My Favorite Lightweight Gear

  • Cocoon Pant
    No other piece in the Cocoon line has added to my cold weather comfort more than the "puffy pants" (don't repeat that phrase in a Montana tavern). Insulated pants are essential if you are going to lighten your sleep system, especially if you're quiltin' it.
  • TorsoLite Pad
    I originally designed this pad for folks that were less hardcore than me - I've always been a foamie. But, man, the more I use this, the more difficulty I have in removing it from my pack. Yeah, it's totally worth the weight for a great night's sleep!
  • Alpacka Packrafts
    Packrafts have revolutionized how I look at wilderness expeditions, and they give me an alternative and intense day hobby. Something about running an irrigation ditch or a city creek that is as appealing as steep-creeking. It's all super fun in an Alpacka.
  • FireLite Mini Firestarting Kit
    I've carried this kit on every day and overnight hike for the past three years. Absolute reliability. Add an Esbit cube and you have a true four-season kit.
  • BubblePAKIT
    No-brainer protection that I use primarily for two things: (1) to carry an expensive compact digicam (Ricoh GRD), and (2) to carry my cell phone, wallet, and car key on packrafting trips.
  • Bushbuddy Ultra Wood Stove
    Practical, compact, fuel efficient, and terribly fun to fire up and use, especially on the trail for midday tea.
  • Fenix L0D Flashlight
    A sub-one ounce single LED light @ 30 lumens. Don't run it full juice or it only lasts for an hour. Peak it up there here and there, and then run @ 12 lumens (4.5 hr) or even 4.5 lumens (8.5 hr) to give more than enough light for trail hiking and task lighting. The power here makes the +1 AAA extra battery no big deal.

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Self-Sufficiency?

Fire1 Andrew Skurka's completion of the Great Western Loop, at its surface, provided a snapshot into the window of what was a monumental effort in self-sufficiency.

Of course, there were others involved, working behind the scenes, that made this happen, too. Sponsors, web developers, parents, media personnel - all of these folks shared in the work.

Likewise, the Wilderness Trekking III course we recently hosted in the Beartooths taught me something valuable about expeditioning: that no single effort could ever exceed the multiplied synergies of people working together.

Fire2This truism, which I believe to be an undeniable fact, sort of flies in the face of modern American thinking which is places inordinate levels of value on "self-sufficiency", "self-reliance", "self-esteem", and "self-preservation".

While I love, and get accused often, of "going solo" (whether in wilderness or life), I understand and appreciate that dependence upon others, reliance upon others, and the ability to change the centricity of focus of esteem from self to others is absolutely essential - and preferred - for life satisfaction, be it in marriage, business, or expeditioning.

Fire3When teaching our den of Webelos this weekend about the art and practice of building fires using only magnesium firestarters, a pocketknife, and wood, I experienced a defining moment as a mentor when one Scout said to another, as the fire went ablaze:

"Whew, at least now our whole den can eat lunch!"

Fire4Who do you depend on for your lunch? And as important, are you making lunch for someone else?

Have you ever made a sandwich with someone else? One person spreads the peanut butter while the other person spreads the jam. And when the two slices are melded together, you have a product of team effort.

Fire5 You say, "But the sandwich tastes the same, whether it's made by one or two or three!" or "More effort went into making that sandwich than what was necessary!" or "I could have done it myself faster"...

Woe to you, soloist.

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What is Ryan Jordan's Backcountry?

    BACKPACKING LIGHT MUSE: trends, bends, and mends focusing on the application of the "Backpacking Light" philosophy of simple backcountry living to practices in the wilderness - and beyond. Written by Backpacking Light Magazine co-founder and publisher Ryan Jordan.
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