Packrafting’s roots reach deep into wild, landscape crossings of northern Alaska.
Landscape crossings are what I started over thirty-five
years ago as a young punk in his twenties and it’s where I have returned as a 50-something old curmudgeon.
Northern Alaska is where Peggy and I packrafted across the
Gates of the Arctic National Park in 1986 from the Haul Road and down the upper
Noatak, perhaps the first month-long trip to use one.
It’s where Thor Tingey decided he needed a boat with “bigger
tubes” and by asking his mom Sheri to make one, that Alpacka was launched after he and a group of college friends made a 600 mile Brooks Range traverse using Sevylors and Curtis Design boats.
Since then, I’ve run some whitewater, roadside and
wilderness, and pioneered the bike-n-boat approach of packrafts con bicycles back in the 1980s.
I’ve
played at the beach, gone hunting, included my kids, climbed mountains and
rafted out.
Some of those early trips I described in my book Packrafting! which is down to the last 100
copies now.
But it’s the long trips linking watersheds with mountain
passes and long, ridge-paralleling walks that satisfy me most.
This spring I planned a nearly 300-mile long, four watershed
trip across Yukon, Canada’s Ivvavik National Park and Alaska’s Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge.
I invited Brad Meiklejohn to take a
vacation from his dam-removal project that’s rehabilitating an Alaskan salmon
stream and a new paddling partner, Tom Diegel. Mike
Curiak, introduced the three of us during a packrafting trip to Idaho in April when we ran the Jarbidge and Bruneau at 1900 cfs on April 20 when we ran the latter's Five Mile Rapid, the longest section of Class III I've ever run. It was great -- one of the best sections of river anywhere, not really difficult, but loooong. It'd be worth to hike the trail on the west side and run twice, since it's sort of near the take-out. Following Mike down the Wild Burro without a scout was exciting too!
Anyway I have enjoyed my university sabbatical doing five-day to
three-week trips each month for the last year, sort of my last gasp at
adventuring, I think.
I am no Dick Griffith and so doubt I'll have a post-retirement boom in adventuring like Dick did: an outlaw run of the Grand Canyon at sixty in his open Sharpa packraft. Completing a four or five thousand mile traverse of the Northwest Passage in his sixties and seventies with annual month-long solo ski trips. Finishing maybe 15 or more Wilderness Classics after his 56th birthday. I am 56 now and seeing an end to this stuff for me.
Luckily there are ever more amazing trips done with and without packrafts by others all around the world.
Over the last year I have been fortunate to have Brad around to make about half
of my monthly trips, everything from season openers on little-known whitewater
wilderness runs in the Lower 48 like the Chetco and Jarbidge-Bruneau, to Nordic ice-skating road-trips across southcentral Alaska from Weiner Lake to Teslin Lake and north to Harding Lake, even from Sutton to Palmer on the Matanuska River ("D+ quality ice but A+ adventure!").
He’s about the only guy I know who’s my age and likes to
do the same sort of things but better and faster than me.
Especially walking wilderness landscapes and running wilderness
rivers.
The route I came up with for our June 2017 trip--“Go Firther, Kongo!"—started with a flight in.
I’m not too keen on flying-in. It robs a little of wilderness’
adventure for me, but because Brad and Tom had other obligations and only about
two weeks to make the trip we flew in with Yukon Air to near the Alaska-Yukon
border on Joe Creek.
From Joe Creek we’d run the Firth, a legendary Yukon Arctic
whitewater river to the edge of the mountains, then walk four days back to
Alaska, crossing the crest of the British Mountains section of the Brooks
Range. Then we’d float the Whale Mountain tributary of the Kongakut River (and
a few miles of the Kongakut) and pick up a food drop.
We’d follow caribou trails of the enormous Porcupine Caribou
Herd through a series of valleys linked by low passes to the Egakserak River,
which we floated over two days to a long ridgeline that borders the foothills
and overlooks the coastal plain, leading to our final float, the Jago River. The
Jago offers up ten or fifteen miles of non-stop boogey water up to Class III as
it cuts through the foothills to spill onto the coastal plane.
The lower Jago leads to the Arctic Ocean, where we let the
Polar Easterly winds blow us across a series of lagoons to the Innupiaq village
of Kaktovik on Barter Island where we flew back to Fairbanks and Anchorage.
In all we’d paddle 175 and walk 120 miles. In a lifetime of
Alaskan adventures, it was among the best packrafting routes of all, with a
week spent paddling and a week spent walking, but split into nine alternating legs.
I already posted on that trip. Here I’d like to share my gear inventory. Maybe it’ll
help some others out there for planning their Arctic Alaska trip.
Let’s start with the pack.
It needed to carry ten days of
food, clothing and gear for camping in the Arctic, and a complete cold and
whitewater packrafting kit.
Having been a lightweight walker since the late 1970s, I have
found that the bigger pack I take the more I carry. So one way to go light is
simply to take the smallest pack I can.
My choice was the HMG 3400 Southwest. Yes it's small.
It’s black, which is good for wet bushwhacking but a poor color for the legendary mosquitos of Alaska’s North Slope where in July 1990 I killed 94 mosquitos with one hand (no smearing) on my pant-covered leg along the Hula Hula River!
It’s black, which is good for wet bushwhacking but a poor color for the legendary mosquitos of Alaska’s North Slope where in July 1990 I killed 94 mosquitos with one hand (no smearing) on my pant-covered leg along the Hula Hula River!
Ladder buckle "lash straps"
My packraft rode on the outside top of my pack, lashed below the
top Y-strap compression that I extended using a lash strap. I carried a bunch
of lash straps. After fire, rocks, and a packraft I find them the most
versatile thing available to me on a trip.
Lash straps from 2-4 feet long. I carried six and used
every one.
Packraft
For packrafting I brought a 2017 “high pressure” Alpacka Raft in the Yak (or medium size). It was outfitted like their new Gnarwhal with a removable whitewater deck. To lighten it I stripped everything out and replaced the seat with an old “Diva seat” that was lighter than the usual seat. This Diva seat wedges into the boat.The sleeve where the stock seat would go held my water bottle. It was a pint-sized, "bottled-water" style found in the TSA line at the Anchorage airport when full and un-opened bottle. Someone left it so I drank, then carried the empty bottle along for my trip. My empty platypus (for camp water supplies) also stayed in the sleeve.
I kept the new Alpacka foam backrest in too.
Twelve ounce Diva seat and foam back band.
I find with a good back-band and foot platform that I can sit with my knees bent and locked in, keeping me, as Mark Oates wrote recently, well-connected to my boat, a must in running whitewater.
Replacement knee strap worked well, although I never
tried to roll with it.
The high pressure boat used a great one-way valve. I could get the boat very hard with just this one valve.
While the zipper on the removable whitewater deck is a little heavier and less dry, it made emptying water and drying the boat much easier. Being able to fully dry the boat before the hiking portions was important in keeping my load light to keep up with Brad and Tom. It also made portaging a loaded boat easier by reaching my hand through the zipper from the inside.
I had to carry my own blow-up bag since the other
two had old style valves.
Inflation bag for new, high pressure one-way valves.
Ramer aka "Lamer" binding from the 1970s. I had these exact bindings.
By the way, even if you never run anything more than Class II, the whitewater decks are so much warmer and drier than Cruiser Decks that they the only way to go, IMO.
2017 Alpacka coaming
stiffener held together with a Voile strap. The knee-cup style whitewater spray
skirt is a must to keep water from pooling in your lap and to keep your knees
bent in the fully-engaged position with your boat.
Another six ounces that are worth bringing come in the form of the Alpacka Bow Bag. I keep my synthetic puffy jacket and a canister stove with its canister in
my little one-quart Ti-pot, as well as food and map/camera/bug dope/head net/reading
glasses in the handy dry compartment.
I went “E-free” on this trip carrying nothing electronic, but when I do bring dEvices I keep them handy here. It’s also a good place to stash my long handled Ti-spoon and inflation bag, too.
I went “E-free” on this trip carrying nothing electronic, but when I do bring dEvices I keep them handy here. It’s also a good place to stash my long handled Ti-spoon and inflation bag, too.
Alpacka Bow Bag is worth the weight.
Of course, I had a paddle. I have a four piece Werner Powerhouse and a
superlight Sawyer. But the four-piece is too heavy and the Sawyer is too fragile,
so I brought a carbon fiber one-piece and lashed it to the side of my pack. It’s a great paddle, stiff and light.
Carrying it was never a problem for me, but it might be for others.
We had some pool toy paddle blades that we carried for spares that could be strapped together to our trekking poles for the mostly Class II and III water if we lost a paddle. But we never lost a paddle.
Carrying it was never a problem for me, but it might be for others.
We had some pool toy paddle blades that we carried for spares that could be strapped together to our trekking poles for the mostly Class II and III water if we lost a paddle. But we never lost a paddle.
Because the Arctic is, well, the Arctic, it’s cold, often
windy. Its rivers are icy run-off from aufeis (Google that) or glaciers, so
a dry suit is necessary.
Over the years I have been a tester for a variety of Alpacka efforts at lightweight dry suits and the version I have is my favorite. It provides more freedom of movement than my big, heavy Kokotat and is far easier to pee and poop (can I say that here?) while wearing, thanks to its clever zipper. It doesn’t have dry-sock feet, which means I can hike in it, if I wear some over-shells to protect its very lightweight fabric.
I love it but still suffer from “Oso-lo-lo” which Thai Verzone assure me means “wet-butt” in some Asian language. My particular version of Alpacka's Stowaway Dry Suit has watertight wrist, neck, and ankle gaskets. Swimming in it I stay quite dry.
Over the years I have been a tester for a variety of Alpacka efforts at lightweight dry suits and the version I have is my favorite. It provides more freedom of movement than my big, heavy Kokotat and is far easier to pee and poop (can I say that here?) while wearing, thanks to its clever zipper. It doesn’t have dry-sock feet, which means I can hike in it, if I wear some over-shells to protect its very lightweight fabric.
I love it but still suffer from “Oso-lo-lo” which Thai Verzone assure me means “wet-butt” in some Asian language. My particular version of Alpacka's Stowaway Dry Suit has watertight wrist, neck, and ankle gaskets. Swimming in it I stay quite dry.
My favorite dry-suit for landscape trips in Alaska has
watertight gaskets at neck, ankles, and wrists.
It’s amazing how much warmer you stay if your feet are dry.
Since I only had gaskets on my ankles, I also brought some Gore-tex and
neoprene socks. I put on wool socks, then these Gore-tex socks (they had a rubber gasket on them), pulled on the dry-suit, adjusting the gaskets
to match and then pulling on neoprene socks to complete the warmth and dryness.
I couldn't wade for too long but I stayed dry, warm and happy this way.
Socks to stay dry: neoprene
on left, Gore-tex on right. I layered these with Gore-tex inside and neoprene
outside and wool next to my feet. The gasket o the drysuit was between the Gore-tex and neoprene.
I wrote the first packrafting book about ten years ago. And
if you read it carefully you’ll see I advocate that everyone take a swiftwater
rescue course.
These days you can find whitewater-specific courses taught in Alaska by Luc Mehl.
In the Dark Ages at the birth of
wilderness packrafting we carried no dry-suits, no helmets, not even PFDs! It
wasn’t until I started putting kids in packrafts wearing PFDs that I decided I needed a PFD,
too. Until then they seemed too heavy, if you can believe that.
For this trip I weighed the various options I had. These include the
inflation-under-the-airplane-seat style, the Andrew-Skurka-chest-pouch that
holds inflated Platypus bags, and even the stuff-the-Thermarest-pad-in-your
jacket strategy we used in the mid-1980s for running some whitewater in the
Gates of the Arctic National Park in an open Sherpa Packraft.
But a real,
foam-style PFD is by far the safest and most versatile. It makes a great pillow
when dry, under-foot sleeping pad insulation when wet, and a lounge-chair sofa
around a campfire.
My lightest foam-style PFD with whistle and a pocket
for my compass (to tell time) and Dermatone.
I also brought a bicycle helmet since it weighed nine
ounces and I didn’t think I’d be under water and head-down too often. It was useful
for sleeping on the cloudy flight back from Barter Island to Fairbanks--better
than a neck pillow.
Stop laughing: bike helmets are certified, whitewater helmets are
not.
In all, my total packrafting kit weighed under 15 pounds.
That’s everything: inside-tube dry bags; boat with engagement-connections for knees,
butt, and feet; clothes and spray deck for keeping dry; paddle; and equipment for staying safe.
The Alpacka “zipper boats” have revolutionized classic-style
packrafting. Getting the gear off the boat and into the tubes is the single
biggest step away from Ramer and toward Dynafit I have seen in my four decades
of packrafting (80s, 90s, Oughts, Teens). Zippered loads mean far more
stable boats and much drier gear.
If you are considering upgrading a packraft, or even a first-time buyer who wants to camp and paddle moving water that's just Class II
or more, then be sure to get a Cargo Zipper and a Whitewater Deck (I like the
removable kind best).
I have used open boats since the 80s, Cruiser-style decks
since the Oughts, but the new whitewater decks and spray skirts are remarkably dry. Not as dry as a hardshell, but amazing to me for a seven-pound
boat and worth the four pounds over an open, un-zippered Scout for landscape trips with moving, cold water.
When Alpacka first introduced the zipper boats they had
zippered dry bags that went inside, nicknamed “Twinkies” or “Snack Cakes”.
Now, I really like these. I use them for car camping because they are dust- and
water-proof and the zipper in them makes them easy to access. I also like them
in my boat if paddling lots of Class IV, since I have cut a boat in a remote
rapid, had the air go out of the tube, but been able to paddle to shore with my thigh straps
still engaged and afloat because the snack cakes held air like a second and
third chamber. They are a safety feature.
However, on this trip where weight was more of an issue than
cutting my boat on Class IV creek rocks, I opted for the first generation of
Alpacka’s “Ultralight Internal Dry Bags”. Since mine were prototypes, I had to
use a strap that I clove-hitched on a mule to the bag with a strap terminated
with the female end of the buckle to attach to the inside of the boat. I think
these bags are boss.
Because my pack is tiny and my back itself is curved, my
stuff sacks go in cross-wise in my pack, not vertically. That way I can get my
pack stuffed better since I can layer more readily as I fill it and use
different paddings in different places. So these super long bags need only be
partially filled, then packed.
They make a good pillow too. In my boat I split
the weigh evenly between the two bags, but in my pack I fill one with sleeping
stuff and put it low, and keep the other in my external pocket to keep my
clothes dry that I might want to wear during the day. That way I don't have to get
into my pack. Once I close up my pack in the morning, I don't get into it until
camp.
Internal dry bag with strap I
clove hitched with a mule to the bag to attach to the inside of the boat. Also
made a great pillow and much easier to pack in my 3400 Porter pack than
Alpacka’s Standard internal dry bag.
Clothing
During the day in Alaska’s Arctic I wear light-colored, quick-drying polyester pants and button-up shirt. I try to cover up any dark clothing with light clothing to keep bugs away
The shirt and pants have pockets. I keep Dermatone in my
right pocket and a compass in my left pocket to tell time and check occasional
directions, or frequent direction if in a coastal fog for instance. In my shirt’s
zippered pocket I keep a lighter and other stuff I might need (like some TP, or
bug-dope). I wear stretchy underpants, sort of like bike shorts without
chamois. These prevent chafing.
If it’s cool I wear a cut-off, short-sleeved lightweight
wool zip-T neck underneath. If it’s cold and rainy I wear a polyester hoody
over the wool and under the khaki colored shirt. I wear lightweight wool long
underwear under the khaki pants in the boat or cold, windy rain. I have another
thicker pair of expedition weight Capilene I paddle in and sleep in, too.
I have two pair of socks. One is only for hiking/boating,
the other is colorful and only for sleeping until I get to “town” when I
finally wear the sleep socks inside my shoes, once the shoes are dry (or inside
the Gore-tex socks).
Daily wear: Clockwise from
upper right: stretchy lycra/capilene mid-thigh underpants, lightweight polyester pants, shirt, short-sleeved lightweight zip-T
wool, light-weight wool hiking socks, lightweight wool long underwear,
expedition-weight Capilene long underwear, blue polyester hoody in center.
I also have a superlight pair of “rain” pants and an HMG prototype rain-coat that I don’t know much about except it’s superlight and surprisingly
dry with a great hood. In the boat I wore the pants and rain coat to bolster
and protect my dry-suit. I also used the two pieces as rain gear but it never
rained long enough during the day to need them, really.
Rain pants left, prototype-jacket right.
I also absolutely needed my hat. It kept the sunshine away
and my wild hair under control. It seemed faster drying than typical ball caps.
Patagonia Duckbill: classic!
For shoes I go with the Salomon Speedcross 3 ($120). My feet
are narrow and I am easy on shoes since I am sort of tender-footed and tend to
walk gently to keep from hurting my feet. This keeps from wearing out my shoes.
I also try to walk on game trails to keep the brush from wearing out the
fabric.
Tom had a pair of the $30 versions from eBay that came direct from China and they pretty much wore
out FYI on this one trip. Still, I doubt mine would last four trips like this! It was entertaining to listen to Tom describe the wear on his shoes. Before he retired he worked at Nike, Merrel and Patagonia where he helped design and then bring to market some classic, fishing, whitewater and lifestyle shoes. He's a shoe expert!
Salomon Speedcross 3 with my
sleep socks I wore at Waldo Arms in Kaktovik and on the airplane back to
Anchorage.
Cooking
Once in camp, we set up Brad’s big HMG Ultamid 4 with the floorless bug liner. Absolutely amazing Arctic shelter. We had a separate ground cloth. We used trekking poles lashed together with Voile straps to hold it up. In high winds we used rocks with the stakes to secure it.
My group gear was the little canister stove. I think it’s called
the Soto Micro Regulator.
A trick I learned from Thai Verzone is using
the stove to start fires. We cooked dinner on willow fires in Alaska and used
the stove in Canada and for breakfast.
Using the stove to start fires makes every other fire-starting
technique feel like barbecuing with charcoal briquettes while this is like barbecuing with gas. Generally Tom would collect wood, then help Brad set up
the tent while I got water, then built the fire around cook-pot to boil the water.
Clockwise from lower left. Micro-stove, rubber thumb and two-finger pot gripper, long-handled Ti spoon, 2 liter Platypus, time and direction piece, aka compass. By finding the declination-corrected, true bearing to the sun you can determine true local time: at 6 AM the sun is due east, at noon due south, at 6 PM due west. It moves 15 degrees an hour across the sky. Some people choose to ask “Does anybody really know what time it is? Hey, does anybody really care?” Me, a scientist, I like to measure nature and apply the measures in practical sense.
Call me old-fashioned (lash straps with ladder-lock buckles instead of Fastex; rain pants; sharing a shelter, cooking on fires, paper maps from USGS) but I like a big, communal one-gallon cookpot if there are three people or more. I have several of these and some, as Mike Curiak says, are the “pots of a thousand trips”. Unsure why people feel the need to get the black off them, I prefer to keep them round, with tight-fitting lids to keep the black out of them. I put them in several plastic grocery bags to keep the black off my pack contents. I think they heat faster if black.
I also keep my chips in the gallon size cookpot while hiking. I buy the big box of assorted chips (Doritos, potato) at Costco, then put holes in the bags to squeeze the air out, tape the holes shut, and take great pride in keeping them and great pleasure in eating them unbroken. One ounce of these chips (a single bag) can have 160 calories.
I am not a calorie counter, but it seems like many folks want to know, so there you have it: caloric, salty, tasty, and crunchy. I like the barbecue chips. The single one-ounce bags are just the right size for a stop, have a savory flavor, and offer up needed salt for me as I hustle to keep up with Brad on a sunny day.
Blackened
one-gallon cook pot of a hundred trips with a tight-fitting lid and little
deformation to its body.
It has taken me four or five years to adjust, but I am now fully
on-board with the “every man for himself” cooking routine.
At first I found myself dumping water in a bag and spooning out
the re-hydrated cardboard that sells at what must be $40/pound ($5/2 oz at
Wallmart for Mtn House Lasagna). Curiak does some home prep, but it still looks
like freeze dried bought at an Armageddon survivalist shop.
The best food I’ve seen is what Thai Verzone and Gordy Vernon put
together and what I have turned to myself, now that I have trouble with wheat.
Sure, I carry some gluten-free Asian-flavored freeze dried, but I
use it to flavor rice noodles. Or I go with dehydrated potatoes and add either
jerky or cheese. Whether noodles or 'taters I add red curry paste or Indonesian
rending and powdered coconut milk, even tamarind paste. My son introduced me to
this when making something delicious on Australia’s Franklin River where he
also added peanut butter. Cheap, flavorful, and with a little preparation
somehow better than eating instant dinner in a foil-lined bag.
I eat and drink hot fluids (usually full-cream milk powder, brown
sugar, and Earl Grey tea) out of my one-quart Ti cookpot. This is what I heat
everybody’s three cups in the morning with. At night everybody wants closer to
six cup; hence the gallon-sized cook pot on the fire.
One-quart BackpackingLight.com Ti-cook pot from 2006.
Starting to split around the edges, but maybe my favorite piece of camping
gear.
Sleeping
For sleeping and camp I have a puffy jacket and pants that
Ryan Jordan gave me back in 2006 for a long, 600 mile walk across the western
Arctic, where we crossed the De Long Mountains, Utukok uplands, Lookout Ridge,
and Gates of the Arctic. I save them for special trips, like this one. The
puffy jacket is a hooded pullover. I wear it under my dry suit if it’s cold,
rainy, and windy when paddling. It dries very fast.
Puffy pullover and pants for sleeping, camp, and cold
paddling.
At night I slept in the puffies under a summer season down
quilt made by GoLite back when they were still producing. Many “nights” I got
too hot when the sun came up at 2 AM, the clouds were gone and the Easterly
winds not yet started.
It's one of my favorite aspects of travel up there: letting the landscape and weather dictate not just your route but your routine and timing of activities.
My down quilt, the
ideal complement to my synthetic puffy pants and pullover.
--> As I’ve aged I need more comfort.
I can’t just bivy on the rocks curled under my wet raft in the rain anymore with no pad and no bag. I carry a Thermarest Neo, full-length. To keep it from popping I pad beneath it.
Brad uses a ground cloth in his tent, so that helps. But I also empty my pack and use my PFD to make a protected place for my air mattress.
The best pad ever (for me).
Because a sleeping pad is so crucial for warm and comfortable sleep in the permafrost-ed Arctic, and I have had decades of air mattresses springing mysterious, untraceable slow leaks that let me down before dawn, I have a back-up to plug the gap between my pack and PFD: a short piece of Cascade Designs’ Z-rest.
This is great for lounging around in camp, or standing on, making a sofa system by the fire, and other applications you never knew you needed until you carried it.
An old bicycle toe-strap I may stop carrying in favor of a Voile strap. But rubber straps will not replace webbing straps with ladder-lock buckles. A three panel Z-rest. Sometimes I take a two panel one instead.
I have often said that we pack our insecurities. Mine seem to center around food and being cold.
I ran out of food in the early days of my landscape crossings, since I was still operating under an alpinist mentality. Alpinists belay half the time (maybe less if moving together a lot) and since they are going straight up, weight matters more than in most other multi-day adventure sports.
I remember my older, wiser partners saying things like, “That route should take 5 days, so we’ll take 3 days of food.” And then it would take like ten days, with five spent in a snow cave drinking hot water.
Well, that doesn’t cut it when you cover 20 or more miles a day.
I ran out of food a couple times and so I developed the mantra that food is light. It’s light because if you do it right you start with say, 22 pounds of food and end with say 2 pounds (just in case!), thus eating 20 pounds over ten days. Then the average weight of your food was only 12 pounds. On the other hand, gear is heavy. It doesn’t get lighter.
So it is with clothing, too. Earlier I mentioned that I have been boating packrafts since the early 1980s. From 1983 through to 1996 I never used a dry suit or even a wet suit and pretty much just shivered in rain gear on Alaskan rivers. It’s a miracle that I boated for over 10 years mostly freezing my butt off in a "shiver boat"!
Hence another insecurity of mine: cold and wet. So I carry some extra clothes.
On this trip I had a down vest for sleeping if my puffy pullover was too wet and an extra wool hoody. These two items were used on one cold night for something other than a pillow, but most nights were found under my head. They were also almost totally clean and odor free when we finished our trip and I could where them in Kaktovik, Fairbanks, and on the plane without stinking out those around me.
Extra clothes that served as pillows and “clean clothes” when reaching town: down vest (bottom) and wool hoody
Odds and ends
There were some other things I used rarely: one mitten shell and one woolen glove for paddling in the wind.
When hiking a shelled jacket sleeve and long woolen sleeve can be one set of hand insulators while these two can hold the trekking pole.
I kept my food in three food bags: 1) lunch food at roughly one pound a day, 2) hot drinks and breakfast at roughly 8 ounces per day and 3) dinners roughly 4 ounces per day.
I eat about two pounds a day when hiking twenty miles or more a day and only one pound a day when floating downstream. More when paddling into headwinds and on flat water. Knowing this allows me to be smarter about my pack weight. For example, we paddled 7 days (7 pounds) and walked about 8 days (16 pounds) for a total of 25 pounds of food for 15 days.
Three food bags and some olive oil for extra calories.
-->
I carried ibuprofen and took it on hiking days. Two in the morning
and two in the afternoon, for my hips. Without it I came to a grinding halt by
about noon. I also carried Dermatone for my lips and a lighter. Often these
things were in a little HMG bag with my reading glasses.
Stuff I used daily.
I brought insect repellent (aka bug dope) a head net, toilet paper, some Aquaseal and zipper lube. I used the toilet paper and the zipper lube, but the bugs were never bad because of good route choice, early season, and sunny weather. I never put on any bug dope or my head net in two weeks in the Arctic. Compare that to the horror story I mentioned earlier!
Clockwise from upper left: TP, head net, glue, lube and patch kit, blister pad, bug dope, and the bag it went it in.
Pretty sure this is
all recognizable and necessary.
-->
Of course, I flossed and brushed daily, carried a knife, enjoyed a few ear cleanings, had an extra lighter and band aids and bunion pads for blisters and soap if I needed to clean wounds, hands, or body. Pretty sure this is all recognizable and necessary.
First Aid
My first aid kit had pain killers (opioids), some Cipro antibiotics, Tinadizol to get rid of Giardia, a wound wash kit, gauze, more band aids, butterfly band aids, Betadine and alcohol swabs, some antibiotic ointment, Tylenol, and Aleve. My dental floss I rewound on its spool after flossing rather than throwing it away, just in case I needed to use it for some repair.
Gear head?
Well, this might make me look like a gear nut, and if a gear nut is someone who gives close attention to what goes into the pack or onto the boat, then I guess I am guilty as charged. I mean I do weigh my gear and write the weights on it often.
On the other hand, the only thing new I bought for this trip was the down vest. I haven't owned one of those since a Frostline Kit I put together when I was 15!
Once I have something that works well, I tend to stick with it, rather than always shopping for something better. I do watch what others bring -- like Voile straps and maybe pot grips. Tom brought a pair and I sure like picking up the gallon pot with them. I didn't have any milk packets to fold as grippers. Sticks are clumsy, the little orange two finger gripper hard to use in a fire and none of my sleeves were long enough.
I don't really like to talk gear or shop gear, but maybe this gear list might come in handy for others, or maybe provide another viewpoint to make room in their pack for a raft, so that they too might discover the freedom and joy of landscape trips across Alaska's Arctic.