Home
  Directory of Free Articles
  Submit and Receive Articles Free
Submit your Articles Free 
Retrieve Free Artices for your WebSite  

SUBMIT YOUR ARTICLE chessbaron.co.uk | www.fine-jewellery-boxes.com | Private Equity

Can't find what you're looking for? Search:


19199 - Ultralight Backpacking - Testing Skills


Ultralight Backpacking - Testing Skills

by: Steve Gillman


On Lake Michigan, at the end of the Stonington Peninsula, there's a stretch of empty beach. Part of the Hiawatha National Forest, it's framed on either side by private property, with no easy access. To walk on the beach, however, is legal. Past the last cabin, the public land starts, and goes for six or seven miles. This is where I would test my ultralight backpacking skills and gear.
I hiked a few miles the first day and explored the woods, where I ate wild blueberries for an hour. Then I set up camp behind a small ridge on the beach. I collected dry grass along the edge of the forest, which made a nice mattress. I pitched my backpacking tarp fairly high, so the breeze would keep out the mosquitos. When camp was set, I went for a swim.
This area has many crayfish, which look and taste just like miniature lobsters. After swimming I caught a dozen under the rocks in shallow water, and carried them back to camp in a whipped-cream container I found. You never know what will wash up on a beach.
I boiled them with some cattail hearts and evening primrose roots, in my cheap three ounce pan. It made a good meal with the crackers I brought. (You remove the meat from the tail of the crayfish, after cooking.)
It was summer, so I hadn't brought a sleeping bag. At seventeen ounces, my bag wouldn't have added much to my packweight of eight pounds. I just wanted to try using a nylon sleeping bag liner I had recently sewn (5 ounces). I wore my clothes to bed, including a hat I made from the sleeve of an old thermal shirt (1 ounce). I slept well, and ate granola bars for breakfast.
Water was all around, so I only had a 16-ounce plastic pop bottle (1 ounce) and a few iodine tablets for purification. I took a good drink before I packed up.
I found fresh bear tracks on the beach. The bear had walked within 60 yards of where I slept. I had a freon horn (2 ounces) that I'd bought after reading that people have used it's high-decible shriek to scare off bears. I pulled it out. I followed the tracks for an hour, but only because I was going in that direction.
I had two old cabins to explore, another patch of berries I knew about, and a beach full things to check out. The strangest item that regularly washes up is light bulbs. I take them home to use them. After years of finding these, a sailor finally told me that they throw them off the ships to shoot at them in the water. I was finding the ones they missed.
The next day I headed back. The rain I expected never came, so I didn't get to test my garbage bag rainsuit (2 ounces), but I had used a similar one with success before. Overall, I was happy with my ultralight backpacking 'test.' Of course, you can get by with fragile clothing and gear when you're hiking an open beach. Oh, and I never did see the bear.





About The Author


Steve Gillman is a long-time backpacker, and advocate of lightweight backpacking. His advice and stories can be found at http://www.The-Ultralight-Site.com.







This article was posted on August 24, 2005







Free Articles Content is King - Get better SEO and search engine traffic by articles from TooBoring Inc.

Now on

TooBoring Inc. Categories: Home | Chess | Coping with Grief | Sales | Marketing | Public Speaking | Auto and Trucks | Business and Finance | Computers and Internet | Education | Family | Food and Drink | Gadgets and Gizmos | Health | Hobbies and Interests | Home Improvement | Humor | Kids and Teens | Legal | Men | Music and Movies | Online Business | Parenting | Pets and Animals | Politics and Government | Recreation and Sport | Relationships | Religion | Self Improvement And Motivation | SEO and Site Promotion | Travel and Leisure | Web Design and Development | Women | Writing

submit articles                   Other Sites  |  Visitor Stats  |  Contact
“Baron Turner (also known as Barry) is a participant in the Amazon Europe S.à r.l. Associates Programme, an affiliate advertising
programme designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.co.uk, Javari.co.uk.”