All You Need to G.O.O.D. You Can Carry on Your Back
by
Charles M.
Survival Blog
In 2000 my
wife and I decided we would do a through hike of the Appalachian
Trail from Georgia to Maine. The distance traveled would be 2,168.5
miles of foot trails through the wildernesses of the eastern United
States. We climbed more than 250 mountains. Our elevation change
was equal to climbing Mount Everest from sea level to the summit
and back nineteen (19) times. The trail is very challenging and
can be dangerous (two people died on the trail the year we hiked).
The trail follows the crest of the Appalachian Mountain through
fourteen states. Although this was a long backpacking trip
it required us to have everything we needed to survive the outdoors
for an extended time while living and walking through all weather
conditions. Rain, sleet, snow, hail storms, 100 degree weather,
in it all we walked an average of 14.7 miles a day, seven days a
week for months. The lessons learned are very valuable when it comes
to surviving extended periods of having to make it on
your own. Ive read many books, articles and heard many conversations
about what is needed to survive natural disasters, terrorist attacks
or bad economic times, but until youve spent weeks and weeks
in the wilderness with just what you can carry, that information
at times is valuable but very often overstated and dangerous.
Our adventure
began on the 3rd day of March 2002 and ended September 26th 2002.
The first night out it was 0 degrees with a 15 below zero wind chill.
The first two weeks on the trail were not much better with most
days not getting above freezing. We had to hike with our water bottles
next to our bodies to keep them from freezing. When it became uncomfortable
during the day we could put them in our packs in an outside pocket
but turned them upside down so the freezing would occur in the bottom
(now the top) and we could remove the bottle and turn it upright
and remove the lid and drink. At night we would put our water bottles
and water filter inside our sleeping bags at the foot of the bag
to keep them from freezing. In the mornings we would turn our tent
wrong side out and shake the frozen moisture out of the tent. The
amount of water given off by the bodys respiration and perspiration
during sleep is amazing and a problem when it is 20 degrees in your
tent. During the summer months there was a record drought for most
of the eastern U.S. We had days in access of 100 degrees and very
little water. At times we collected water from ditches, cattle ponds
and once from a deep tire track in the forest service road we crossed.
In the White Mountains it took 2 hours to collect just 2 liters
of water. We found a rock crevice that had a small trickle of water.
We would collect it in our spoon and put it in our bottles. By the
end of the trail we had walked from winter in the Georgia mountains
to summer in Pennsylvania to winter on Mount Katahdin in Maine.
What allowed
two people over the age of 50 to complete this hike was preparation
and knowledge of personnel abilities and skills and equipment. By
the time we started our hike we had our pack base weight down to
12 lbs plus food and water. We could hike for 10 days and not have
our packs weigh over 45 lbs. and have over 4,000 calories per day
in our meals. We only carried what we used and every item had multiple
uses. If we didnt use it at least once a week we didnt
take it. We saw early on that carrying things for just-in-case
created more problems than the advantage of having it just-in-case.
We realized that carrying too much, too fast and too many miles,
people got hurt too soon and went home too soon.
Preparation
Planning is
one of the most important factors in accomplishing such a daunting
task of surviving in the outdoors for an extended time. It appears
to be difficult for a lot of people to understand the importance
of preparation when it comes to difficult task. We like most people
read as much material as possible on long distance hiking and specifically
the Appalachian Trail. We read every journal we could find on the
Internet and garnered as much information as possible. We took notes,
studied maps, made list of materials, explored where we could get
food supplies and the more we knew the more confidence we had in
completing the task. The benefit of all our planning became evident
very quickly on our trip. As we made our approach to the southern
terminus of the Appalachian Trail on Springer Mountain in Georgia
we met several other hikers starting their through hike.
The first thing we noticed were the large packs. One young man was
carrying a 108lb pack and when I asked him what he had in it he
said, only the necessities. Another hiker had a pack
that he had weighted at the ranger station that was 78lbs. Of the
eight people we met that first day on the trail only one finished
the hike and actually climbed Mt. Katahdin (the northern terminus)
the same day we did. Then there were the Boy Scout troops with their
50 lb packs and the scout leaders with their 75lb packs full of
necessities.. They would look at our packs and ask the
question, how long are you out for? When we said "six
months" they had a very puzzled look on their face and would
ask the next question, why are your packs so small?
When we answered we just carry what is necessary they
would give us a curious look and walk on by.
Some of the
things we did to check out our equipment was just common sense.
Every time it would rain or snow we would put on our gear and head
out on an all day hike through our neighborhood. I expected the
white van from Bellview Sanitarium to show up any minute with the
jackets to carry us away. We live in the historical district of
our hometown and the area is very hilly, so, it was a good starting
point to practice. We got some strange looks from our neighbors.
A lady one morning asked if we were going mountain climbing?! We
said "Yes, 250 of them". She smiled and went back into
her house and probably dialed the phone.
At other times
we would pitch our tent in a downpour in our backyard and spent
the night cooking and eating our meals in the rain (you cannot eat
in your tent because of animals, from bears to mice will invade
your sleeping quarters) and it paid off, we never slept in wet bags
or tent in six months. When it was below freezing we hiked and learned
how to layer our clothes. We learned what to take off and when to
take it off. We knew we would be alone, sometime days from the nearest
town or road and we had to get it right the first time. In the first
month alone on our hike over 25% of the hikers we knew quit because
of poor preparedness for the drastic changes in weather. The struggles
became very depressing and they stated, this is no fun.
Preparation made it fun and rewarding. Ill never forget the
beauty of the ice storm we had in the Great Smoky Mountains and
we were 35 miles from the nearest road. Im glad we took it
seriously, during our hike a fellow hiker we knew died of hypothermia
in the White Mountains in New Hampshire. Not only were we prepared
with the right clothes and equipment we were prepared physically.
By the time we were at the half way mark in Pennsylvania, over 75%
of the hikers had left the trail. A considerable number had left
because of physical problems the majority of which were either feet
or knee issues. Walking in pain is part of the hike. We lost all
of our toenails and had some sore knees and foot problems but no
blisters. Two thousand feet downhill walks with a heavy pack
are a killer on knees and feet. Toe bang is what they
call it when your shoes are not large enough and your toes hit the
end of your boot. In a day or two you have black toes with a lot
of pain. Preparation avoided this and all of the other issues that
we faced.
By the end
of the first week on the trail we came to an outfitter in Georgia
that sits on the trail. (Literally, the Appalachian Trail goes through
the building. It is a little of the trivia on the Appalachian
Trail). The outfitter was going through individual packs and sending
stuff home. He said on an average day at the peak of
the starting days (end of March through April) he ships out over
500 lbs of gear he has taken out of hiker packs. The conversation
around campsites each night covered only a few things; food, miles,
next water source and pack weight. With over 1,000 miles of hiking
experience before our hike, we were still tweaking the contents
of our pack the entire hike. The only thing we added to our packs
on the entire hike was Thermarest micro pads (we shipped the closed
cell pads home in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia). They were awesome!
Sleeping on the ground for six months got a lot better when we swapped
12 oz pads for 1 lb., 2 oz pads. I carried three Band-Aids for 2,168.5
miles. I dont carry band-aids now. If I need one, Ill
use a piece of duct tape with Toilet Paper and triple ointment over
the wound. Everything must have multi-use abilities or you dont
need it.
You will never
know what will happen around the next ridge or over the next mountain
but you can develop the skills and habits that will enable you to
deal with what ever happens; good or bad. It will take more than
a few weekend trips. Weekend trips will not give you enough situations
to correct your gear nor will it give you the fatigue you will encounter
on 100 to 200 mile hikes. You can run, jog, ride bikes and do 10k
runs but 100 miles in the woods carry a pack will indicate very
loudly what is wrong with your set up. And trust me it will show
up
you will end up cutting the labels out of your shirts and
the unused pockets out of your pants. You will get rid of the stuff
you just couldnt do with out. You will need to spend extended
periods in what ever the predicted situation may be. Weeks of
consistent practice will hone your skills and purge
your equipment into a workable tool set.
Basic gear
list:
First, what
you carry depends on how far youre going, where, and when.
Camping and backpacking magazines may make it seem as if youre
doomed unless you have the latest gear. But, new equipment for even
an overnight hike can easily run $1,000 to $2,000 or more. Dont
worry. You can plan a hike on the Appalachian Trail without bankrupting
yourself in the backpacking store. Most of our gear we collected
over years and less than 25% came from a name brand or a known outfitter
(i.e., REI).
What should
I carry?
Packing
for a day-hike is relatively simple:
- Map and
a good small compass (learn to use them first!)
- Water (at
least 1 quart, and 23 on longer hikes in hot weather)
- Warm clothing
and rain gear and hat
- Food (including
extra high-energy snacks)
- Tent peg
(used as a pick to dig a cat hole to bury human waste)
- First-aid
kit, with duct tape for blister treatments
- Whistle
(three blasts is the international signal for help)
- Garbage
bag (to carry out trash you find on the trail, some people are
slobs!)
- Sunglasses
and sunscreen (especially when leaf cover is gone)
- Blaze-orange
vest or hat (in hunting season)
- Toilet paper
(take out the paper center and flatten your half roll and put
it in a Ziploc bag)
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the rest of the article
February
22, 2012
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