The Ultimate Trip & Gearlist

Sitting at work, thinking about escaping to the forest for a hike, a climb in the mountains, a packrafting trip down an idyllic river, a mountain bike ride down a fine single track or a skiing trip across vast, snow-covered landscapes? I hear you. Lets goof off together. This is an invitation to slack off at work, university or in your freetime and post your ultimate gearlist and destination to use it. Anything goes. Post it in the comments, write a post on your own blog and let us know where you'd now rather be! And to keep the reality of work & studies far away, money is of no concern - so that hike in Fiji is as realistic as the local trail in front of the door. I'll start =)



Deciding where to go is the hardest part, I think - there are thousands of beautiful places on this planet, so picking just one is hard. I always wanted to go to Papua New Guinea, so I reckon I will pack my backpack and fly there for this trip. Lush rain forests, mountains, secluded beaches and all of it in pristine condition. Exotic wild life. Yeah, I'm in.

For the gear then: I will stick to my tried and tested LAUFBURSCHE huckePACK in Dyneema X Gridstop as my rucksack, no sense in changing a winner. The pack is big enough for my UL gear and ten days of food, and I also can fit a packraft and paddles in so it is the way to go.

The shelter question on the other hand is a bit more difficult. What should I expect in Papua New Guinea? Rain, I hear. Bugs, here and there. Humidity. Wind. So it should be spacious to keep my stuff dry, airy to minimize condensation, there should be some mesh to keep the bugs out and me sane and it should be able to cope with wind. Well, even if I haven't yet slept in one, I think I might go for a yellow TrailStar from MLD. Steven, Roger and many others rave about it, and I am a smart guy who knows to trust fellow Nordic Lightpacking mates and friends. I forgo a groundsheet - still think they're useless - and for bug protection, well, a MLD Superlight bivy with its bug netting would seal the deal and allow me to sleep under the stars when the weather is fine.

For sleeping, you know me, a quilt is the only way. Temps might drop under 0°C when I camp high in Papua New Guinea, so bringing a warm quilt seems smart. A Katabatic Gear Palisade should be perfect for my needs thus. Together with a set of BPL Cocoon Hoody and Pants, and those Integral Designs Hot socks, they should allow me to stay toasty even if the thermometer drops a lot under 0°C. For pads I will trust on the Multimat Adventure and the six segments of TAR Z Lite to keep my butt of the ground and well isolated. That seals the deal on the big three.

Clothing then. I'm not a big user of normal trekking pants, that is until I tried the Arc'teryx Palisade pants and the BPL Thorofare pants. They both rock, and I shall take both for being able to switch if the need arises - at 99 g for the Thorofare it is an acceptable weight to carry extra. I'll round it out with a Arc'teryx Ether Crew shirt, a BPL Thorofare button-down shirt and a BPL Beartooth Merino hoody. A bitihorn aero100 jacket from Norrona, ultralight and in great colours, will be my windshirt of choice. Socks will have to be Merino, I will look at the usual suspects like Woolpower, Darn Tough, Bridgedale and Smartwool to keep my feet in perfect condition. Trailrunners from Inov-8 will round out the clothing department, likely the X-Talon 190 will be the shoes of choice. For the rain I take a set of eVent pants and jacket, Rab has so far not disappointed me so I will take the Demand Pull-On and the Drillium pants.

Trekking poles for yours truly, it must be the Gossamer Gear LT4s, I'd say. A compass in a country like Papua New Guinea is mandatory, as a well-integrated foreigner in Finland the choice shall fall on a Suunto compass, accompanied by a Suunto clock to tell me what time it is (not that I'd want to know). A trekking umbrella for that less-than-torrential rain will be with me as well, as will be my Tenkara fly-fishing rod and flies.

Other basics for Hendrik include his trusted Puukko knife, his Kuksa and his BushBuddy Ultra. If you see someone on a trail calling himself Hendrik without a wood burning stove, you know he's an impostor! Other small stuff includes a Petzl eLite and a Princeton Tec Remix for light at night, a good book (Terry Pratchett to make me laugh), sunglasses, a notebook and pen to plot down my thoughts, a merino Buff, a packtowel from MSR, 1st Aid, Hygiene and Repair stuff.


Butterflies!

Because I will be walking where not many have walked before, a good camera comes along, with plenty of spare batteries, memory cards, as well as a pancake and tele lens to catch those fine panoramas and exotic birds of paradise & monkeys swinging along over my head. I think the camera might be called Panasonic Lumix GF2. That should ensure superb photos to keep those memories alive.

Voilá! That is my contribution to "Goof-Off-Tuesday"! I'm looking forward to read yours =)

21 Questions, comments, observations:

  1. Oh, this is the perfect post to destroy my concentration at work :) My mind is already far away outside the office....

    Cannot decide on that one destination indeed. Just lists of destinations...

    Fish River Canyon in Namibia comes to mind. Or maybe Crete? What about the Caucasus foothills? My mind's eye is leafing through an imaginary atlas.

    *sigh*

    Meeting in 30 minutes... perfect occasion for more daydreaming.

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  2. Great post and a great excuse to goof off work and pretend I'm typing code but I'm really writing a post of my ultimate outdoors trip. Hopefully I shall post a link before the end of the day.

    Thanks again for a great post.

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  3. You may want to take a bigger knife Hendrik, quote from Wikipedia:
    Although now almost entirely eradicated, in the past headhunting and cannibalism occurred in many parts of what is now Papua New Guinea.

    I like the "almost entirely" in that sentence.
    I'm dreaming about Papua New Guinea as well, and a Thru Hike of the Carpathians in Romania.
    Great post.

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  4. What? This is something that would have been natural to do a few weeks ago when it was raining. Now there is hope that the winter is here.

    Anyway, if money is of no concern, the choice is clear: The Antarctic Peninsula or the Sub-Antarctic Islands. Preferably sailboat based and week long backpacking/skiing excursions.

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  5. Lightening up...23 November 2010 12:59

    Because winter has set in, maybe a winterish trip would be nice? If there would be no limits at all:

    Antarctica. From Hercules Intlet to the South Pole - and back! Unsupported and unassisted skiing. No one has never ever yet managed to do that. (Well, guy called Chris Foot will be trying it this season. And Ben Saunders and his mate will try it the next season.)

    It would take something like 80-90 days to skii the distance of about 1200km - twice! Food for that time alone will weight about 100kg. So I would need a big sled. The Finnish Hiking Travel HIT makes this nice Ultima Thule sled from lightweight space age materials, and it is about the size of your apartment so it would do the job.

    There are no trees or natural shelter in Antarctica so pimped up Hilleberg Keron 3 GT would be on top of my sled. For melting snow and making food: two MSR XGK stoves with Bluewater stove restorations damper caps (Otherwise they roar like jet engines making you insane or deaf at least!). For sleeping, maybe a custom PHD deep-winter-piece-of-warmth or Marmot CWM and an extra three season down bag for those really cold night at the high plateu. And couple of large Thermarest Ridgerest Deluxe pads - you really don't want to blow your inflatable pad there...

    For clothing: two sets of doog merino wool undies (one change per three moths is enough, rigt?), powerstretch fleece outfit for cold days and the best shell clothingever made for the job: Finnish Sasta custom made North Pole Adv jacket and The Pole trousers. And a nice thick fleece jacket to wear in the tent. And something like the PHD Omega Down jacket to stay warm during the stops. And an assorment of head, hand and foot wear including hard face masks and stuff.

    And for skiing I might pchoose Amundsen skiis from Åsnes, Rottefella NNN BC bindings and a pair of the new Alfa North Pole boots. And Swix Edpedition poles.

    Then enough electronics for a small TV-studio: solar panels, smart batteries, couple of Iridium sat phones, PDA or small laptop, couple of good DSLR cameras (I might go with Canon 1D series despite the weight) with optics (Canon L series), GPS device, etc.

    And few kilos of misc stuff you will need for the three months without much human contact and without any external support. This would be including a small bunch of bambu sticks with bright flags to mark the food cahces for the return trip.

    That all will likely weight a bit too much to enable the fast skiing needed for the trip so I have to start shaving ounces from it... But how to do that... it is a secret. ;)

    And then I would need some one to ski with as I am not a solo traveller. Any volunteers?

    - - -

    Another nice option would be hiking and packrafting trip trough northern Siberia during the summer. But I haven't planned that yet and can not afford to miss another hour of working time for dreaming... Or could I? =)

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  6. I think I might be off to Greenland!
    http://www.google.fi/images?q=kayaking in greenland


    I'd take a top-of-the-line folding kayak with me:
    http://feathercraft.com/kayaks/traditional/wisper/index.php
    There is no need to go ultralight with other gear, since it is easy to carry moderate loads in a kayak. For shelter, I'd probably take my Fjällräven Akka Shape 3, since it is spacious enough and can handle adverse conditions. A three season sleeping bag (e.g. GoLite Adrenaline 3-season) is necessary, since the temperatures hover somewhere above freezing also in summertime. A gas stove would be my choice for cooking: there's quite little to burn for a wood burning stove, and a multifuel burner is too hazardous to use in the vestibule.

    Or maybe I want to go on an epic bike ride to New Zealand or something... So many gorgeous places to visit!

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  7. Hendrik,
    Love the post and it has me thinking of so many lovely places i have seen in the world.
    New Zealand or Tasmania for me.

    If you don’t mind me saying. In your gear review you have chosen a yellow shelter. This is the last colour you should chose, especially in that environment as it will attract all the bugs. By the end of the day it will be covered.
    It think green would be best.
    Cheers,

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  8. Hendrik

    I wouldn't take anything down filled into a rain forest. Although you plan to go high, you will have to travel through and presumabably sleep in the rain forest to get there. The down will soak up the humidity like a sponge and you'll struggle to get it dried out. The only places you're likely to see the sun is along the banks of rivers. The chances are mildew will get into the down and that will be the end of it. And take a hammock to sleep off the floor.

    You'll want to keep your camera and other electronic gear in water tight containers.

    Also, anti-fungal foot powder will be useful.
    Oh and ear plugs, if you want to sleep at night. The forest never rests!

    It's the Yukon for me but I haven't thought about gear yet. I fancy doing some paddling down the rivers, so I'll need some kind of inflatable canoe. Any recommendations?

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  9. Well I've thought about it and posted them here if your interested.

    http://walkwithtookie.posterous.com/it-takes-two-a-paddle-and-a-walk

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  10. Good idea.

    http://bedrockandparadox.wordpress.com/2010/11/23/the-ultimate-trip-and-gearlists/

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  11. I've been doing too much goofing-off recently, so I'll have to keep this short!

    It's a cliché, but I'd love to hike arond the Himalayas - no up Everest or anything crazy, daft, and über commercial, but some exploration-style trip.

    On the other hand, Cornelius's comment about thru-hiking the Carpathians would also be cool - having been there, I can think of a pretty cool route too. However, the bears there are out of control at the moment, and keep eating tourists.

    As for Americky, I was lookign at the Bob Marshall wilderness the other day, but the Wind River Range is enticing, and also the scarily wild Absaroka-Beartooth Wilderness. I can't resist the interestingly-named "Froze-to-Death Mountain." Oh, and the Continental Divide Trail would be spectacular.

    Gear... well, I'd love an Alpacka Raft, so that would come along. There would have to be some snowshoeing. I would try to fit it all in my Laufbursche pack, but for a longer heavier trip, maybe a Pinnacle.

    My Bushbuddy would be by my side, and I would need some new gear from Rab, Integral Designs, and others because I am anticipating cold. A new cold weather quilt might also be in order, or some layered system. Other than that, I don't have any wild dreams for gear. I would like to do a couple of climbing courses before going. In Utah I wished I had a few more skills in that area to get up some of the tricky bits.

    Also, I would need a hiking partner. I feel a trip of a lifetime would be something good to share.

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  12. Nice idea ...
    so I would go on a lazy packraft trip to somewhere in South East Asia - 70% paddling, 30% hiking.
    There - never below 25° - my shelter would only be a hammock - always try something new on a trip! The BPL Cocoon Quilt and a silk inlet would be enough insulation at night, nothing needed during the day ;)
    No need for cooking either - only tea and fruits, some rice and curry from the villages on the way, eating with the right hand from a banana leaf.
    Everything packed waterproof in the ULA Epic.
    On the feet FiveFingers would be enough.
    Someone want to come? ;)

    Fantasizing about this - I am asking myself why I have already booked my flight next summer for Northern Finland ...

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  13. Great reading all these ideas, thanks Hendrik, and everyone else.

    For me at least gear will always but secondary to the trip, probably due to my relative ignorance in that field! So to the trips (there's too many to choose one, so maybe some help to whittle them down...? please? It's challenges like this that make you realise how short life is).

    In no particular order of preference, and because I can't choose:

    (i) I've fancied a hiking/kayaking trip chasing volcanic peaks across the Indonesian archipelago for a while now. I reckon it would take at least a year, starting from Sumatra and ending in PNG, with a loop back around to Sulawesi and Indonesian Borneo. For that, I guess the Hennessey hammock that chap who walked down the Amazon used (his name escapes me at the moment) would be necessary, as well as a kick-ass craft to send onto ports to kayak between the islands when feasible. Fungicidal powder and lots of DEET (screw the cancer) would also be necessary.

    (ii)Speaking of volcanoes, how about a whole summer chasing them along the Kamchatka peninsula?

    (iii) Perhaps more realistically, the Ocean to Sea route along the Pyreenees has always appealed...

    (iv) The Ethiopoian highlands with a non-English speaking guide, making you learn a language at the same time...

    (v) or being in a group summiting a peak in Tien Shan for the first time (there's plenty of them to do, but I'd have to improve my mountaineering skills first I think!)

    (vi) The Kungsleden is a big draw too..

    or (vii) The West Coast trail on Vancouver island...

    or...

    or...etc

    Too many, and too little time.

    Incidentally, Lightening Up, I think two pairs of undies for your trip is perfectly sufficient, and has a beautiful symmetry of wearing one on the way to the pole and one on the way back. You could always turn a pair inside out if skiing too fast gave you skid-marks ; )

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  14. Guess not exactly the best spot to ask this, but I'm looking at crosscountry skis and skates for the winter, and was wondering if you think I could buy a pair of GG trekking poles, and they could double as skiing poles? The skis will be more for into the woods owl-finding expeditions and stuff like that, I'm not gonna be setting any new speed records or anything.

    Are they sturdy and long enough, or do I need to get separate trekking and skiing poles?

    And, by the way, do you know any good places to order the GG stuff for a swede?

    cheers

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  15. Jag - I hope Hendrik doesn't mind me butting in here but no, the GG LT4s would not make good ski poles. I love my LT4s but they are just not long enough. If you only want one set of poles then I would go for the Black Diamond Traverse poles. Long enough and strong enough for BC skiing and yet adjustable so they can be used for hiking.

    As for dream hiking destinations then John mentioned Ethiopia and I would like to go back there and hike in the Simian mountains. You would have to watch out for the marauding packs of baboons though... Wenchi Crater was also fascinating and stunning.

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  16. Eric, always good to take the mind of work and go to that special place =)

    Tookie, nice one! Always great to let work be work and do what one really likes to do.

    Cornelius, you take the Machete and we go together! Romania and Carpathians sounds great (and more realistic!) as well.

    Yeti, there was no rain here in Tampere/ Kuru - at least not that much. A sailboat as a base camp, now that is an awesome idea, I like it!

    Lightening up, isn't that like the trip you're already planning? The HIT Ultima Thule is way over-priced, sorry, as is everything from HIT (their website is shite, as well). Anyway. One change of undies is fine (hopefully), Canon 5D Mk II would be my choice for a camera (HD movies ftw!). And Siberia + packrafting, some *very* prominent UL person is considering that too, so go ahead and dream on!

    Viski, nice seeing you here! Greenland, a good pick! Nice Kayak, too.

    The Odyssee, NZ was my first thought as well! Thanks for the heads up on the yellow shelter, will edit it appropriately up in the article!

    Pennine Ranger, also a big thank you for the input, will change my sleeping stuff to synthetics then. Hammocks, I will need to try the one I have once again, but the last time I didn't close an eye in it. As for something inflatable, how about a packraft?

    Awesome, Dave!

    Mark, some nice stuff there. Seems packrafts are becoming popular! Climbing is good, stay tuned on what I have in store for you on that front!

    Sabi, packrafting in Asia, now that sounds good. Of course you also can packraft in Finland next summer =)

    John, true words - gear secondary, but there to make a fine trip. I's say you join Cornelius and me in PNG, and then we paddle with you around the island. The Kundsleden is prety overrun (by Germans ;) so I recommend the Nordkalottleden!

    jag, what Joe said!

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  17. Lightening up...29 November 2010 00:20

    Hendrik:

    Trips are taken step by step. The next (and first) big one is merely 3 weeks and 300km. There is huge difference to 3 months and 2400km. =D

    Similar custom pulks from Acapulka (for example) can cost about 10000 euros, so over priced is relative... The Airborne Ranger Club expedition left six of those pulkas some where on the arctic ocean to reach the North Pole in 2006 before their ride to home left. That tells something about the budget for that kind of trips. So it is pure dreaming untill I got some 200000 euros of extra money. And I am taking doantions already. ;)

    But about the homepages of HIT: I totally agree with you! (And if that Siberia packrafting is going to realize, please contact me. I am reeeally interested.)

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  18. I was thinking the Acapulkas are about ~1.000 to 2.000€? 10.000€ for a pulka, that is madness, sorry.

    I might go to Siberia, but then to Baikal, not to the north - I have a friend from Baikal ;)

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  19. I've had another goof off Tuesday and I've added my kit list here http://walkwithtookie.posterous.com/i-takes-two-the-kit-list

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  20. Eric, always good to take the mind of work and go to that special place =)

    Tookie, nice one! Always great to let work be work and do what one really likes to do.

    Cornelius, you take the Machete and we go together! Romania and Carpathians sounds great (and more realistic!) as well.

    Yeti, there was no rain here in Tampere/ Kuru - at least not that much. A sailboat as a base camp, now that is an awesome idea, I like it!

    Lightening up, isn't that like the trip you're already planning? The HIT Ultima Thule is way over-priced, sorry, as is everything from HIT (their website is shite, as well). Anyway. One change of undies is fine (hopefully), Canon 5D Mk II would be my choice for a camera (HD movies ftw!). And Siberia + packrafting, some *very* prominent UL person is considering that too, so go ahead and dream on!

    Viski, nice seeing you here! Greenland, a good pick! Nice Kayak, too.

    The Odyssee, NZ was my first thought as well! Thanks for the heads up on the yellow shelter, will edit it appropriately up in the article!

    Pennine Ranger, also a big thank you for the input, will change my sleeping stuff to synthetics then. Hammocks, I will need to try the one I have once again, but the last time I didn't close an eye in it. As for something inflatable, how about a packraft?

    Awesome, Dave!

    Mark, some nice stuff there. Seems packrafts are becoming popular! Climbing is good, stay tuned on what I have in store for you on that front!

    Sabi, packrafting in Asia, now that sounds good. Of course you also can packraft in Finland next summer =)

    John, true words - gear secondary, but there to make a fine trip. I's say you join Cornelius and me in PNG, and then we paddle with you around the island. The Kundsleden is prety overrun (by Germans ;) so I recommend the Nordkalottleden!

    jag, what Joe said!

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  21. Hi there, if you ever do make it out here please let me know - I am a new packrafter and live in Papua New Guinea, currently trying to get as many trips done as possible, though mostly short 1 day minor epics at this stage. I can give you some pointers on gear as well for efficient rainforest travel as well....I've had a few years of practice of thrashing around the jungle myself. I live in Port Moresby but often work way out in the remote areas - I have a three week trip packrafting planned for September, crossing a very remote mountain range and rafting down to the main Sepik river in the north...I'll keep you posted.
    Cheers,

    Matt

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