I'm doing the Western Arthurs A-K in December (a 10 day trip) and am considering the viability of a bivy bag under a tarp shelter as a means of saving weight. Does anyone have any experience of bivvying in the Western Arthurs? Any thoughts welcome

Tortoise wrote:Icefest has done it. He's exceptionally good at pitching things.
north-north-west wrote:If I was getting a new tent that had to stand up to Tassie conditiions, I'd always start with Tarptent. Their blemished DCF options are a bit cheaper and every bit as reliable as the standard version. You can get a Moment Li blem for under $600US, for instance. That's a solid little tent.
Tortoise wrote:Hi Kaid. Wondering what the rest of your gear is like. You might already have gone lighter weight.
But if not, it may free you up to take a boofier shelter. Have you done the 'weigh everything, including bags, containers etc'? I got a number of surprises when I did. It changed what I take. I also cut hundreds of grams off cooking stuff - now just a small titanium pot that's my billy, bowl & mug. On big walks I usually take my tiny BRS3000T stove. To protect from wind I use my vestibule/pack/boots/gaiters and carbon felt (this doubles as a pot cosy). It may be slightly more likely to clog than a bigger stove (?), but as all my walking buddies also use gas, they'd share their stove with me if needed (I'd still have my gas to contribute).
High Moor seems to be the spot to get stuck at in the WAs. I can't imagine what the 36 hours of heavy, horizontal rain would have been like in a bivvy, even if a tarp was very well pitched over it.My Tarptent Scarp 1 handled it pretty well.
PS I see Icefest has done it. He's exceptionally good at pitching things.
north-north-west wrote:Apologies for the hiatus; I went for a walk.
Gear list, please. Base weight of 12kg, even allowing for the tent and (perfectly reasonable) SB, seems excessive.
Biggles wrote:One thing that stands out like an infected big toe is your mention of camera gear coming in at 4kg for a (perceived) 10 day hike!![]()
Whatever that constitutes, maybe reconsider that inclusion in the undoubtedly heavyweight pack (23kg!) with something small and lighter.; you will still have photographs of the hallowed Lake Oberon overlook. I have not traversed the Arthurs (I certainly would like to), but I have explored Mount Anne's mid- to cloud-level rainforests (4 nights) and on those twi occasions my camera gear was an old Fujifilm X-30 digital (2014 vintage, which I still have), a KSM polariser and Gitzo Basalt CF tripod (560gm, a smidgeon heavier now with a new Arca-Swiss QR head).
Now, there is a (big!) difference between what I take on a multiday hike (a treasured Olympus XA, owned since 1982) or the X-30) versus what I take on a planned, researched, "search-and-trap" day walk: I am not a muscular walker and must by necessity keep multi-day pack carrying down low weight-wise. Then we come to the other extreme: day walks up to 15km are quite another thing: along for the ride is a 13kg Pentax 67 MF kit (), 4 lenses and three rolls of 120 film (of which everything will be scanned and printed to add to my gallery). I walk with photographers too, and the variety of equipment on day walks is as diverse as the walkers themselves, but mostly it is small mirrorless cameras or rangefinders. I think, in terms of difficult and long walks, we have sensibly moved on from the distant days when Peter Dombrovskis walked head-to-the-wind with his 27kg pack, topped off with a 5kg Linhof 4x5, three lenses, 5 holders and a polariser! As the late Melva Truchanas remarked in conversation, wryly observing the weight of his kit, "...it was the camera that killed him!".
Of latter times on MD walks I don't skimp on the protective qualities of tents — it's called "learning from unfortunate experience";; Moondance 1 is fine for me, with the recent addition of titanium TOAKS pegs (which, along with the guylines, double as tripod column support in unstable or windy conditions). I suspect a tarp and a groundsheet is stretching the risk a bit in them thar mountains. Maybe inveterate walker Rob Blakers could offer insight into the best tent for the WAs, given his numerous trips there, along with those in coastal and rainforest areas, often with 4x5 + holders packed (but latterly a Canon digi and maybe TS-E (tilt-shift) lens.
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