I certainly remember the name but can't recall where they were.My wife worked for Perigrine Outfitters back in the day.
Are you familiar with them?
I certainly remember the name but can't recall where they were.My wife worked for Perigrine Outfitters back in the day.
Are you familiar with them?
Were they in Williston, VT?I certainly remember the name but can't recall where they were.
Seems like wasted weight, especially if you dunk it in a stream anyway.
I do the same for the most part. Just assuming in this case they didn't do thatI was taught that a pack should be a "bag of bags". Everything goes into it's own ziplock bag, preventing the item from getting wet in a dunking.
If one ziplock bag somehow gets open, the other stuff isn't affected.
Makes rummaging through the pack looking for something easier.
If something gets wet, and you need to swap, you can put the wet item in the bag that its replacement came from, preventing the wet item from getting anything else wet.
TomK
Williston vtI certainly remember the name but can't recall where they were.
I was taught that you should pack such that you can fall into a river and assuming you can get out, survive. That mentality has served me well over the years, but especially in '23 when I had roughly 45 days of rain on a 55 day hike. Learned a lot about being wet on that trip and I learned a lot about getting dry, even in the pouring rain. Good timesI was taught that a pack should be a "bag of bags". Everything goes into it's own ziplock bag, preventing the item from getting wet in a dunking.
If one ziplock bag somehow gets open, the other stuff isn't affected.
Makes rummaging through the pack looking for something easier.
If something gets wet, and you need to swap, you can put the wet item in the bag that its replacement came from, preventing the wet item from getting anything else wet.
TomK
Any best practices you want to share? I'm particularly curious about the getting dry in the pouring rain strategy. Love to hear your thoughts.I was taught that you should pack such that you can fall into a river and assuming you can get out, survive. That mentality has served me well over the years, but especially in '23 when I had roughly 45 days of rain on a 55 day hike. Learned a lot about being wet on that trip and I learned a lot about getting dry, even in the pouring rain. Good times
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