikes 30+ miles through the Sawtooth Mountains of Idaho with a 16 liter child's schoolbag, tent, quilt, foam pad, filter and a bag of candy.

    This is tongue-in-cheek ultralight jerk material but it’s a genuine reminder that you really don’t need much.

    Not carrying any layers means if bad weather rolled in they’d have to setup up their tent — something that isn’t always possible everywhere so it introduces some risk. Also, all that candy and no half-toothbrush in sight 😜

    https://imgur.com/gallery/IBBpoba

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  • Step 1: Get a kitchen or postal scale. Yes, you need to do this!

    You don’t have to buy one, use what you have. If you don’t own a scale, borrow one, or buy one cheap at a local thrift store or secondhand store if possible. If you want to buy one online, consider the AMIR Digital Kitchen Scale, it’s readily available, inexpensive, accurate, easy to use and light!

    Step 2: Test it!

    Test your scale with objects of known weight. For example, coins (U.S. nickels weigh 5 grams, quarters 5.67 grams), a full SmartWater bottle, or look up the weight of your phone.

    What kind of scale do you have? What's the last thing you weighed? What's the next thing you want to do?

    Illustration by Mike Clelland from Ultralight Backpackin' Tips by Mike Clelland

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  • original post by EDDAKA

    Hello everyone! I have been fortunate enough to use just this one tarp for my triple crown, and also many smaller hikes. For this review I would go like to go over some of general tarp usage thoughts, some pictures of it in use, and maybe some other general thoughts.

    Why the Grace Solo? What is the Grace solo? It's an "A-frame" Catenary cut "trapezoidal" tarp, It's basically a 7x9, but tapers to 5 feet on the bottom end. It also has what they call a "catenary cut," which cuts a little weight, but also helps keep it taught when pitched. In my opinion it's an excellent one person shelter. Just small to enough to go without a bivy, for splash protection, but just barely. It's extremely light weight and extremely well made. I bought this tarp for my PCT thru hike in 2014, (gear list here) I bought it in November 2013, the only thing I asked for was no trekking pole grommets on the ridgeline tie-outs. It was not the first shelter I tried, In fact I tried a Zpacks Hexamid, (now the hexamid pocket tarp) and didn't like using the Carbon pole it came with. I disliked trekking poles, (still do) and didn't wanna carry a flimsy carbon pole that might break, so i sent it back and bought the grace solo instead.

    First setup pic

    It came with linelock 3's and some heavy 3mm guyline. The linelock 3's with the guyline were heavy af. I think it was over 4oz? That's over 50% of the tarp weight in guyline, and guyline hardware, no thanks. So I cut my own guylines. I used 1.3mm Zpacks Z-Cord for the four corners at 5ft length, and the two middle tie outs are 2.5ft. This leaves a little extra on the roll if a tie out wears out. (which took a thru hike and several years.) For the Ridgeline, I used roughly 11 feet (each end) of 1.75mm "lash it." This stuff is just awesome. I have never replaced the Ridgeline after all these years, and it has wrapped around many trees and splintery sticks and it's no more worse for wear.

    I used a pretty simple method with pitching, I use a truckers hitch for the ridge-line on a tree, Or I'll clove hitch it to a stick, someones trekking pole, random bush, etc... I just tie a figure eight loop in the Z-cord guyline, put the stake through the loop, apply some lateral pressure when placing a stake, and....thats it. Sometimes I'll do a little half hitch in the guyline if i need it to be shorter, and just put the stake through that way. If it is windy or the ground sucks, then i just use a log or rock on top of the stake. I would only do this with cuben though, as in my experience silnylon gets pretty flappy especially overnight or when it's wet, but for me this system is simple, light, and most of all worked great, oh and did I mention this tarp weighs 6.4oz with guylines?? So I thought I would share some pictures, Who doesn't like pictures? I honestly have cowboy'd more than setup my tarp, but it's always in the pack ready to go. To this day I've never had a hole or had to patch anything. I keep saying I'll replace, but it wont die!!

    PCT Tarp Pictures

    Our year wasn't super crazy in 2014. Got snowed on Mt. San Jacinto (17 degrees that night apparently, one of, if not the coldest the whole hike) got dumped on a few times, in fact the first night at Lake Morena we had a crazy storm and I saw some ruined shelters...But mine help up fine. It got pretty chilly up north, and it was wet. Lots of cowboy camping on the southern half, but it kept me warm and dry when I needed it.

    AT Tarp Pictures

    Used it a bit on this hike. I finished pretty late due to some family stuff, but it held up to ice, sleet, snow, wind, I did use a Bivy (MLD bug bivy) on this hike because Lyme ain't no joke, but otherwise I'll never use 'em.

    CDT Tarp Pictures

    Years later and I thought about replacing the tarp for this hike but it just kept working! It took snow ice and rain, honestly didn't get a ton of use until later in the hike. Got lucky with weather for a while. On this hike I also roomed with my homie under his two person MYOG Rayway, and it was a palace compared to my tarp, you can see it in some of the pictures.

    CT Tarp Pictures.

    Still kickin'! Had a couple nights above treeline with some tricky pitches, but generally worked out great. I would advise against using shaped A-frame shaped tarps in other "fancy" pitches, they just don't work that well.

    So what can i say after using a tarp all this time? It's awesome! I enjoy having that extra connection with nature when I camp, I can see everything around me, and when I cowboy I'm not burdened with a heavy shelter weight. Make no mistake tents definitely have their place, but for me, I do not like going into nature and then zipping myself out of it.

    With that said, what are the downsides? Well there are three major ones I consider, but I have found a few ways to mitigate some of them.

    1.) Bug and creepy crawly protection: This a big one and probably the most common counter answer to tarp usage, what I have found is that that most creepy crawly's leave you alone, this goes along with the second point down below, and I have heard some horror stories, however I haven't had any life altering bug/snake/centipede/bear experiences while sleeping. As for bugs, I usually just wear my baseball cap plus a bugnet, and if they're really bad, maybe some earplugs and Benadryl. Except for some specific scenarios, usually the bugs went away at night and I could take my headnet off. They let me know in the morning when it was time to start walkin'.

    2.) Site selection, site selection, site selection: This I would say is the most important thing to using a tarp. You cannot just camp wherever like our Big Agnes fam, I'm sorry, but it just wont be the same. You have to be a little more meticulous about where you camp and where you want to setup. I feel like this is a worthy payoff for shedding all that tent weight, but you can't be lazy, especially if the weather looks bad. I didn't carry poles, so if you're heading above treeline or camping in the desert make sure you can figure out how to pitch your shelter. Spending that extra time on finding a good spot or finding a better area is paramount, or else you'll just be sad and wet (ask me how I know)

    3.) Pitching a tarp. This takes some experience. Having numb fingers and trying to remember knots is recipe for disaster, know your shit before you go. There are a ton of ways to do it, but I've mostly stuck with the A-frame, this tarp specifically doesn't lend well to other pitches, but A-frame is easy to setup and can be pretty bomb proof, especially if you paid attention to number 2. Usually I pitched it pretty low. Not a lot of room to sit up but optimum splash and rain protection. Not great for hanging out, good for sleeping tho. Moving forward would I buy another grace solo? I've thought about it, the weight penalty for a rectangle 7x9 is not that drastic and at $270 before shipping, the MLD is a pricey bit of kit. It has however, held up great all these years and the only item that's stayed with me from my first thru hike.

    Thanks for checking out my review.

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  • cross-posted from https://lemmy.world/comment/2024416

    @foggy@lemmy.world advocates for hiking for health:

    > Hiking. > > I cannot stress this enough. > > One of the biggest loops of depression is feeling anhedonic and drained of energy, which keeps you from doing stuff, which keeps you anhedonic and drained of energy. > > Go for a hike literally every single day for a whole month. Rate your depression on a scale of 1-10 every day a week before you start, every single day during, and then every day for a week after. You'll see the trend, and hiking will be your new antidepressant. > > It's easy. It's walking. It's not competitive, you can go hilariously slowly and still accomplish your goal. You can add hobbies to this hobby, like photography or bird watching. You're probably not getting enough exercise, and being depressed all the time blows. > > If you're nerdy and depressed, you may have heard about EMDR, where you sway your eyes back and forth rhythmically while you think about trauma. The doctor who came up with the treatment (that's showing crazy good results) went down the rabbit hole they went down because they noticed walking in the woods helping their depression. They currently think the mechanism has something to do with bilateral stimulation (walking) and constant reframing of your perspective (tree on my right, tree on my left, rock on my right, rock on my left). > > Other physical activities are great too, but hiking seems literally taylor made for the depressed. > > Do you struggle with anxiety and destructive ruminative thought patterns? Guess what you won't have the energy to do when you're panting for air? > > Hiking is a legit way to maintain depression indefinitely. Don't get cozy, though. take a break and your brain will find its way back to it's old antics.

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  • I neglected to wash my backpack the last couple seasons and my 2p tent could use a wash. Zippers are feeling a little gritty.

    I've seen some suggestions like baby shampoo, but the only stuff at the store was scented. Anyone use unscented castile soap?

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  • John Z is one of the more interesting personalities in the UL and long-distance communities that I've been able to find. Here he manages to set the Colorado Trail unsupported FKT and create an entertaining video at the same time.

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  • Hi, did somebody theSaga Trail (or RON trail, which share almost the same path at the beginning) in Norway? I want to hike it at the end.of August/beginning of Septemberamd I am not sure how much moskitoes or other blood thristy flying creatures should I expect. Will I be ok in a tarpent without a mesh?

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