Plenty of old and trusted gear, mixed with some new gear, and also some mandatory and traditional pieces of gear, here's the packlist of my trip to Russia and my evaluation of it. Get ready for some Geartalk!

As in previous discussions
in the article here, I use Skin-out as the boundary. That puts me 365 g over the Lightweight limit, OMG!
Backpack: A bigger version of the
LAUFBURSCHE huckePACK, made from Dyneema X Grid. 49 l with up to 10 liters more, it was big enough to carry all my gear and ten days of food - comfortably! I had by far the smallest and most compact backpack, something I find, if walking off-trail in forests an enormous benefit - it means less whiplashes for the people behind me and less get tangled up in trees and shrubbery.

Shelter: The
Hyperlite Mountain Gear Echo I Tarp &
Beak were my home at night in Russia. Light and roomy and giving plenty of protection for me and my gear, it was a great shelter which will see more use in the coming months. Theoretically I wouldn't have needed the shelter at all, as it didn't rain - but then I already brought it, and just using a bivy might have been too "extreme" in terms of me using other gear than the rest of the group and standing out even more wasn't necessary. Detailed review forthcoming.
Sleeping: A MLD Alpine bivy with a Dyneema X Grid bottom and eVent 2L top, purchased from a BPL member, was the extra protection against wind and rain (well, moistness from underneath as it didn't rain). The decision for the MLD Alpine was made after reading how happy
Dave was with his, as well as expecting more rain. The Exped Groundmat was a present from
Jonas and I am glad I took it. The ground was moist and mossy at most campsites, so having a mat on which to lay out gear was welcome.
That I love quilts should be well known to the regular reader by now, and my GoLite Ultra 20 performed well yet again and kept me nice and warm. The
Artiach Skin Micro-Lite was a new try on how comfy and warm self inflating pads can be, and I wasn't disappointed. A more detailed review will come in the future.
Kitchen: I carried the Bushcooker LT III as common gear for my food partner and me, but as we were able to make a fire each day it wasn't needed. The
SnowPeak 1400 was perfect and will be my go-to pot for the coming months, offering plenty of space to melt snow and also to make bannock and pancakes. The
Alpkit Lhoon is affordable and perfect for my type of cooking, and service from Alpkit is outstanding. A new drinking vessel is my
Kupilka 21 kuksa, lighter than my wooden one and a bit bigger - just right for a cup of coffee or tea. A more detailed review on Kupilka crockery and cutlery is coming, so stay tuned.
Clothing - Worn:
Woolpower for underneath.
Rab Drillium pants as usual - I expected rain, remember? - though I switched to a
Rab Demand Pull-On this time around. Splendid smock, it breaths fantastic, is light and the one pocket is much more to my liking than two. Detailed Review forthcoming.
Finisterre Zephyr Merino Boxer Shorts for that next-to-skin comfyness, warm, non-smelly, looks good. Wouldn't take anything else anymore when I go backpacking, be it one night or two weeks.
Inov-8 OROC 280 on my feet, perfect grip on any surface and so much lighter and more comfortable than the rubber boots the rest was wearing. Detailed review forthcoming.

SnowPeak 1400, Inov-8 OROC 280, Woolpower 200 socks.
MLD gaiters = great, Suunto Core = detailed review in the future, but I can say that I liked it a lot (first watch I'm wearing in twenty years!) and also the GG LT4s were excellent. Only one member of the group used trekking poles, and while I myself am only a recent convert I found them very beneficial. On super swamp day they allowed me to probe the ground, on summit day they made the climb up and down simpler, and in the evening they were used to pitch my tarp. I think they're a good investment for people with joint and back problems, as they seem (so others tell me) to take some of the stress of them. More on them in detail as well.
Clothing - Carried:
Klättermusen Loke is awesome, detailed review coming after using it for over a year. The
PLQ pants and pullover from Integral Designs were with me in case it would have got cold and also as wet weather insulation. I wore the PLQ pullover every day, the pants twice. If I would have known that it wouldn't rain I would not have taken either, as the Loke could have taken the duty. Extra socks were a recommendation, though taking both the 600 and 800 was overkill and the 600 would have been enough.
The MLD eVent rain mitts I yet have to wear when it rains. It seems they're my good weather charm, and if I need to carry 36 g for it to stay dry then that ain't too bad, me thinks. The Cyclone Buff is excellent and was worn during the summit day, where it was so windy that if I would have jumped up in the air I likely would have flown a couple of meters with the wind! Trekmates GoreTex socks for camp, as usual.
Photography: I carried a new test camera on this trip, sans spare battery - so all photos from this trip - nearly thousand - were taken with the Panasonic Lumix G2. I'll not lose much words on the camera now as I'll write a more detailed review on it in the future; though the photos already can give you an idea of it.

So, where should I go?
Various: Puukko as my trusted knife & also a mandatory item. Recta DT 220 compass, used twice: On the day I was guiding and on the last night, because it is easy to get lost in the dark if you camp on top of a ridge! Gränsfors Bruks Small Forest Axe as mandatory group gear, a very nice axe which I used quite a few times. Sharp, well balanced and practical if you need to split wood for a fire or cut down a dead tree to make a pole for your tarp. Detailed Review forthcoming.
Suunto Comet, my small compass & thermometer, always handy but with the Recta compass and my Suunto Core maybe not necessary anymore. Baby powder was a last minute buy for footcare, in order to keep feet in good health after walking through swamps. As I used only 11 g in nine days the whole package was unnecessarily big, need to refill it for future trips in appropriate portions. The iPhone was dead weight, and I also had not enough time to read so both book and phone could have stayed in the car.
Princeton Tec Remix headlamp was just perfect for this time of the year, the red light is so much more comfortable on the eyes when walking in the dark as it doesn't kill the natural night vision of the human eye (white light does).
Personal First Aid kit wasn't needed, also not the fixing stuff. Hygiene, I could have taken less soap (should have taken a Mini Dropper bottle!), everything else was ok. Maybe I should have cut my toothbrush shorter to safe some extra weight?
Conclusion: All gear worked excellent, though some was too much - I think I could have taken a few pieces less and still have been as comfortable as I was now. In comparison with the other students I think I was just as well-equipped and comfortable (if not better, oh my!), but given that I carried less weight on my back in a more compact pack I believe I had a better experience. Less weight means less stress on joints and back, it is easier to navigate in difficult terrain, one can carry less food and overall can enjoy the walking part more as ypu don't need to just watch your steps. Not being able to have a blazing fire in front of my cuben tarp was the only shortcoming of my UL gear, though I can life with that. So that was the Russia gear extravaganza. Comment away if you have questions, comments or observations =)
Plenty of old and trusted gear, mixed with some new gear, and also some mandatory and traditional pieces of gear, here's the packlist of my trip to Russia and my evaluation of it. Get ready for some Geartalk!

As in previous discussions
in the article here, I use Skin-out as the boundary. That puts me 365 g over the Lightweight limit, OMG!
Backpack: A bigger version of the
LAUFBURSCHE huckePACK, made from Dyneema X Grid. 49 l with up to 10 liters more, it was big enough to carry all my gear and ten days of food - comfortably! I had by far the smallest and most compact backpack, something I find, if walking off-trail in forests an enormous benefit - it means less whiplashes for the people behind me and less get tangled up in trees and shrubbery.

Shelter: The
Hyperlite Mountain Gear Echo I Tarp &
Beak were my home at night in Russia. Light and roomy and giving plenty of protection for me and my gear, it was a great shelter which will see more use in the coming months. Theoretically I wouldn't have needed the shelter at all, as it didn't rain - but then I already brought it, and just using a bivy might have been too "extreme" in terms of me using other gear than the rest of the group and standing out even more wasn't necessary. Detailed review forthcoming.
Sleeping: A MLD Alpine bivy with a Dyneema X Grid bottom and eVent 2L top, purchased from a BPL member, was the extra protection against wind and rain (well, moistness from underneath as it didn't rain). The decision for the MLD Alpine was made after reading how happy
Dave was with his, as well as expecting more rain. The Exped Groundmat was a present from
Jonas and I am glad I took it. The ground was moist and mossy at most campsites, so having a mat on which to lay out gear was welcome.
That I love quilts should be well known to the regular reader by now, and my GoLite Ultra 20 performed well yet again and kept me nice and warm. The
Artiach Skin Micro-Lite was a new try on how comfy and warm self inflating pads can be, and I wasn't disappointed. A more detailed review will come in the future.
Kitchen: I carried the Bushcooker LT III as common gear for my food partner and me, but as we were able to make a fire each day it wasn't needed. The
SnowPeak 1400 was perfect and will be my go-to pot for the coming months, offering plenty of space to melt snow and also to make bannock and pancakes. The
Alpkit Lhoon is affordable and perfect for my type of cooking, and service from Alpkit is outstanding. A new drinking vessel is my
Kupilka 21 kuksa, lighter than my wooden one and a bit bigger - just right for a cup of coffee or tea. A more detailed review on Kupilka crockery and cutlery is coming, so stay tuned.
Clothing - Worn:
Woolpower for underneath.
Rab Drillium pants as usual - I expected rain, remember? - though I switched to a
Rab Demand Pull-On this time around. Splendid smock, it breaths fantastic, is light and the one pocket is much more to my liking than two. Detailed Review forthcoming.
Finisterre Zephyr Merino Boxer Shorts for that next-to-skin comfyness, warm, non-smelly, looks good. Wouldn't take anything else anymore when I go backpacking, be it one night or two weeks.
Inov-8 OROC 280 on my feet, perfect grip on any surface and so much lighter and more comfortable than the rubber boots the rest was wearing. Detailed review forthcoming.

SnowPeak 1400, Inov-8 OROC 280, Woolpower 200 socks.
MLD gaiters = great, Suunto Core = detailed review in the future, but I can say that I liked it a lot (first watch I'm wearing in twenty years!) and also the GG LT4s were excellent. Only one member of the group used trekking poles, and while I myself am only a recent convert I found them very beneficial. On super swamp day they allowed me to probe the ground, on summit day they made the climb up and down simpler, and in the evening they were used to pitch my tarp. I think they're a good investment for people with joint and back problems, as they seem (so others tell me) to take some of the stress of them. More on them in detail as well.
Clothing - Carried:
Klättermusen Loke is awesome, detailed review coming after using it for over a year. The
PLQ pants and pullover from Integral Designs were with me in case it would have got cold and also as wet weather insulation. I wore the PLQ pullover every day, the pants twice. If I would have known that it wouldn't rain I would not have taken either, as the Loke could have taken the duty. Extra socks were a recommendation, though taking both the 600 and 800 was overkill and the 600 would have been enough.
The MLD eVent rain mitts I yet have to wear when it rains. It seems they're my good weather charm, and if I need to carry 36 g for it to stay dry then that ain't too bad, me thinks. The Cyclone Buff is excellent and was worn during the summit day, where it was so windy that if I would have jumped up in the air I likely would have flown a couple of meters with the wind! Trekmates GoreTex socks for camp, as usual.
Photography: I carried a new test camera on this trip, sans spare battery - so all photos from this trip - nearly thousand - were taken with the Panasonic Lumix G2. I'll not lose much words on the camera now as I'll write a more detailed review on it in the future; though the photos already can give you an idea of it.

So, where should I go?
Various: Puukko as my trusted knife & also a mandatory item. Recta DT 220 compass, used twice: On the day I was guiding and on the last night, because it is easy to get lost in the dark if you camp on top of a ridge! Gränsfors Bruks Small Forest Axe as mandatory group gear, a very nice axe which I used quite a few times. Sharp, well balanced and practical if you need to split wood for a fire or cut down a dead tree to make a pole for your tarp. Detailed Review forthcoming.
Suunto Comet, my small compass & thermometer, always handy but with the Recta compass and my Suunto Core maybe not necessary anymore. Baby powder was a last minute buy for footcare, in order to keep feet in good health after walking through swamps. As I used only 11 g in nine days the whole package was unnecessarily big, need to refill it for future trips in appropriate portions. The iPhone was dead weight, and I also had not enough time to read so both book and phone could have stayed in the car.
Princeton Tec Remix headlamp was just perfect for this time of the year, the red light is so much more comfortable on the eyes when walking in the dark as it doesn't kill the natural night vision of the human eye (white light does).
Personal First Aid kit wasn't needed, also not the fixing stuff. Hygiene, I could have taken less soap (should have taken a Mini Dropper bottle!), everything else was ok. Maybe I should have cut my toothbrush shorter to safe some extra weight?
Conclusion: All gear worked excellent, though some was too much - I think I could have taken a few pieces less and still have been as comfortable as I was now. In comparison with the other students I think I was just as well-equipped and comfortable (if not better, oh my!), but given that I carried less weight on my back in a more compact pack I believe I had a better experience. Less weight means less stress on joints and back, it is easier to navigate in difficult terrain, one can carry less food and overall can enjoy the walking part more as ypu don't need to just watch your steps. Not being able to have a blazing fire in front of my cuben tarp was the only shortcoming of my UL gear, though I can life with that. So that was the Russia gear extravaganza. Comment away if you have questions, comments or observations =)
Gear That Worked And Gear That Didn't III
I'm off to a corner to be ashamed of my failed lightweight (not to mention UL) existence :-)
ReplyDeleteIf you only had cut a piece of your toothbrush.
ReplyDeleteNice report!
Hendrik - some excellent gear choices. I don't know all of the gear you took. I will enjoying reading up on them - thanks for all the gear links. Looking forward to additional gear reviews. Still keen to find a good quilt - I know you are a fan. Probably looking at a summer weight synthetic which I can also use on top of my Alpkit bag for winter.
ReplyDeleteMark
Think it's a little harsh to suggest UL failure! Your photography, which is crucial to your blog (and our enjoyment of it) took up 650g and the axe added another 1kg. You pack after your environment - something I learned when considering the Scottish winter kit, and Alpine kit, recently. That said, it's a cracking list and a great report as usual.
ReplyDeletejust glanced over this piece usual high standard. flatter flatter. (don't think I'll bother to sign up for that one). anyway was just paddling and came across this - http://www.lookwhatwefound.co.uk/
ReplyDeletethought u might be interested, but likly you already know. kevin
and yes I would have been very happy to be carrying/waring the same stuff as you were using. except the tarp....... to small and flamable. kevin
ReplyDeleteI find that....gear either is 100% effective or it's 0%. That's my experience. It either works or it don't.
ReplyDeleteLove the compass watch. That's top of the line, my friend.
Oh Oh. You spent good money based on somthing I wrote (must go and check what I said). Hope the MLD bivvy measures up!
ReplyDeleteI think, given the nature of the trip, the load you carried was very respectable. I'm truely impressed that the huckePack coped with the load (I'm guessing around 17kg max packed weight?). My experience of other frameless packs is that they don't fare well under such loads.
Is the watch more accurate than you iPhone? Does the iPhone not have a GPS, compass, altimeter, carry maps, plot routes, record photos linked to GPS coords? Of course your school has special requirements, but if you dumped what you wanted to dump, what would you have left?
ReplyDelete"Artiach Skin Micro-Lite, inkl. rubberband"
ReplyDeleteWhy have you used a rubberband for this? Although the Skin Micro is a inflatable pad it's still very usefull as an internal packframe (burrito style). You could have used this in addition to your Z-lite. That's the way my wife used to pack her huckePack.
All in all a very nice review of your gear. Can't wait to have a closer look on your upcoming gear reviews.
hi Hendrik
ReplyDeletenice review on your gear. I would be interested if you are really happy with your goretex socks - how long do they live, in kilometers/miles? I am not really satisfied with the lack of longevity in the Sealskinz.
re: 100% or 0% working - I do not agree because sometimes some thing is not completly failing but it is no fun either. Depends where you have put your comfort level and if it is a way to further stretch your ability for discomfort ;)
Nice piece of writing again, Hendrik. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteCould you do a follow-up-review on the Drillium pants? For example in combination with the Rab Demand review? This is because my Rab Latok Alpine pants failed miserably in rainy summer trip and they were used only on two skiing trips (one week each). I tested them in home and they were not waterproof anymore... Rab told me that it was because of excessive wear! But the friendly retailer gave me a new pair (actually a jacket instead because I alrerady had new pants). Then in addition I heard from friend of mine that his Montane eVent jacket had failed in similar manner... I am not anymore too confident about eVent. If doesn't hold up for couple of weeks of normal use, it is no good.
Though in my opinion most gear is somewhere between 0% and 100% good. The reason is usually in details, I put quite a lot of emphasis on the details and usually something is missing or the gear has something unnecessary... Perfect gear is really hard to find.
Nibe, exactly my thoughts. Thanks =)
ReplyDeleteMark, getting a BPL Cocoon quilt soon and will use it for layering over my down quilt in winter, so stay tuned for that if you're interested.
Maz, I am just talking about UL but not practicing it ;) Thank you for the kind words & insights!
Hei Kevin, thanks for the link. I don't mind the flammable tarp, as I also don't really need a fire in front of my crib.
Izzy, The Suunto compass watch worked fine, though a real compass for taking a bearing and following it is preferable. Re: either 0% or 100%, sometimes it also can work in between, though I largely agree with you.
Dave, yes, you're responsible for my MLD Alpine bivy purchase, and it is sweet! The load is OK, I'd say, I hoped to be lower (around four to six as baseweight excl. carried) but given some mandatory items it was not to be - this time. A bit under 16 kg for carried weight sounds right (carried about 1,9 kg and camera in bag about 1 kg), the huckePACK was certainly at its limit but it was comfortable and did manage very well.
harttj, No Service for iPhone = no GPS & Altimeter without some (expensive) GPS apps which allow one to download maps, etc. All in all the watch is very accurate if you can set the references for Altitude (so that the Barometer works correctly). Thermometer worked very accurate - compared it to the small thermometer to check. If I would have left out what I didn't need, the axe, Bushcooker, spare meal, spare socks, synthetic insulation, iPhone, and extensive FA would have stayed home. Of the common gear I would have left one of the Medicament and one of the FA bags at home (needed to carry common Guide gear on own Daily Guide day!). I prolly also would have left the Beaks at home, and likely the GorillaPod.
Basti, rubberband to keep it together (likely unnecessary, yeah). Burrito not possible as it would have taken too much space with all that food!
Sabi, the Trekmates GoreTex socks are good. I reckon I used them in winter more, a good 50 km maybe? After that mainly for camp use, no idea how many km there. They still work very well and keep my feet dry - I wear them over my dry, thick camp socks in my wet trailrunners!
Lightening up, kiitos! Will do the Drillium pants when I review the Demand Pull-On, but I can tell you already that there's no problems with them for me. btw, perfect gear is made in Germany by this LAUFBURSCHE guy ;)
Tks for the excellent gear review.
ReplyDeleteAccording to my research, and I may be wrong, iPhone GPS works without cell towers.
ReplyDeletehttp://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=504491
"Right, Normal GPS (like from a TomTom) has a chip that picks up radio signals from the costellation of sats and does triangulation from them to determine position. When doing this for the first time since turning the device on it can sometimes take several minutes to perform (but usually is very quick afterwards), and can usually get fixes to within 10 meters or so.
AGPS (assisted) which is what the 3G iPhone does, will use a combination of the cell tower/Wifi location detection (like the older iPhone uses) to get a initial general fix while the GPS receiver chip is doing that initial long signal retrieval from the Sats. After the GPS chip gets the fix, it will update what's coming from the Cell/Wifi fix and get you much much more accurate position info.
The advantage of having a dual system like this is that GPS doesn't work in-doors, where the cell/wifi method does, and the GPS can take longer initially, but once it's got it's fix it will be much more accurate.
So, the older iPhone's cell/wifi-only positioning might get you a fix within a city block... the 3G will get you within 30 ft, it'll just take longer to refine the position...
And remember, MAPPING and POSITIONING are 2 different things... the iPhone does positioning (Lat/Long info), but it needs the network in order to push that info into Google Maps and pull back down a map of that area. Unless somethign like the announced TomTom app allows you to pre-download and store maps of the area you plan to be in, you'll have no way to display your AGPS determined position on a map without the network."
I did buy a map app for about $7 that gives me all the topo map data for North America for free. GPS works fine with it. iPhone can be upgraded, carries first aid and survival books. Augmented reality means that you can look at plants and find out what is edible or poisonous. Astronomy apps, geology apps, endless really. Killer problem, battery and weatherproofness.
Suunto is waterproof, lighter, battery lasts longer. Good piece of kit. I own one.
Thus it boils down to this for me. Even when I backpack with friends, sharing the trip via twitter with those that can't come is important. I know when I can't go on a hike with you, when you share via twitter it excites me to get and reciprocate.
Thanks again for sharing Hendrik.
I have my doubts about the DWR on eVent and noticed that the face fabric of my RAB waterproof looked soaked where it had been covered by rucksack shoulder straps on a wet day. Two damp, vertical stripes ran down from my shoulders. The rest of the jacket was still repelling water at this stage.
ReplyDeleteThe DWR on my first eVent jacket, from Montane, also seemed to give up on first contact with a rucksack, but it hadn't really and Nikwax Tech Wash was able to do a fair job of restoring eVent to good, if not perfect, condition. I get the impression that eVent is more susceptible to oils than Gore-Tex.
It dawned on me that I wash my running and cycling gear after an hour or two of aerobic exercise so I ought to be treating my shell garments to more time in the wash. It gets just as dirty as sports gear because it is sports gear.
Wow, your wool clothing is light. Does anyone know where I can get Finisterre clothing in the US? google was not helpful.
ReplyDeleteThanks Hendrik, for a very useful gear list interestingly on my trip over the past 4 days I had come to the conclusionI would get a Kupilka 21 as it seemed like the right combination of weight volume and "drinking pleasure" now I just have to wait for it to arrive. I like the picture of you with pack on and other packs on the ground was this a game of "last one standing with a pack on" I guess you won : )
ReplyDelete"Not being able to have a blazing fire in front of my cuben tarp was the only shortcoming of my UL gear, though I can life with that"
ReplyDeleteI like these different opinions and preferences.
To me its one of the most relaxing things to be able to set a fire and be able to sleep at side of the fire,but youre ok not to have this,and youre enjoying sleeping under what i could shower curtain :),no offence,man,i hope you get my point.
But in any case,im pleased to see you carrying a real axe,its far better tool,especially during winter than any knife,when shtf. There are several light axes and similar but theyre not worth carrying around here.
"and youre enjoying sleeping under what i could shower curtain :),no offence,man,i hope you get my point."
ReplyDeleteIn his book (at least one of them) Ray Jardine said that when he started to lighten his load, he first used a shower curtain as a tarp and it worked well.
You are on the right tracks Perkunas... =D
Nice report as ever Hendrik.
ReplyDeleteThink the pack weight was very decent considering it was a 10day autumn trip! As someone else said the camera/axe was nearly 10% of the weight carried so blummin good.
I have just come back from a bothy weekend with my kids and I am sure I carried more that that!
Completely agree re the Golite quilt....its brilliant and I have used it exclusively all year round for nearly 3 years now
Dont tempt me re an event bivvy! arrrrg!!!!
;)
I'm off to a corner to be ashamed of my failed lightweight (not to mention UL) existence :-)
ReplyDeleteGreat report Hendrik.
ReplyDeleteI'm a big fan of the LAUFBURSCHE huckePack. I never travel too far but am at comfort with the amount of food, water, clothes, and other equipment it can carry.
Keep up the good blogging!
(Great photos as usual)