I've done a pretty decent amount of outdoor shit in my life. I've stayed in field-expedient shelters in sub-zero weather, hiked portions of the Appalachian trail, canoed in Boundary Waters, been to a variety of summer camps, fishing trips, canoe trips, white-water rafting (on the river where they filmed Deliverance) and survival training.
I've always enjoyed being outdoors and exploring nature, and I didn't think about it until recently during a discussion with another forum member who mentioned he'd like to do more of this stuff.
I put together an overview but would like to hear about other members' trips. I'm particularly interested in extended survival experiences and hitchhiking.
Planning
All you need to do is find an undeveloped area and spend the night. However, I've found some general practices can make the experience a lot better.
1) Less is more. The best camping trips are simply about enjoying nature, usually with a few good buddies. Complex plans, trying to plan out every detail /having a strict itinerary, really just defeat the purpose
2) Don't spend a ton. For guys, buying a compass to go camping is like a fat bitch buying new gym shoes. You probably won't need half the stuff you think you do
3) It's supposed to be fun. If you're getting stressed out about planning it, don't invite me, I don't want to go camping with you
4) Determine water and food needs before-hand. Find out if there are re-supply points nearby or along the way. You don't want too much or too little so make sure this is the one thing you hash-out well ahead of time
Equipment
Just ask yourself if you really need it before you bring it. Some basic stuff I've always needed is below but it really depends on what you're doing. Tailor your equipment to your mission.
1) Backpack - Pretty much the most essential piece. I've used my Osprey Stratos 24 since around 2008. I've had other fancy backpacks come and go in the meantime, this has always been the most useful.
![[Image: SOBL.jpg]](https://www.backcountry.com/images/items/large/OSP/OSP0059/SOBL.jpg)
2) Sleeping bag - I've got a down North Face that's rated for -40 degrees Fahrenheit. Even in freezing weather, I've never needed to sleep inside it. It makes a great and expensive pad though. I recommend this instead (surplus bivy sack) with a cheap sleeping bag.
3) Tent - After lugging tents all over the place, setting them up, carrying them home with all the extra mud...I find that mobility beats infrastructure when it comes to camping.
I'd go with this (snugpack shelter) over a clunky tent any day.
4) Cooking equipment/Food - These two can't really be separated. This datasheet is more specifically about camping and not bonfires, which are fun but different. For camping, you don't really want a bunch of extra shit that you have to lug around.
My staples:
- Cliff bars
- Tin foil dinners
- A tin of hard boiled eggs
- Apples
- Trail Mix
- Beef Jerkey
- Rice
- Baked Beans
- Alternatively, MRE's can be bought from Amazon and might be a good option if you're backpacking long distances
Cooking equipment
- Canteen Cup
- Water bottle
- Frying pan setup
- Camp stove
- Flask
5) Shoes - I prefer these or these. They MUST fit. I hiked 40 miles on the AT in poorly fitting, clunky boots. It was hell. You might think they are snug enough in the store, but you should make sure you get the right ones, maybe go a half-size smaller than usual
![[Image: wolve415779_113971_jb.jpg]](http://www.shoebuy.com/pi/wolve/jb/wolve415779_113971_jb.jpg)
6) Clothing - Dress for the environment. Again, keep it simpler than you think you need to. They sell cool stuff at sporting goods stores but it's mostly a waste of money
Underwear and socks - Personal preference but remember: Cotton absorbs moisture, polypropylene, polyester, and wool wick moisture and are better to have touching your skin if you are going to be sweating a lot.
Pants - I like a pair of comfortable jeans or shorts but something with side pockets can be really handy. I've had pretty good success with the "zippered shorts/pants thing"
Shirt - A 'Dryfit' style material (polyester) seems to work pretty well. I throw a long-sleeve (usually plaid) button-up on when it gets cool.
Jacket - This really depends on the weather. Layers are your best friend in cold weather.
7) Rain gear - Anything from an expensive, breathable and lightweight jacket to a trash bag with a hole in it
8) Headgear - If it's cold, I prefer a shemagh over a synthetic balaclava, but up to you. I go with a beanie in the winter and a regular baseball cap in the summer.
***Notes about clothing***
- Unless you are experienced and acclimatized with the area you are camping/hiking in, body-temp changes will likely be unexpected. Layered clothing allows you to adjust to these changes.
- I keep clothes in a waterproof compression sack when not using them. I take the extra few minutes to unpack and repack properly if I need something. Rain can catch you quickly and that's not a good time to be adjusting a poorly packed item of clothing.
- Less is more.
9) Miscellaneous - Be sure you need the following, these items can add a lot of weight
Knives/hatchets/machetes - A regular Swiss-army works just fine
Compass - If you have a compass around your neck and don't know what a topo map is, you're wrong
Map - Doesn't have to be a topo but it's cool to have one if you're backpacking and essential for going off-trail
Electronics - Ipod, phone/ gps (i've never used one)/ weather radio (if it rains, you'll know)/headphones
Waterbottle- You need water, but you don't need a lot. Again, make sure you know where and if water is available on your hike. Aquamira (link) can replace a lot of extra water and one bottle can be refilled at a pump
Flashlight - Usually handy. A little mag-light will be fine but if you want to spring for a head-lamp, they can really come in handy
Extra shoelaces - 550 cord works better and has more uses. A small roll of this can be helpful to have on hand
Sunglasses - I wear my Rayban aviators everywhere. Maybe I look a bit douchey but they never break or bend and they fold up nice and slim for easy storage
Compression Sacks - I always bring some for water-proofing purposes
Hard Case - I keep breakable shit in a hard plastic, waterproof case
Watch
One more thing for now - Be smart about who you go with. A bad companion is a disaster when it comes to camping. You're in the woods, possibly far from civilization, and dependant on each other. Complainers are easy to spot and weed out, but other things are not so obvious.
Just because someone is your friend doesn't make them a good camping buddy. A few things to look for:
- The longer you're going for, the more important selection is
- You need someone who will match your pace (stopping too much on a long hump? don't plan on walking the next day)
- Have an understanding of what you're getting into beforehand, have an agreement on the plan to a reasonable extent
Camping and Game
It's a cool way to find new lays while doing fun, manly shit.
Camps - Adult camps
Hiking meetup groups
With a social circle
Take a girl on a day hike/ overnight trip
I have a ton more info on this beyond the general info provided here. Let me know if it would be of interest.
I've always enjoyed being outdoors and exploring nature, and I didn't think about it until recently during a discussion with another forum member who mentioned he'd like to do more of this stuff.
I put together an overview but would like to hear about other members' trips. I'm particularly interested in extended survival experiences and hitchhiking.
Planning
All you need to do is find an undeveloped area and spend the night. However, I've found some general practices can make the experience a lot better.
1) Less is more. The best camping trips are simply about enjoying nature, usually with a few good buddies. Complex plans, trying to plan out every detail /having a strict itinerary, really just defeat the purpose
2) Don't spend a ton. For guys, buying a compass to go camping is like a fat bitch buying new gym shoes. You probably won't need half the stuff you think you do
3) It's supposed to be fun. If you're getting stressed out about planning it, don't invite me, I don't want to go camping with you
4) Determine water and food needs before-hand. Find out if there are re-supply points nearby or along the way. You don't want too much or too little so make sure this is the one thing you hash-out well ahead of time
Equipment
Just ask yourself if you really need it before you bring it. Some basic stuff I've always needed is below but it really depends on what you're doing. Tailor your equipment to your mission.
1) Backpack - Pretty much the most essential piece. I've used my Osprey Stratos 24 since around 2008. I've had other fancy backpacks come and go in the meantime, this has always been the most useful.
![[Image: SOBL.jpg]](https://www.backcountry.com/images/items/large/OSP/OSP0059/SOBL.jpg)
2) Sleeping bag - I've got a down North Face that's rated for -40 degrees Fahrenheit. Even in freezing weather, I've never needed to sleep inside it. It makes a great and expensive pad though. I recommend this instead (surplus bivy sack) with a cheap sleeping bag.
3) Tent - After lugging tents all over the place, setting them up, carrying them home with all the extra mud...I find that mobility beats infrastructure when it comes to camping.
I'd go with this (snugpack shelter) over a clunky tent any day.
4) Cooking equipment/Food - These two can't really be separated. This datasheet is more specifically about camping and not bonfires, which are fun but different. For camping, you don't really want a bunch of extra shit that you have to lug around.
My staples:
- Cliff bars
- Tin foil dinners
- A tin of hard boiled eggs
- Apples
- Trail Mix
- Beef Jerkey
- Rice
- Baked Beans
- Alternatively, MRE's can be bought from Amazon and might be a good option if you're backpacking long distances
Cooking equipment
- Canteen Cup
- Water bottle
- Frying pan setup
- Camp stove
- Flask
5) Shoes - I prefer these or these. They MUST fit. I hiked 40 miles on the AT in poorly fitting, clunky boots. It was hell. You might think they are snug enough in the store, but you should make sure you get the right ones, maybe go a half-size smaller than usual
![[Image: wolve415779_113971_jb.jpg]](http://www.shoebuy.com/pi/wolve/jb/wolve415779_113971_jb.jpg)
6) Clothing - Dress for the environment. Again, keep it simpler than you think you need to. They sell cool stuff at sporting goods stores but it's mostly a waste of money
Underwear and socks - Personal preference but remember: Cotton absorbs moisture, polypropylene, polyester, and wool wick moisture and are better to have touching your skin if you are going to be sweating a lot.
Pants - I like a pair of comfortable jeans or shorts but something with side pockets can be really handy. I've had pretty good success with the "zippered shorts/pants thing"
Shirt - A 'Dryfit' style material (polyester) seems to work pretty well. I throw a long-sleeve (usually plaid) button-up on when it gets cool.
Jacket - This really depends on the weather. Layers are your best friend in cold weather.
7) Rain gear - Anything from an expensive, breathable and lightweight jacket to a trash bag with a hole in it
8) Headgear - If it's cold, I prefer a shemagh over a synthetic balaclava, but up to you. I go with a beanie in the winter and a regular baseball cap in the summer.
***Notes about clothing***
- Unless you are experienced and acclimatized with the area you are camping/hiking in, body-temp changes will likely be unexpected. Layered clothing allows you to adjust to these changes.
- I keep clothes in a waterproof compression sack when not using them. I take the extra few minutes to unpack and repack properly if I need something. Rain can catch you quickly and that's not a good time to be adjusting a poorly packed item of clothing.
- Less is more.
9) Miscellaneous - Be sure you need the following, these items can add a lot of weight
Knives/hatchets/machetes - A regular Swiss-army works just fine
Compass - If you have a compass around your neck and don't know what a topo map is, you're wrong
Map - Doesn't have to be a topo but it's cool to have one if you're backpacking and essential for going off-trail
Electronics - Ipod, phone/ gps (i've never used one)/ weather radio (if it rains, you'll know)/headphones
Waterbottle- You need water, but you don't need a lot. Again, make sure you know where and if water is available on your hike. Aquamira (link) can replace a lot of extra water and one bottle can be refilled at a pump
Flashlight - Usually handy. A little mag-light will be fine but if you want to spring for a head-lamp, they can really come in handy
Extra shoelaces - 550 cord works better and has more uses. A small roll of this can be helpful to have on hand
Sunglasses - I wear my Rayban aviators everywhere. Maybe I look a bit douchey but they never break or bend and they fold up nice and slim for easy storage
Compression Sacks - I always bring some for water-proofing purposes
Hard Case - I keep breakable shit in a hard plastic, waterproof case
Watch
One more thing for now - Be smart about who you go with. A bad companion is a disaster when it comes to camping. You're in the woods, possibly far from civilization, and dependant on each other. Complainers are easy to spot and weed out, but other things are not so obvious.
Just because someone is your friend doesn't make them a good camping buddy. A few things to look for:
- The longer you're going for, the more important selection is
- You need someone who will match your pace (stopping too much on a long hump? don't plan on walking the next day)
- Have an understanding of what you're getting into beforehand, have an agreement on the plan to a reasonable extent
Camping and Game
It's a cool way to find new lays while doing fun, manly shit.
Camps - Adult camps
Hiking meetup groups
With a social circle
Take a girl on a day hike/ overnight trip
I have a ton more info on this beyond the general info provided here. Let me know if it would be of interest.
Per Ardua Ad Astra | "I have come here to chew bubblegum and kick ass. And I'm all out of bubblegum"
Cobra and I did some awesome podcasts with awesome fellow members.