Monday, March 26, 2012

Feral Cat vs the Spitfire

Why my tent has patches.  Originally posted March 12, 2010


Meet the Spitfire. It weighs in at 2 lbs 12 oz. It is pretty much a little mesh pod with a bathtub-floor sporting taped seams. It is light weight, breezy and the perfect solo-hiking tent. I love it. Love Love Love.

I get home from backpacking last weekend, and like the good scout that I am, I set all the tents up in the backyard to air out. The $30 Walmart tent, Laura's 2 person tent and my Spitfire. All in a neat little row taking in the Miami sunshine and ruffling slightly in the cool ocean breeze.


Now: Meet Feral Cat.

Feral Cat crawls into the Spitfire because I left about a 6 inch gap in the door when I threw the stakes in after setting it up. The Spitfire is not free standing, so I figured I'd just put the two end stakes in--so that it would stand--but not fully stake it out, because after all, it was just airing out.

When Feral Cat gets into the Spitfire, she must have decided that it wasn't roomy enough for her and that she would rather be Out of the Spitfire. But Feral Cat is stupid or something because instead of crawling out of the little gap that she came in through, Feral Cat decides to start bouncing back and forth within the Spitfire. From one end to the other with claws out.

I see this going on through the window and run down to let Feral Cat out of the Spitfire. But instead of how I envisioned this rescue mission: open the door, Feral Cat runs out without any further trouble, it actually goes like this: Feral Cat sees me approach and breaks into an all out sprint--still inside the Spitfire--which just rips the stakes loose and collapses the Spitfire. Now Feral Cat is REALLY mad. Feral Cat continues to sprint, wrapped up inside the noseeum netting and nylon, all around the yard before landing on a pile of debris behind the laundry room. On top of an old rusty ironing board. At this point I'm able to grab onto one of the tent poles and slowly reach down and unzip the door. Feral Cat is free. Spitfire is down for the count.

Anyone have any suggestions on how to repair ripped noseeum netting (think dozens of dime to hand sized holes) and torn nylon?

Feral Cat 1, Spitfire 0

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Andrew Skurka 22 March 2012, Asheville NC

I spent a day hanging out in Asheville, NC.  I stayed at the Sweetpeas Hostel right in the old-timey downtown area.  Long lasting economic devastation started by the Depression ensured that historic buildings were preserved. Now there are hostels with historic brick walls and Urban Outfitters with vintage wood floors.  Sweetpeas was alright as hostels go, it was expensive, brand new (Ikea!) and had lots of rules.  Lots!  (e.g. no alcohol or barefeet).  Hostels, regardless of how many ridiculious rules they have, are great places to meet folks.  I had my backpack stuffed under my bunk (no backpacks on beds! Rule!) and another guy in my room noticed.  "Hey, do you do like, real wilderness backpacking?"  "uhhh, yeah I guess so."  I was brushing my teeth at the time, but really I was thinking "Thanks for noticing? Wanna know my baseweight?".  Later, in the more appropriate environ of the swanky living room, we got to talking--FellowBackpaker and I (FB).  He asked "Are you going to the Andrew Skurka talk tonight?"  Andrew Skurka! Is in town? Really?  What luck.
"No."
"Oh, too bad.  I saw his slideshow last night and it was really amazing.  Tonight he is going to do a gear-talk"
So we talked a bit.  I use a tent, he uses a tarp.  He did the same section (Amicalola to Franklin) last year that I'd just finished.  Isn't the AT Cool? 
Eventually we decided that I would indeed like to go to the Andrew Skurka talk and that FB would give me a lift.  I whiled the day away in Asheville.  I went to see a Tragic foreign film at the local art-house-cinema, picked up the maps and guide for the North Carolina/Tennessee sections, a new CD (support music stores! yeah!) A Note of Hope (Because Woody Guthrie would have been 100 this year too) and drooled over some ultralightweight windshells and then met up with FB again.

The talk was at the Grove Park Inn.  Nice place.  When I'm rich and famous I will stay there instead of hostels.

For two hours AS wowed us with stories of Peril! Adventure! and Gear!  AS had his gear spread out on a few folding tables.  He's got a friendly presence and smiles easily.  He was wearing jeans and a stylish black sweater with big buttons half way down the front and the collar turned up and, to my horror, brown leather shoes.  I can forgive him for this, though.  He is clean shaven and looks like he came from the farm next door.  He credits his success in long-distance hiking partly to his appearance. "If I walk up to a farmer in Minnesota with a scraggly beard and say 'Hi I'm Paul Revere', it might not go so well."

He begins his talk in this way:
"You guys should see this," he started pulling off his shoe and sock.  "I was running on the AT yesterday and...."  His big toe was a black and blue swollen mess.  Gasp from the audience.

"Is it broken?"

"I don't know,"  he put his sock and shoe back on.  "I can walk on it so I guess it's okay".

The audience was mainly old guys and a handful of Cub Scouts.  AS asked at the beginning if anyone wanted to share who they were and why they were at the talk.  "Because you're a celebrity" would have been my contribution, but I kept my mouth shut.  Instead a loud Boy Scout leader stood up, "I'm a Boy Scout Master and our last trip was a disaster"  I'm sure it was.  

The main point of the presentation was to introduce beginners to the types of gear you can carry to improve your experience.  Beginners often carry foolproof gear (tents, water filters) anything that requires little skill to use properly.  They also 'pack their fears' for extreme what-if scenarios.  Both of these things increase the weight of the pack and thus decrease the ability to enjoy hiking.  So you need skills--or the 'stuff between your ears'--to decrease the weight of your pack and increase the enjoyment of the hiking part of hiking--not necessarily the 'camping' part.  AS can blow through 30 or 40 miles a day but the second he makes camp he's in his sleeping bag and sleeping--he only carries gear necessary for hiking, not for camping--mainly that's clothes and food.

AS and I agree on many points.  Our first aid kits, shorty sleeping pads supplemented with backpacks for foot insulation, cooking kit and water purification systems are identical.  According to him, though, I could trim my weight significantly by switching from tent or hammock (foolproof!) to a tarp and from a full sleeping bag to just a quilt with a sewn in footbox (basically a sleeping bag missing the back half).  Also, I could downsize my sock collection from three pairs to two.  Of course, my system (tent, full sleeping bag and three pairs of socks) have served me well enough so far, but I can't help myself.  I have a problem. I am tickled by the possibility that I might NEED more gear.  AS SAID so and he is an Expert after all.

AS describes his diet as "lots of snacks and bars, all containing some sort of chocolate, before a hot dinner of mashed potatoes or anything I can throw into hot water".  He also pre-packages all his food in small ziplock bags.  This would help to ensure that you knew exactly how many calories were going into your pack.  The recommendation was 3,000 calories a day and carrying food dense in calories--at least 150 calories per ounce.  (Assuming your food averages 125 calories per ounce, that's 1.5 pounds of food per day).  Olive oil added to a dinner is a great way to add really dense calories at the end of the day.

My pack was definitely heavier than it needed to be when I left Neel's Gap.  It was 30 lbs (! I'm embarrassed to admit this)  Unseasonably warm temperatures made my 20* down bag overkill--I sweated most nights--and I ate much less food than I anticipated.  Whether or not I replace my sleeping bag and tent before I head back to Franklin I will be streamlining my food supply.

Friday, March 9, 2012

Ahhh!

We're leaving Tomorrow!  Today is all sweaty and nervous anticipation, tonight is packing food and tomorrow is the Big Drive.

Here's a recipe for all of you out there in BlogLand to try.

GadoGadoRamen,
from Troop 48, With Love
For 12 (!)

In heavy duty freezer bag, pack individual ingredients:

  • 1 brick ramen 
  • dehydrated carrots
  • (include the seasoning pack, but don't open it!)
  • 3 tbs sunflower seeds

In a small water bottle combine:
  • 3 tbs oil
  • 12tbs soy sauce 
  • 12 tbs white vinegar

in a separate bag (one per group/pot) combine
  • 2tbs dehydrated onion
  • 12tbs brown sugar

You also need
  • clove of garlic
  • 1/2 jar of peanutbutter (to taste)

In Camp:

  • Boil water.
  • Add 2ish cups of water to heavydutyfreezerbag and let ramen/carrots/sunflowerseeds incubate for ~15 minutes while you make sauce.
  • chop garlic, saute in a separate pot (you have more than one stove for 12 people, right?!) with a bit of oil (do you have a bottle of just oil?, maybe keep that separate)
  • add liquid and other saucy things
  • heat up, make it taste nice and pour it over your now-soft ramen+carrot mixture

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Happy 100th!

to Oreos!  NPR told me so.  Hurrah!  Oreos are going into my pack, for sure.

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Le Menu

Ok, here's the Menu.  or What the Youth are Eating These Days:

1.  Mac&Cheese + weiners.
2.  Tortellini + pesto + dried tomatoes
3.  GadoGado Spaghetti (Troop 48 style, adapted from NOLS style)
4.  Herbed Tomato Rice
5.  Italian Double Cheese Taters

Yum.

So, we have a resupply at the beginning of Day 2, so we can have 2 nights of heavy food (Mac&Cheese&weiners on top of Ol'Springer) hurrah.

Also, I am about to begin a week of Serious Food Dehydrating.  I will let you know how it goes (Pics or it didn't happen).  I've never done this before...

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Freezer Bag Cooking

I'm digging around on the ol' Internets to find some recipes for the kids that are not 'gado gado spaghetti' which they would eat every single time if I let them because that's the one thing they know how to make.

I think for this hike we're going to try to put together some freezer-bag meals--to help with portioning and avoid the "Wait, WHO is carrying the noodles?" only to realize that the noodles actually got left in the car (to be honest this has NEVER happened to us, save the unforgettable Nutella-gate of 2010 and the great oatmeal-famine of 2011).

It will also allow us to cut down on dishes and allow us to feed more people more quickly -- there's only SO MUCH you can cook in 2 2L pots and we're going to be hiking in 2 groups of 6 people, so anyway we can streamline our cooking process is going to be important.

 Freezer Bag Recipes

When the girls pick some out, I'll post them up here so you all can see what the Youth are eating These Days.