In
another thread I explained that I mix EDC items with the things I use for backpacking, hiking and walking trips.
I thought I'd post another thread to illustrate what I mean and also take the opportunity to solicit advice. Also, since I know you guys like pictures, I took some!
I should say in advance that I in no consider myself an expert in survival techniques and although I carry a PSK, advice and suggestions are welcome.
When I go camping or hiking I like to travel light but also to be comfortable. I can sleep under a plastic tarp rigged with paracord if I need to but unless I've been dropped out of a plane I want to enjoy myself out there. Also, although I know how to make a fire I tend to avoid doing so when I'm camping - partly due to a penchant for no-trace camping and also because the area around here is prone to forest fires.
I get about a lot on a bicycle and generally carry a small pack around with me in which I always keep a few things. When I go hiking or camping, I use the same pack and merely add my camping gear.
Here's the pack and the bits and pieces that go in it daily:
On the right is my wallet, keys with a couple of LED torches and a lighter, and a Leatherman, always on my belt. Not pictured a Casio Pro Trek and my mobile phone which I'm using to take the picture!
Here's what goes in the front pocket of the bag:
That would be a FAK (limited, suggestions welcome), a PSK, a headlamp, a bicycle tool, a compass, a banana case for my glasses, pencil with duct tape, a spare torch, Miox and a notebook for jotting.
I have, and used to carry camping, a ceramic/activated carbon filter but the Miox is so small that I have taken to carrying it both camping and day to day.
The FAK:
Pretty self-explanatory and comments and suggestions welcome.
Torch:
With a spare set of batteries. Handy for cycling but also for camping.
PSK:
As I said, I am no expert here and I have picked up a few ideas from this very forum. There is room for extra items - what might be useful?
Here it is all packed up into the front pocket of the pack. There's 30 feet of paracord wrapped around the top handle in a quick release weave.
Now here's the interesting part. This is the sort of thing I take with me for a couple of nights hiking and camping:
Sleeping bag with a liner to increase its rating if it gets chilly. A packtowel for the swimmin' hole. A Hennessey hammock which is probably the best piece of outdoor gear I have ever encountered. Cooking pot, Esbit stove, cutlery and a flask for keeping my tea warm (hey, I said I like luxury), hard bottle of water and a couple of Platypus bottles with a hydration kit for drinking on the move. Spare clothes and a couple of packets of dried dinner.
As I said when I'm on a planned trip, I try to avoid fires, so I bring this:
All pretty self-explanatory except that flask isn't booze, it's pure alcohol which I pour into the aluminium candle holder and use instead of the Esbit tabs in order to cook. Unlike the tabs it doesn't reek when it burns. I carry a batch of tabs regardless, just in case.
And here it all is, packed up and ready to go for a few nights.
There's room in the pack for a handful of granola bars to munch along the way, and more food and extra clothing to extend the trip or for when it gets cold.
The only thing that changes when I'm camping or hiking is that the PSK clips to my belt, instead of sitting in the pack.
The flask is a real luxury and serves my obsession with a nice hot cup of Oolong tea during the day, which I would brew up in the morning before breaking camp.
Even when only hiking, I throw the hammock and the bag in the pack. They weigh so little and are handy in a tight spot.
As you can see, I mix up EDC with camping gear quite happily.
Your thoughts?