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Backpacker Magazine – Online Exclusive
When a day hike turns into an overnight, learn how to take care of yourself.
Dropping most of your equipment at Kephart Shelter in Great Smokey Mountain National Park, you set out carrying food, water, and clothing for a 7.5-mile round-trip dayhike to the Charlies Bunion overlook. One of the most biologically rich forests on the continent eventually gives way to long views of verdant ridges. When you started out, the late-October sky looked leaden, and the air felt chilly. As you climbed nearly 2,000 feet on the Grassy Branch and Dry Sluice Gap Trails, light rain fell and soon changed to wet snow--not unusual for this time of year and elevation. Then the trail got more difficult to follow as the snow piled up and the Smokies' namesake fog abruptly rolled in. Now darkness is falling, and even though you'd started back, you're miles from the shelter and getting disoriented. Cold, wet, and exhausted, you're suddenly facing a potentially life-threatening situation.
READERS COMMENTS
My top pack becomes a day pack and that is where I store my most important survival gear: a few Clif bars, a first aid kit(also has purification tablets and aluminum foil) a Bivy space blanket, storm matches in a watertight compass/whistle. a chem light, paracord, knife, poncho, and an extra generic "area" topo map.
I VERY often get excited about an area to climb and will stash my pack at the base off trail and do some free climbing or bouldering but take the time to put the day pack around my waist...
Just my Humble opinion though...
Posted: May 27, 2008 Philly Tom
With so many "outdoor survival" books and schools out there, it is almost deserved for those who go off unprepared to have something unfortunate happen!!! I keep gear in my vehicle at all times, and carry a Cody Lundin based belt pouch pack with me anytime I take even a short hike or nature walk!!! Even the Boy Scouts teach "Always Prepared!!"
Posted: May 06, 2008 Cormach
I agree with all that has been said. I'd like to add that I carry a knife and flint/steel/tinder daily. You do need to practice your skills with your equipment so that if the day should come, you'll know what to do. There is not much worse than finding yourself in a situation in which you think your prepared only to find that you can not make the fire you thought you could, or the shelter you've seen made, but never really tried to make yourself. Or better yet, did make 10 years ago while camping (which seems like 2 years ago...)...You get the idea. Safe Journeys
Posted: May 06, 2008 Jim
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