Heading into the wilderness for 1 to 6 or more nights, with nothing more than you can carry and your wits.
(None of this carrying all your stuff around Europe on your back when you're not travelling by train crap)




A friend I regularly backpack with does the cowboy camping thing. Big sheet of Tyvek and a 20-degree rated bag is all he needs.A_Man_Who_Tries wrote:Waffles for taking a tent, ha.
I have fantasies of hiking the Washington section of the PNW trail.Dave N. wrote: Sun Aug 08, 2021 6:45 am Not crap! Haven’t done it in awhile, but I have nice memories of backcountry pack trips. I often have fantasies of hiking the Arizona Trail.
I was having the same issue with my 1” Thermarest pad, and then I got a Big Agnes Insulated Q-Core SLX Pad and my quality of sleep changed much for the better. It’s an insulated 3.5” pad that you only inflate enough to keep your hip from touching the ground when on your side (most people overinflate them, like they would a Thermarest). Like sleeping on a cloud. Total game changer.It’s getting harder for me to sleep on the ground, so I don’t get as excited about it as I once did. Still, not crap.
Every spring I go through this dilemma, particularly this year after not bike commuting or getting out as much during COVID. I just need to start small in spring and work my way up to longer and more strenuous day hikes by early to mid-summer.jason from volo wrote: Sat Aug 07, 2021 12:26 am I am so far from being able to handle something like that, both physically and mentally. It’d be nice to get there.
All my favorite experiences have been in places where you’re at least a full days hike from the trailhead and civilization. That’s not to say there aren’t amazing places that can be seen on a day hike, but the majority of pictures and memories I’m most moved by have been in some pretty remote areas.But for now, let me be there during the day but get me a nice dinner and nice bed at night.
tbone wrote: Sun Dec 10, 2023 11:58 pm I imagine at some point as a practicality we will all start assuming that this is probably the last thing we gotta mail to some asshole.
If Appalachia is in your region/distance, then I can’t recommend Red River Gorge in eastern Kentucky enough for a beginner backpacking destination. Plenty of places to hike and camp, under 2-5 miles total distance per day is entirely doable, and ample car camping if you wish to break up multiple days or call it quits on backpacking early, plus a small taste of real wilderness and impressive ridge line views. The most elevation gain you can have is about 450-500’ in any section, which is great for a beginner (especially compared to the 2,000-4,500’ cumulative gain one might do per day on most PNW hikes).jason from volo wrote: I really enjoy hiking and have had a vision of one day being able to hike at least several days of something like the Appalachian Trail. That's at least do-able, but I'm a long ways from that even. And while I've said I would love to hike the whole Appalachian Trail, I realize the likelihood of that ever happening is probably just barely above zero.
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