Thu 10 Dec, 2015 4:21 pm
2350g Osprey Aether 70 XL (76L)
75g Nivia Moisturiser Sunscreen (in hip pocket)
142g Leatherman Skeletool (in hip pocket)
130g Sea to Summit Ultra-Light Packcover - Large (in hip pocket)
1540g MSR Hubba Hubba NX 2P Tent
299g MSR Autoflow
199g MSR 4L Dromlite
55g MSR Hydration Kit
179g Nalgene Wide Mouth Loop-Top bottle
221g LifeStraw Go Filter Bottle
000g Globetrotter Semi-Rectangular Down Sleeping Bag v6 - Shadow/Silver/Salsa - Large
660g Thermarest Prolite L
190g eBay Vietnam Silk Sleeping Bag Liner
114g Sea to Summit Aeros Premium Pillow
470g Stove (lighter, matches, sponge, etc, stove, pots etc.)
45g Utensils
65g Sea to Summit Collapsible Mug
220g Samsung Note 3
365g Suaoki 16W/20W Solar Panel
90g Petzel Headlamp
320g Xiaomi 16000mah (320g)
338g Charging Cables
eBay Samsung Note 3 4250mah battery case
Sony FM/AM Walkman SRF-59
Apple iPod nano 5G 16GB A1320
Other
720g Medication, Hikers wool, other blister stuff (been having boot trouble)
???g Snake Bite Kit
375g Fuel
375g Fuel (partially empty)
1800g Keen Boots + Icebreaker Socks (heavy with lots of Dubbin and orthodics)
100g Legionnaire Cap
660g Kathmandu Convertible Cargo Pants + Leather Belt
670g Polyester T-Shirt
Kathmandu Thermal Pants
Patagonia Long Sleeve Base Layer
Jocks
Speedos
330g Microfibre Towel
Gaiters
Thu 10 Dec, 2015 4:22 pm
Eljimberino wrote:You're taking a solar panel but not a sleeping bag?
Thu 10 Dec, 2015 4:24 pm
Eljimberino wrote:This is the 'what gear is essential' thread:
essential
ɪˈsɛnʃ(ə)l/
adjective
adjective: essential
1.
absolutely necessary; extremely important.
"it is essential to keep up-to-date records"
synonyms: crucial, necessary, key, vital, indispensable, needed, required, called for, requisite, important, all-important, vitally important, of the utmost importance, of great consequence, of the essence, critical, life-and-death, imperative, mandatory, compulsory, obligatory, compelling, urgent, pressing, burning, acute, paramount, pre-eminent, high-priority, significant, consequential
"it is essential to remove all the old plaster"
Thu 10 Dec, 2015 4:43 pm
Alittleruff wrote:Personal/ First Aid needs some work.
Hikers Wool
30ml Hand Sanitiser
15ml Iodine
Toothbrush
15ml Toothpaste
15ml Heel Balm
Nail Clippers
Scissors (micro)
Tweezers
Oral Thermometer
String (5m)
Superglue
Paracetomol
Ibuprofen (to be switched for Asprin)
Cotton Balls
Cotton Buds
TP
Band-aids
Tape
Insect Repellent
Sunscreen
Snakebite kit
Wipies
Alittleruff wrote:Include- A space blanket... you know, just in case. And well, if you are even contemplating not taking a sleeping bag you may just need it!
Alittleruff wrote:Also, a triangular bandage (multitude of uses for first aid), some crepe bandages, tape, scissors, tape, bushmans/ airogaurd, hydration tablets, some water purification tabs as a back up to your straw (which you may get rather frustrated with, kind of like drinking heavy ice cream through a straw at McD's!). You will need some band aids, and some gauze, disposable gloves, and possibly some antiseptic creme and some alcohol wipes (can be used to help start a fire if you need in an emergency as well as the usual), Panadol, aspirin (aspirin can be used in first aid to help anyone with a suspected heart attack, and well, you are in that age category, take some.) String can be handy too.
First aid gear is a priority not an after thought.
Alittleruff wrote:You haven't included toothpaste, toothbrush, comb, hand sanitizer. All of this is not essential I guess, but I take it.
Alittleruff wrote:Just my opinion.
Thu 10 Dec, 2015 4:45 pm
Sandbars wrote:Alittleruff wrote:
I don't know why you have all that water collecting kit. Personally I wouldn't bother with having more than one filter, if that.
Just my opinion.
hmm... what I see is one water filter. With a back up lifestraw incase of water filter failure, which is 40g heavier than the Nalgene. 40g hardly seems excessive. In hot weather 6 litres of carry capacity seems appropriate too.
Thu 10 Dec, 2015 5:00 pm
Alittleruff wrote:Agreed, 40g of water filter seems fine to me. But then I've never used water filters.
So I was wondering why would you have 1. A filter in your drink bottle (40g). Then 2. A larger (299g) Filter for collecting water. Then a 4L bag that weighs in at 199g + tubing for it at 55g. Seems like a lot to me. But I'm only new to this stuff, and generally just carry a 2L bladder and a few larger water bottles and some Aqua Pure tabs. I could go lighter & better by using an old cask wine bladder. But... I have to drink the wine first, and I'm not much of a drinker.
Is the area that Flipper Hands is travelling into particularly hard to find clean water in? Looking at the web site, drinking water is available at Burbie Camp, Camp Pincham & Camp Walaay by the looks, but maybe he is headed a bit more remote?
Thu 10 Dec, 2015 5:20 pm
Thu 10 Dec, 2015 7:26 pm
Thu 10 Dec, 2015 7:33 pm
Thu 10 Dec, 2015 9:09 pm
Gadgetgeek wrote:filter your water just to be safe, but that said, if you need water, drink it. you'll be out before you'll get sick, and you'll have time to get meds into you before the parasites take hold. Wine casks as water storeage works if you have a good packing system and are very careful. The guys I work with often use them on canoe and kayak trips as they pack in barrels. 35 degrees can really pull the electrolytes out, so make sure you have some replacement. I don't want to make assumptions, but guys your size and age tend to be on fairly low sodium diets. I've found that day two can really suck if you run low. Its not just sodium, potassium and calcium are important too.
Gadgetgeek wrote:Carry the spot this time, see if you like it.
Gadgetgeek wrote:Personally I would get ruthless on the little first aid stuff. if you need to do solo first aid, its either going to be big stuff, or little annoying things (or blisters) the annoying stuff needs just enough to keep from bleeding on your gear, you can do the cleaning and infection control when you get home on a three dayer. There is a lot of just fluff there. thermometer? no need, if you are feeling too crook to walk, you will be hitting the SOS button, you won't be trying to self-diagnose. you won't have food to wait out a fever. Thats the kind of thing I'm talking about. But non-stick dressings and large gauze can be the difference between bleeding out and getting out. I'll take big gauze over almost anything else any day. I've patched some big wounds with just a non-stick and tape.
Gadgetgeek wrote:the AMK heat-sheets are the best. And its worth haveing one for cases of shock, hypothermia and the like. I don't see rain gear, which is not always needed. But spending a night cold and wet can really deplete a body, and can put someone in a bad situation. So a good large space blanket can become that shelter if needed until the tent is up, and then can help you warm up and dry out.
Gadgetgeek wrote:I'd try to trim out the stove kit, and see if you can shed a bit there.
Gadgetgeek wrote:Ultimately you walk your own walk, and you'll find things that you need to adjust/change. But I think you've got a fairly solid basis there. I think its a good start as far as not trying to conquer the world in the first hit.
Thu 10 Dec, 2015 9:18 pm
Strider wrote:What does the snake bit kit consist? Are you familiar with the recommended pressure-immobilisation treatment for Australian snakes?
Thu 10 Dec, 2015 9:24 pm
Thu 10 Dec, 2015 9:26 pm
Thu 10 Dec, 2015 10:48 pm
Equip Snake Bite Kit - 150g
Tweezers 10g
Cotton buds and balls - 10g
Asprin - 10g
Iodine - 20g
Paracetamol - 20g
Gauze-??g
Non Adhesive Pads - ??g
Ventolin - 40g (Asthma) (DITCHED)
Symbiocort - 40g (Asthma)
Various Med's and Multivitamins - 30g (Think of this as food ;))
Gaviscon tablets - 30g (DITCHED)
Iberogast - 120g (!!!in glass bottle, too heavy, will sort this out fast and get it in a 15/30ml bottle) assume 40g
Hikers Wool (half empty) - 40g
Roll of adhesive gauze tape 50g
Scissors - 20g
Gel Blister packs -50g
Assortment of Band-Aids - 25g (probably too many)
Heal balm - 20g
Hand Sanitiser - 45g (DITCHED)
Wipies - 30g (DITCHED)
Toothbrush - 5g (removed handle)
Toothpaste - 20g
Patellar Knee Strap (Grade #2 Patellar Tendonitis) /cheer - 30g
Cord - 10g
Superglue - 5g
Fri 11 Dec, 2015 9:18 am
Flipper Hands wrote:
Meds 110g
- Code:
Ventolin - 40g (Asthma) (DITCHED)
Symbiocort - 40g (Asthma)
Various Med's and Multivitamins - 30g (Think of this as food ;))
Gaviscon tablets - 30g (DITCHED)
Iberogast - 120g (!!!in glass bottle, too heavy, will sort this out fast and get it in a 15/30ml bottle) assume 40g
Fri 11 Dec, 2015 10:33 am
Sandbars wrote:Flipper Hands wrote:
Meds 110g
- Code:
Ventolin - 40g (Asthma) (DITCHED)
Symbiocort - 40g (Asthma)
Various Med's and Multivitamins - 30g (Think of this as food ;))
Gaviscon tablets - 30g (DITCHED)
Iberogast - 120g (!!!in glass bottle, too heavy, will sort this out fast and get it in a 15/30ml bottle) assume 40g
I would think two and three times before ditching the ventolin. Even if you very rarely use it - when you bushwalk, you go to places that are away from your usual, and there will be different plants and other allergens there, that you may react to. I have seen very stable asthmatics have bad attacks when walking. Plus, its not something that you can improvise. You can always use some item of clothing as a sling, or to stop bleeding etc, but if you cannot breathe.... A PBL is not like ringing an ambulance, you have to be prepared to take care of yourself for up to 24 hours, depending on location, before you get assistance. Far more people die each year from asthma attacks than snake bites, and yet people are consistently happier to carry 150g snakebite kit than 40g ventolin.
When I am putting together a first aid kit, I ask these questions:
*what will this be used for?
*how likely is that to happen?
*is there anything else that can be used to substitute?
*what is the worst thing that can happen if I do not have this?
for example:
triangle bandage
used for sling, to wrap severe bleeds, to use as a tie for a splint. severe events - unlikely to happen. Can use shirt for sling, any long sleeve item to wrap bleeds or use a tie for a splint. Worst thing that might happen: imperfect sling (uncomfortable but not life threatening), lose an item of clothing as a bandage.
ventolin:
used as bronchodilator, severe asthma attack, fairly uncommon. No useful substitute. Potentially life-threatening if you don't have it.
Fri 11 Dec, 2015 2:19 pm
Fri 11 Dec, 2015 6:17 pm
Fri 11 Dec, 2015 6:28 pm
wayno wrote:i'd change the leather belt for a synthetic one. lighter and holds a lot less moisture...
Fri 11 Dec, 2015 6:38 pm
Gadgetgeek wrote:for pots, depends on how you cook, I get away with an 800ml pot with a fry-pan lid. (snow-peak trek 800) But you will know after you do the walk how much you can trim out.
Fri 11 Dec, 2015 8:28 pm
Fri 11 Dec, 2015 10:09 pm
Gadgetgeek wrote:I get that, its why I lashed out on a titanium set! Honestly, I think you have a pretty good setup. Its a grams game from here on out, and only you know where you can shave things off, and where you can't.
Sat 09 Jan, 2016 6:59 pm
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