You've set yourself quite an undertaking to say the least. I suggest that you plan your equipment for maximum sustainability without resupply. Check the threads here for ideas on what equipment might best suit your purposes such as this one;
Sustainable resources-New BOB ideaFor traps and snares, here's a down-loadable free e-book in pdf format;
Camp Life in the Woods and the Tricks of Trapping and Trap Making I'll suggest that you study up on stealth/guerrilla camping to avoid entanglements with irate landowners, people of questionable intent and law enforcement officers that won't be interested in why you're doing what you're doing, just that you're acting outside of the norm, not a resident of the area and probably breaking some law or other (knowingly or unknowingly). Make your evening fire just big enough to heat water and cook your meal, (I've used a hobo stove for years but am currently experimenting with a home-made wood-gasifier stove based on the
Bushbuddy.) eat, clean up and then move on a mile or two and make a cold camp. A
Hennessy Hammock makes setting up a stealth camp in the dark quick and easy and doesn't depend on a dry, flat, clear space to set up in.