devoswitch wrote:Tortoise wrote:devoswitch wrote:Sorry I can't help you there Tortoise. Haven't been up either of the Arthur's yet. Maybe for the sake of a few grams just chuck a few hooks in to be safe...
Hi devoswitch. Ta for the thought.
But a few grams? I've got a bunch of mountain leapers to try to keep up with!

Or at least not slow them down tooooooo much.
Just got my food back down below 400gm/day - which worked fine on the WArthurs. Now in the process of chucking unnecessary drawstrings etc...
Yeah I suppose every gram counts.. If you're counting

Then again I'm 105kg so I suppose I don't notice the small differentials like that!
Can't wait to hear about how the trip goes. The Arthur's looks incredible. Are you summiting Fedders? Is this the peak of the previous concerns?
Ah yes, Fedders would be my Everest. It snuck back onto my bucket list after I managed Anne and her Circuit a couple of years ago (in sheer terror, I might add). Then followed 12 months of working on my fear of heights, including a couple of brilliant private rock climbing lessons (thanks, guys!!!!). Revisited Anne and her Circuit, and LOVED it!! I've yet to finish the report 'In Which Tortoise Smashes the Anne Circuit', to follow up my fear-and-trembling report from the year before. Since then, I got to visit the WArfurs (A to K) and LOVED it. But it's been a few months, with only a short time on a high ropes course and an abseil down a 25m drop. I found myself more nervous than when I was intensively working on heights, but nothing like the fear I had developed. So I'll just have to wait and see what I think in real life. The main purpose this time is the Eastern Arthurs, but Fedders would be another few layers on top of the cake.
Re pack weight - being a middle+-aged midget who can't go up hills fast no matter how hard she trains, I need to have some other things going for me. On the Anne circuit, I kept up most days because the mountain-leapers were carrying over 20kg, and I was carrying 11.

That's come down from 23kg for 7 days a few years ago. While I'm far from ultra-light, becoming a gram-counter has revolutionised what walks I can do, and how much suffering (or not!) they involve.
If I make it up Fedders (and down safely), the world will know! Thanks for the encouragement.
